Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.113, No.33, 11437-11447, 2009
Effectiveness of Perturbation Theory Approaches for Computing Non-Condon Electron Transfer Dynamics in Condensed Phases
A description of electron transfer in condensed-phase media requires models that adequately describe the coupling of the electronic degrees of freedom to the surrounding nuclear coordinates. The spin-boson model has been the canonical model used to understand quantum dynamic processes in condensed-phase media over the last 25 years. Inherent in the standard model of a two-state quantum system coupled to a bosonic bath is the assumption that the Condon approximation is valid. In this context, the Condon approximation assumes that the bath configurations (coordinates) have no effect on the nonadiabatic coupling matrix element. While this is a useful model for electron transfer in small molecular systems, the validity of this approximation is less likely when large-scale motions of solvent molecules are strongly coupled to the electron transfer event, e.g., in molecular clamps and long-range electron transfer in biopolymers. In the present paper a general model for two-state electron transfer which allows for system-bath coupling in both the diagonal and off-diagonal (nonadiabatic) terms is studied. Time-dependent perturbation theory for this Hamiltonian is developed using a small polaron transformation. As noted in several recent studies, in a certain regime of parameter space. the relevant Hamiltonian admits in exact solution, termed the exactly solvable non-Condon Hamiltonian (or NCE). This limit, for which exact solutions are available, is used to benchmark the short- and long-time accuracy of various Perturbative approaches. The validated perturbation equations are Subsequently used to explore the role of non-Condon effects on electron transfer by systematically increasing the strength of the non-Condon coupling term from zero (i.e., the canonical spin-boson model) to the value that pertains to the exactly solvable non-Condon model (where non-Condon effects are significant).