The method proposed in the companion paper for analysing the coupling between overall and internal dynamics is applied to the study of the full rotational motion of a molecule with one internal degree of freedom. For systems characterized by a finite set of stable conformers determined by the minima of the intramolecular potential, a simplified time evolution operator of mixed type is derived, with the continuous diffusion equation and the generalized random walk operator representing the overall rotation and the internal dynamics, respectively. The dependence on the conformational state of the rotational diffusion tensor is one source of coupling between these two types of motion. Another source is represented by the recoil rotations acting on each subunit during a conformational transition. Both conformational-dependent rotational diffusion tensors and recoil rotations can be calculated from a model for the friction exerted by the solvent. Some applications of the theory are presented in relation to the butane molecule and the molecules having the structure of biphenyl, with particular emphasis on the calculation of the experimental observables in NMR and dielectric relaxation measurements.

Coupling of the overall molecular motion with the conformational transitions. II. The full rotational problem

MORO, GIORGIO
1987

Abstract

The method proposed in the companion paper for analysing the coupling between overall and internal dynamics is applied to the study of the full rotational motion of a molecule with one internal degree of freedom. For systems characterized by a finite set of stable conformers determined by the minima of the intramolecular potential, a simplified time evolution operator of mixed type is derived, with the continuous diffusion equation and the generalized random walk operator representing the overall rotation and the internal dynamics, respectively. The dependence on the conformational state of the rotational diffusion tensor is one source of coupling between these two types of motion. Another source is represented by the recoil rotations acting on each subunit during a conformational transition. Both conformational-dependent rotational diffusion tensors and recoil rotations can be calculated from a model for the friction exerted by the solvent. Some applications of the theory are presented in relation to the butane molecule and the molecules having the structure of biphenyl, with particular emphasis on the calculation of the experimental observables in NMR and dielectric relaxation measurements.
1987
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/138849
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