A tug-of-war between electronic excitation and confinement in a dynamical context†
Abstract
Quantum fluid density functional theory has been used to study the time evolution of various reactivity parameters such as hardness, electrophilicity, entropy, chemical potential, polarizability, electronegativity etc. in a confined environment during time dependent processes like atom–ion collision and atom–field interaction. Responses in the reactivity parameters of the helium atom, in the dynamical context, for ground state as well as in excited state, have been reported. The confinement is incorporated through a Dirichlet type boundary condition. With a decrease in the size of the cylindrical box, the system gets harder and less polarizable. Simultaneous excitation and confinement may bring back the ground state behavior.