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A comprehensive description of molecular electron transfer reactions is essential for our understanding of fundamental phenomena in bio-energetics and molecular electronics. Experimental studies of molecular systems in condensed-phase environments, however, face difficulties to independently control the parameters that govern the transfer mechanism with high precision. We show that trapped-ion experiments instead allow to reproduce and continuously connect vastly different regimes of molecular charge transfer through precise tuning of, e.g., phonon temperature, electron-phonon interactions, and electronic couplings. Such a setting allows not only to reproduce widely-used transport models, such as Marcus theory. It also provides access to transfer regimes that are unattainable for molecular experiments, while controlling and measuring the relevant observables on the level of individual quanta. Our numerical simulations predict an unconventional quantum transfer regime, featuring a transition from quantum adiabatic- to resonance-assisted transfer as a function of the donor-acceptor energy gap, that can be reached by increasing the electronic coupling at low temperatures. Trapped ion-based quantum simulations thus promise to enhance our microscopic understanding of molecular electron transfer processes, and may help to reveal efficient design principles for synthetic devices.
Near-unity energy transfer efficiency has been widely observed in natural photosynthetic complexes. This phenomenon has attracted broad interest from different fields, such as physics, biology, chemistry and material science, as it may offer valuable
Molecular vibrations underpin important phenomena such as spectral properties, energy transfer, and molecular bonding. However, obtaining a detailed understanding of the vibrational structure of even small molecules is computationally expensive. Whil
We report the first electronic structure calculation performed on a quantum computer without exponentially costly precompilation. We use a programmable array of superconducting qubits to compute the energy surface of molecular hydrogen using two dist
To harness the potential of noisy intermediate-scale quantum devices, it is paramount to find the best type of circuits to run hybrid quantum-classical algorithms. Key candidates are parametrized quantum circuits that can be effectively implemented o
Electron transfer organic reaction rates are considered employing the classic physical picture of Marcus wherein the heats of reaction are deposited as the energy of low frequency mechanical oscillations of reconfigured molecular positions. If such e