“…The description of tunneling in such slightly asymmetric double-minimum potentials continues to draw interest from the theoretical side. [6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14] Known experimental splittings for hydrogen atom tunneling span a range of more than eight orders of magnitudes, with most of them being (far) smaller than 1 cm −1 hc ( ≈ 0.01 kJ mol −1 ) [15]. For this reason, localization is the typical, but not the strict, outcome from symmetry breaking by chemical [3,[16][17][18][19] or isotopic [4,5,[20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28] substitution, internal rotation of molecular groups [6,16,20,24,29], or from environmental influences such as solvation [16,30], matrix embedding [3,31,32] or crystallization [33].…”