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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Nerelativistické a relativistické výpočty energií molekul na kvantových počítačích / Quantum computing approach to non-relativistic and relativistic molecular energy calculations

Veis, Libor January 2012 (has links)
Quantum computers are appealing for their ability to solve some tasks much faster than their classical counterparts. In fact, they have a potential to perform the full configuration interaction (FCI) energy calculations with a polynomial scaling only. This is in contrast to con- ventional computers where FCI scales exponentially. We provide a detailed description of the quantum version of the FCI method and the results of numerical simulations of the ground and excited state energy calculations of the methylene molecule. We further generalize this method to the relativistic four component regime and show how to efficiently solve the eigenproblem of the Dirac-Coulomb(-Breit) Hamiltonian on a quantum computer. We demonstrate the func- tionality of the proposed procedure by numerical simulations of computations of the spin-orbit splitting in the SbH molecule. Finally, we propose quantum circuits with 3 qubits and 9 or 10 CNOTs, which implement a proof-of-principle relativistic quantum chemical calculation for this molecule and might be suitable for an experimental realization. 1
2

Computational and Experimental Studies of the Photoluminescence, Reactivity and Structural Properties of d10 and d8 Metal Complexes

Otten, Brooke Michelle 05 1900 (has links)
Computational chemistry has gained interest as a characterization tool to predict photoluminescence, reactivity and structural properties of organic and transition metal complexes. With the rise of methods including relativity, these studies have been expanded to the accurate modeling of luminescence spectra of complexes with considerable spin-orbit splitting due to heavy metal centers as well as the reaction pathways for these complexes to produce natural products such as hydrogen gas. These advances have led to the synthesis and utility of more effective catalysis as well as the development of more effective organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) through the incorporation of organometallic complexes as emitters instead of typical organic emitters. In terms of significant scientific advancement presented in this work is in relation to the discovery of significant spin-orbit splitting in a gold(I) alkylphosphine complex, where the splitting results in the states that emit in different colors of the visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum. This work also reveals the discovery both computationally and experimentally, of a genuine polar-covalent bond between two-closed shell metals. This work highlights a complex with an incredibly short gold(I) – copper(I) intermetallic distance leading to a vibrational frequency and dissociation energy that is on par with those of other systems with single-bonded metal centers. Lastly, this work outlines a strategy for the production of hydrogen gas through the use of trinuclear cyclic coinage metal complexes as catalysis to split hydrohalic acids.

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