397 research outputs found

    Linearized Coupled Cluster Correction on the Antisymmetric Product of 1 reference orbital Geminals

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    We present a Linearized Coupled Cluster (LCC) correction based on an Antisymmetric Product of 1 reference orbital Geminals (AP1roG) reference state. In our LCC ansatz, the cluster operator is restricted to double and to single and double excitations as in standard single-reference CC theory. The performance of the AP1roG-LCC models is tested for the dissociation of diatomic molecules (C2_2 and F2_2), spectroscopic constants of the uranyl cation (UO22+_2^{2+}), and the symmetric dissociation of the H50_{50} hydrogen chain. Our study indicates that an LCC correction based on an AP1roG reference function is more robust and reliable than corrections based on perturbation theory, yielding spectroscopic constants that are in very good agreement with theoretical reference data.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure

    A simple algorithm for the Kohn-Sham inversion problem applicable to general target densities

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    A simple algorithm for the Kohn-Sham inversion problem is presented. The method is found to converge toward a nearby v-representable Kohn-Sham density irrespective of the fact whether the initial target density has been v-representable or not. For the proposed procedure, the target density can be of general nature. The algorithm can handle Hartree-Fock and post-Hartree-Fock, spin-unpolarized and polarized states equally well. Additionally, experimental densities and even general gedanken densities can be treated. The algorithm is easy to implement and does not require an additional procedure to adjust eigenvalues

    CheMPS2: a free open-source spin-adapted implementation of the density matrix renormalization group for ab initio quantum chemistry

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    The density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) has become an indispensable numerical tool to find exact eigenstates of finite-size quantum systems with strong correlation. In the fields of condensed matter, nuclear structure and molecular electronic structure, it has significantly extended the system sizes that can be handled compared to full configuration interaction, without losing numerical accuracy. For quantum chemistry (QC), the most efficient implementations of DMRG require the incorporation of particle number, spin and point group symmetries in the underlying matrix product state (MPS) ansatz, as well as the use of so-called complementary operators. The symmetries introduce a sparse block structure in the MPS ansatz and in the intermediary contracted tensors. If a symmetry is non-abelian, the Wigner-Eckart theorem allows to factorize a tensor into a Clebsch-Gordan coefficient and a reduced tensor. In addition, the fermion signs have to be carefully tracked. Because of these challenges, implementing DMRG efficiently for QC is not straightforward. Efficient and freely available implementations are therefore highly desired. In this work we present CheMPS2, our free open-source spin-adapted implementation of DMRG for ab initio QC. Around CheMPS2, we have implemented the augmented Hessian Newton-Raphson complete active space self-consistent field method, with exact Hessian. The bond dissociation curves of the 12 lowest states of the carbon dimer were obtained at the DMRG(28 orbitals, 12 electrons, DSU(2)_{\mathsf{SU(2)}}=2500)/cc-pVDZ level of theory. The contribution of 1s1s core correlation to the X1Σg+X^1\Sigma_g^+ bond dissociation curve of the carbon dimer was estimated by comparing energies at the DMRG(36o, 12e, DSU(2)_{\mathsf{SU(2)}}=2500)/cc-pCVDZ and DMRG-SCF(34o, 8e, DSU(2)_{\mathsf{SU(2)}}=2500)/cc-pCVDZ levels of theory.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figure

    Robust methods for predicting the transition states of chemical reactions: new approaches that focus on key coordinates

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    A new method for optimizing transition state and minima structures using redundant internal coordinates is presented. The new method is innovative because it allows the user to select a few key reduced coordinates, whose Hessian components will be accurately computed by finite differencing; the remaining elements of the Hessian are approximated with a quasi-Newton method. Usually the reduced coordinates are the coordinates that are involved in bond breaking/forming. In order to develop this method, several other innovations were made, including ways to (a) select the key reduced coordinates automatically, (b) guess the transition state quickly and efficiently, (c) choose dihedrals so that the “linear angle problem” is avoided, (d) robustly convert redundant internal coordinates to Cartesian coordinates. These, and other technical developments (e.g., new quasi-Newton Hessians, new trust-radius updates), were validated using a database of 7000 initial transition-state guesses for a diverse set of 140 chemical reactions

    Foundation for the {\Delta}SCF Approach in Density Functional Theory

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    We extend ground-state density-functional theory to excited states and provide the theoretical formulation for the widely used ΔSCF\Delta SCF method for calculating excited-state energies and densities. As the electron density alone is insufficient to characterize excited states, we formulate excited-state theory using the defining variables of a noninteracting reference system, namely (1) the excitation quantum number nsn_{s} and the potential ws(r)w_{s}(\mathbf{r}) (excited-state potential-functional theory, nnPFT), (2) the noninteracting wavefunction Φ\Phi (Φ\Phi-functional theory, Φ\PhiFT), or (3) the noninteracting one-electron reduced density matrix γs(r,r)\gamma_{s}(\mathbf{r},\mathbf{r}') (density-matrix-functional theory, γs\gamma_{s}FT). We show the equivalence of these three sets of variables and their corresponding energy functionals. Importantly, the ground and excited-state exchange-correlation energy use the \textit{same} universal functional, regardless of whether (ns,ws(r))\left(n_{s},w_{s}(\boldsymbol{r})\right), Φ\Phi, or γs(r,r)\gamma_{s}(\mathbf{r},\mathbf{r}') is selected as the fundamental descriptor of the system. We derive the excited-state (generalized) Kohn-Sham equations. The minimum of all three functionals is the ground-state energy and, for ground states, they are all equivalent to the Hohenberg-Kohn-Sham method. The other stationary points of the functionals provide the excited-state energies and electron densities, establishing the foundation for the ΔSCF\Delta SCF method
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