2022/2024

A Wave Function Based Framework for Describing Photoactivated Redox Processes

Natural Sciences

Principal investigators

profile image illustration

Ida-Marie Høyvik

Associate Professor
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
Year at CAS

Abstract

When describing molecules with wave function theory, we usually require the wave function to reflect a physical state in which the number of electrons is conserved. However, there exist examples where electron conservation is not physical. An important example is molecular junctions, in which a molecule acts as a bridge for electron transport between some contact points. Similarly, electron transport can occur between molecules or molecular constituents in redox processes, in which one molecule is reduced (gain electrons) and one molecule is oxidised (lose electrons). I will establish a rigorous framework to theoretically describe and explore photoactivated redox reactions between molecules. The framework will be based on the particle-breaking molecular electronic wave function theory which I am currently developing. The wave function parametrisation holds a strong connection to statistical grand canonical ensembles, and together with collaborators in quantum transport, statistical mechanics and optical molecular properties, it will be exploited for exciting photoactivated redox applications and beyond.

News

Ida-Marie Høyvik, an Associate Professor at the Department of Chemistry, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), spent the last two weeks of February at CAS for her research stay.

Ida-Marie Høyvik’s Young CAS Fellow project seeks to develop a new framework to describe and better understand photoactivated processes related to electron transport or electron exchange between molecular systems.