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1月3日学术报告——Professor Thomas F. Miller III(Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering California Institute of Technology)
发布时间:2018-12-26 来源:国际化学理论中心 浏览:63


报告题目

Getting Something for Nothing: Classical and Machine-Learning Methods for Quantum Simulation

报告人

Professor  Thomas F. Miller III

报告人单位

Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology

报告时间

201913日(周四)上午10:00

报告地点

合肥微尺度物质科学国家研究中心99004

主办单位

合肥微尺度物质科学国家研究中心 国际化学理论中心(ICCT) / 复杂化学体系多尺度动力学学科创新引智基地 化学与材料科学学院

报告介绍

Abstract:

A focus of my research is to the develop simulation methods that reveal the mechanistic details of quantum mechanical reactions that are central to biological, molecular, and heterogenous catalysis. The nature of this effort is three-fold: we work from the foundation of quantum statistical mechanics and semiclassical dynamics to develop methods that significantly expand the scope and reliability of condensed-phase quantum dynamics simulation; we develop quantum embedding and machine learning methods that improve the description of molecular interactions and electronic properties; and we apply these methods to understand complex chemical systems.

The talk will focus on recent developments and applications of Feynman path integral methods for the description of non-adiabatic chemical dynamics, including proton-coupled electron-transfer and long-ranged electron transfer in protein systems. Additionally, we will describe a machine-learning approach to predicting the electronic structure results on the basis of simple molecular orbitals properties, yielding striking accuracy and transferability across chemical systems at low computational cost.


About the speaker:

Thomas Miller’s research focuses on the development of theoretical and computational methods to study chemical processes that are related to catalysis, battery technologies, and membrane protein biosynthesis. After completing his undergraduate studies at Texas A&M University, he attended graduate school in the UK on a British Marshall Scholarship and received his Ph.D. from Oxford University in 2005. Miller then returned to the US for a postdoctoral fellowship at UC Berkeley. He joined the faculty of the California Institute of Technology in 2008 and was promoted to full professor in 2013. While at Caltech, he has received awards that include the Sloan Research Fellowship, NSF CAREER Award, Associated Students of Caltech Teaching Award, Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, and the ACS Early-Career Award in Theoretical Chemistry.