Optical van-der-Waals forces in molecules: from electronic Bethe-Salpeter calculations to the many-body dispersion model

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Abstract

Molecular forces induced by optical excitations are connected to a wide range of phenomena, from chemical bond dissociation to intricate biological processes that underpin vision. Commonly, the description of optical excitations requires the solution of computationally demanding electronic Bethe-Salpeter equation (BSE). However, when studying non-covalent interactions in large-scale systems, more efficient methods are desirable. Here we introduce an effective approach based on coupled quantum Drude oscillators (cQDO) as represented by the many-body dispersion model. We find that the cQDO Hamiltonian yields semi-quantitative agreement with BSE calculations and that both attractive and repulsive optical van der Waals (vdW) forces can be induced by light. These optical-vdW interactions dominate over vdW dispersion in the long-distance regime, showing a complexity that grows with system size. Evidence of highly non-local forces in the human formaldehyde dehydrogenase 1MC5 protein suggests the ability to selectively activate collective molecular vibrations by photoabsorption, in agreement with recent experiments.

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Ambrosetti, A., Umari, P., Silvestrelli, P. L., Elliott, J., & Tkatchenko, A. (2022). Optical van-der-Waals forces in molecules: from electronic Bethe-Salpeter calculations to the many-body dispersion model. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28461-y

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