Research Seminars @ Illinois

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Tailored for undergraduate researchers, this calendar is a curated list of research seminars at the University of Illinois. Explore the diverse world of research and expand your knowledge through engaging sessions designed to inspire and enlighten.

To have your events added or removed from this calendar, please contact OUR at ugresearch@illinois.edu

Prof. Yang Yang, UW Madison, "Bridging Quantum and Classical: An Efficient Framework for Capturing Zero-Point Effects in Hydrogen-Related Chemistry"

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Tenure Speaker
Location
CLSL B102
Date
Oct 22, 2025   2:00 - 3:00 pm  
Contact
Randy Prince
E-Mail
rlprince@illinois.edu
Phone
217-333-2540
Views
25
Originating Calendar
Chemistry - Physical Chemistry Seminars

Zero-point effects — quantum mechanical phenomena arising from the fact that nuclei never truly stand still, even at absolute zero — are essential for accurately describing many chemical and biological processes, especially those involving hydrogen. Yet, capturing these effects in large-scale molecular simulations remains a major challenge. To address this, we developed the Constrained Nuclear-Electronic Orbital (CNEO) framework, which incorporates zero-point effects along with certain other components of nuclear quantum effects directly into quantum chemistry calculations and molecular dynamics simulations, while maintaining computational efficiency.

Our methods — CNEO density functional theory (CNEO-DFT) and CNEO molecular dynamics (CNEO-MD) — significantly outperform conventional DFT and ab initio MD in predicting vibrational spectra, particularly for hydrogen-dominated modes. With CNEO transition state theory (CNEO-TST), we achieve more accurate hydrogen/proton/hydride transfer rate predictions at little additional cost. CNEO simulations with periodic boundary conditions also reveal shifts in hydrogen adsorption preferences on metal surfaces driven by zero-point effects. We have also extended the framework to excited-state calculations, nonadiabatic dynamics, and hybrid QM/MM calculations. Together, these developments establish CNEO as a versatile and efficient tool for bridging classical simulations with a quantum mechanical description of nuclear motion.

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