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Creators/Authors contains: "Weight, Braden"

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  1. We perform on-the-fly non-adiabatic molecular dynamics simulations using the recently developed spin-mapping formalism. Two quantum dynamics approaches based on this mapping formalism, (i) the fully linearized Spin-LSC and (ii) the partially linearized Spin-PLDM, are explored using the quasi-diabatic propagation scheme. We have performed dynamics simulations in four ab initio molecular models for which benchmark ab initio multiple spawning (AIMS) data have been published. We find that the spin-LSC and the previously reported symmetric quasi-classical (SQC) approaches provide nearly equivalent population dynamics. While we expected the more involved spin-PLDM method to provide superior accuracy compared to the other mapping-based approaches, SQC and spin-LSC, we found that it performed with equivalent accuracy compared to the AIMS benchmark results. We further explore the underpinnings of the spin-PLDM correlation function by decomposing its N2 density matrix-focused initial conditions, where N is the number of states in the quantum subsystem. Finally, we found an approximate form of the spin-PLDM correlation function, which simplifies the simulation and reduces the computational costs from N2 to N. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 28, 2026
  2. Coupling molecules to a quantized radiation field inside an optical cavity has shown great promise in modifying chemical reactivity. It was recently proposed that strong light-matter interactions are able to differentiate endo/exo products of a Diels-Alder reaction at the transition state. Using the recently developed parameterized quantum electrodynamic \textit{ab initio} polariton chemistry approach along with time-dependent density functional theory, we theoretically confirm that the ground state selectivity of a Diels-Alder reaction can be fundamentally changed by strongly coupling to the cavity, generating preferential endo or exo isomers which are formed with equal probability for the same reaction outside the cavity. This provides an important and necessary benchmark with the high-level self-consistent QED coupled cluster approach. In addition, by computing the ground state difference density, we show that the cavity induces a redistribution of electron density from intramolecular $$\pi$$-bonding orbitals to intermolecular bonding orbitals, thus providing chemically relavent description of the cavity-induced changes to the ground state chemistry and thus changes to the molecular orbital theory inside the cavity. We extend this exploration to an arbitrary cavity polarization vector which leads to critical polarization angles that maximize the endo=/exo selectivity of the reaction. Finally, we decompose the energy contributions from the Hamiltonian and provide discussion relating to the dominent dipole self-energy effects on the ground state. 
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  3. We generalize the quasi-diabatic (QD) propagation scheme to simulate the non-adiabatic polariton dynamics in molecule–cavity hybrid systems. The adiabatic-Fock states, which are the tensor product states of the adiabatic electronic states of the molecule and photon Fock states, are used as the locally well-defined diabatic states for the dynamics propagation. These locally well-defined diabatic states allow using any diabatic quantum dynamics methods for dynamics propagation, and the definition of these states will be updated at every nuclear time step. We use several recently developed non-adiabatic mapping approaches as the diabatic dynamics methods to simulate polariton quantum dynamics in a Shin–Metiu model coupled to an optical cavity. The results obtained from the mapping approaches provide very accurate population dynamics compared to the numerically exact method and outperform the widely used mixed quantum-classical approaches, such as the Ehrenfest dynamics and the fewest switches surface hopping approach. We envision that the generalized QD scheme developed in this work will provide a powerful tool to perform the non-adiabatic polariton simulations by allowing a direct interface between the diabatic dynamics methods and ab initio polariton information. 
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  4. Abstract Incorporating fluorescent quantum defects in the sidewalls of semiconducting single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) through chemical reaction is an emerging route to predictably modify nanotube electronic structures and develop advanced photonic functionality. Applications such as room-temperature single-photon emission and high-contrast bio-imaging have been advanced through aryl-functionalized SWCNTs, in which the binding configurations of the aryl group define the energies of the emitting states. However, the chemistry of binding with atomic precision at the single-bond level and tunable control over the binding configurations are yet to be achieved. Here, we explore recently reported photosynthetic protocol and find that it can control chemical binding configurations of quantum defects, which are often referred to as organic color centers, through the spin multiplicity of photoexcited intermediates. Specifically, photoexcited aromatics react with SWCNT sidewalls to undergo a singlet-state pathway in the presence of dissolved oxygen, leading to ortho binding configurations of the aryl group on the nanotube. In contrast, the oxygen-free photoreaction activates previously inaccessible para configurations through a triplet-state mechanism. These experimental results are corroborated by first principles simulations. Such spin-selective photochemistry diversifies SWCNT emission tunability by controlling the morphology of the emitting sites. 
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