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Proton transfer and hydrogen tunneling play key roles in many processes of chemical and biological importance. The generalized nuclear-electronic orbital multistate density functional theory (NEO-MSDFT) method was developed in order to capture hydrogen tunneling effects in systems involving the transfer and tunneling of one or more protons. The generalized NEO-MSDFT method treats the transferring protons quantum mechanically on the same level as the electrons and obtains the delocalized vibronic states associated with hydrogen tunneling by mixing localized NEO-DFT states in a nonorthogonal configuration interaction scheme. Herein, we present the derivation and implementation of analytical gradients for the generalized NEO-MSDFT vibronic state energies and the nonadiabatic coupling vectors between these vibronic states. We use this methodology to perform adiabatic and nonadiabatic dynamics simulations of the double proton transfer reactions in the formic acid dimer and the heterodimer of formamidine and formic acid. The generalized NEO-MSDFT method is shown to capture the strongly coupled synchronous or asynchronous tunneling of the two protons in these processes. Inclusion of vibronically nonadiabatic effects is found to significantly impact the double proton transfer dynamics. This work lays the foundation for a variety of nonadiabatic dynamics simulations of multiple proton transfer systems, such as proton relays and hydrogen-bonding networks.more » « less
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In the recently discovered proton-coupled energy transfer (PCEnT) mechanism, the transfer of electronic excitation energy between donor and acceptor chromophores is coupled to a proton transfer reaction. Herein, we develop a general theory for PCEnT and derive an analytical expression for the nonadiabatic PCEnT rate constant. This theory treats the transferring hydrogen nucleus quantum mechanically and describes the PCEnT process in terms of nonadiabatic transitions between reactant and product electron–proton vibronic states. The rate constant is expressed as a summation over these vibronic states, and the contribution of each pair of vibronic states depends on the square of the vibronic coupling as well as the spectral convolution integral, which can be viewed as a generalization of the Förster-type spectral overlap integral for vibronic rather than electronic states. The convolution integral also accounts for the common vibrational modes shared by the donor and acceptor chromophores for intramolecular PCEnT. We apply this theory to model systems to investigate the key features of PCEnT processes. The excited vibronic states can contribute significantly to the total PCEnT rate constant, and the common modes can either slow down or speed up the process. Because the pairs of vibronic states that contribute the most to the PCEnT rate constant may correspond to spectroscopically dark states, PCEnT could occur even when there is no apparent overlap between the donor emission and acceptor absorption spectra. This theory will assist in the interpretation of experimental data and will guide the design of additional PCEnT systems.more » « less
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