posted on 2025-05-07, 16:06authored byApurba Nandi, Riccardo Conte, Priyanka Pandey, Paul L. Houston, Chen Qu, Qi Yu, Joel M. Bowman
Vibrational properties of molecules are of widespread
interest
and importance in chemistry and biochemistry. The reliability of widely
employed approximate computational methods is questioned here against
the complex experimental spectrum of ethylene glycol. Comparisons
between quantum vibrational self-consistent field and virtual-state
configuration interaction (VSCF/VCI), adiabatically switched semiclassical
initial value representation (AS-SCIVR), and thermostatted ring polymer
molecular dynamics (TRPMD) calculations are made using a full-dimensional,
machine-learned potential energy surface. Calculations are done for
five low-lying conformers and compared with the experiment, with a
focus on the high-frequency, OH-stretches, and CH-stretches, part
of the spectrum. Fermi resonances are found in the analysis of VSCF/VCI
eigenstates belonging to the CH-stretching band. Results of comparable
accuracy, quality, and level of detail are obtained by means of AS
SCIVR. The current VSCF/VCI and AS-SCIVR power spectra largely close
the gaps between the experiment and TRPMD and classical MD calculations.
Analysis of these results provides guidance on what level of accuracy
to expect from TRPMD and classical MD calculations of the vibrational
spectra for ubiquitous CH- and OH-stretching bands. This work shows
that even general vibrational features require a proper quantum treatment,
usually not achievable by the most popular theoretical approaches.