1,371 research outputs found
Progress in Time-Dependent Density-Functional Theory
The classic density-functional theory (DFT) formalism introduced by
Hohenberg, Kohn, and Sham in the mid-1960s, is based upon the idea that the
complicated N-electron wavefunction can be replaced with the mathematically
simpler 1-electron charge density in electronic struc- ture calculations of the
ground stationary state. As such, ordinary DFT is neither able to treat
time-dependent (TD) problems nor describe excited electronic states. In 1984,
Runge and Gross proved a theorem making TD-DFT formally exact. Information
about electronic excited states may be obtained from this theory through the
linear response (LR) theory formalism. Begin- ning in the mid-1990s, LR-TD-DFT
became increasingly popular for calculating absorption and other spectra of
medium- and large-sized molecules. Its ease of use and relatively good accuracy
has now brought LR-TD-DFT to the forefront for this type of application. As the
number and the diversity of applications of TD-DFT has grown, so too has grown
our understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of the approximate
functionals commonly used for TD-DFT. The objective of this article is to
continue where a previous review of TD-DFT in this series [Annu. Rev. Phys.
Chem. 55: 427 (2004)] left off and highlight some of the problems and solutions
from the point of view of applied physical chemistry. Since doubly-excited
states have a particularly important role to play in bond dissociation and
formation in both thermal and photochemistry, particular emphasis will be
placed upon the problem of going beyond or around the TD-DFT adiabatic
approximation which limits TD-DFT calculations to nominally singly-excited
states. Posted with permission from the Annual Review of Physical Chemistry,
Volume 63 \c{opyright} 2012 by Annual Reviews, http://www.annualreviews.org
Fast computation of the Kohn-Sham susceptibility of large systems
For hybrid systems, such as molecules grafted onto solid surfaces, the
calculation of linear response in time dependent density functional theory is
slowed down by the need to calculate, in N^4 operations, the susceptibility of
N non interacting Kohn-Sham reference electrons. We show how this
susceptibility can be calculated N times faster within finite precision. By
itself or in combination with previous methods, this should facilitate the
calculation of TDDFT response and optical spectra of hybrid systems.Comment: submitted 25/1/200
Rydberg transition frequencies from the Local Density Approximation
A method is given that extracts accurate Rydberg excitations from LDA density
functional calculations, despite the short-ranged potential. For the case of He
and Ne, the asymptotic quantum defects predicted by LDA are in less than 5%
error, yielding transition frequency errors of less than 0.1eV.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
A joint time-dependent density-functional theory for excited states of electronic systems in solution
We present a novel joint time-dependent density-functional theory for the
description of solute-solvent systems in time-dependent external potentials.
Starting with the exact quantum-mechanical action functional for both electrons
and nuclei, we systematically eliminate solvent degrees of freedom and thus
arrive at coarse-grained action functionals which retain the highly accurate
\emph{ab initio} description for the solute and are, in principle, exact. This
procedure allows us to examine approximations underlying popular embedding
theories for excited states. Finally, we introduce a novel approximate action
functional for the solute-water system and compute the solvato-chromic shift of
the lowest singlet excited state of formaldehyde in aqueous solution, which is
in good agreement with experimental findings.Comment: 11 page
A new and efficient approach to time-dependent density-functional perturbation theory for optical spectroscopy
Using a super-operator formulation of linearized time-dependent
density-functional theory, the dynamical polarizability of a system of
interacting electrons is given a matrix continued-fraction representation whose
coefficients can be obtained from the non-symmetric block-Lanczos method. The
resulting algorithm allows for the calculation of the {\em full spectrum} of a
system with a computational workload which is only a few times larger than that
needed for {\em static} polarizabilities within time-independent
density-functional perturbation theory. The method is demonstrated with the
calculation of the spectrum of benzene, and prospects for its application to
the large-scale calculation of optical spectra are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Spin gaps and spin-flip energies in density-functional theory
Energy gaps are crucial aspects of the electronic structure of finite and
extended systems. Whereas much is known about how to define and calculate
charge gaps in density-functional theory (DFT), and about the relation between
these gaps and derivative discontinuities of the exchange-correlation
functional, much less is know about spin gaps. In this paper we give
density-functional definitions of spin-conserving gaps, spin-flip gaps and the
spin stiffness in terms of many-body energies and in terms of single-particle
(Kohn-Sham) energies. Our definitions are as analogous as possible to those
commonly made in the charge case, but important differences between spin and
charge gaps emerge already on the single-particle level because unlike the
fundamental charge gap spin gaps involve excited-state energies. Kohn-Sham and
many-body spin gaps are predicted to differ, and the difference is related to
derivative discontinuities that are similar to, but distinct from, those
usually considered in the case of charge gaps. Both ensemble DFT and
time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) can be used to calculate these spin discontinuities
from a suitable functional. We illustrate our findings by evaluating our
definitions for the Lithium atom, for which we calculate spin gaps and spin
discontinuities by making use of near-exact Kohn-Sham eigenvalues and,
independently, from the single-pole approximation to TDDFT. The many-body
corrections to the Kohn-Sham spin gaps are found to be negative, i.e., single
particle calculations tend to overestimate spin gaps while they underestimate
charge gaps.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, 3 table
Time-dependent Density Functional calculation of e-H scattering
Phase shifts for single-channel elastic electron-atom scattering are derived
from time-dependent density functional theory. The H ion is placed in a
spherical box, its discrete spectrum found, and phase shifts deduced.
Exact-exchange yields an excellent approximation to the ground-state Kohn-Sham
potential, while the adiabatic local density approximation yields good singlet
and triplet phase shifts.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
- …