Even‐tempered atomic orbitals. II. Atomic SCF wavefunctions in terms of even‐tempered exponential bases

1973 ◽  
Vol 59 (11) ◽  
pp. 5936-5949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard C. Raffenetti
Author(s):  
Xudong Weng ◽  
O.F. Sankey ◽  
Peter Rez

Single electron band structure techniques have been applied successfully to the interpretation of the near edge structures of metals and other materials. Among various band theories, the linear combination of atomic orbital (LCAO) method is especially simple and interpretable. The commonly used empirical LCAO method is mainly an interpolation method, where the energies and wave functions of atomic orbitals are adjusted in order to fit experimental or more accurately determined electron states. To achieve better accuracy, the size of calculation has to be expanded, for example, to include excited states and more-distant-neighboring atoms. This tends to sacrifice the simplicity and interpretability of the method.In this paper. we adopt an ab initio scheme which incorporates the conceptual advantage of the LCAO method with the accuracy of ab initio pseudopotential calculations. The so called pscudo-atomic-orbitals (PAO's), computed from a free atom within the local-density approximation and the pseudopotential approximation, are used as the basis of expansion, replacing the usually very large set of plane waves in the conventional pseudopotential method. These PAO's however, do not consist of a rigorously complete set of orthonormal states.


The construction of spin eigenfunctions and the evaluation of matrix elements between ,them are discussed generally in preparation for a development of the valence bond (VB) theory along the lines indicated in I. The customary approximation of considering explicitly only the electrons outside a ‘closed shell’ is shown to be defensible. The reformulation of the VB theory is now straightforward, but its final description of bonding is quite new. Atomic orbitals (AO’s) are replaced, whenever they appear, by orthogonalized atomic orbitals (AO’s); but when the assumptions of the conventional theory are rigorously validated in this way the ‘covalent’ structures (now ‘VB’ structures) are found, quite generally, to indicate only strong repulsion between the ‘bonded’ atoms, and formal descriptions of bonding and of bond orders, in terms of ‘spin-pairing’, become nonsensical. Bonding can be described only by admitting into the wave functions polar VB structures; a bond between two atoms demands the appearance (with considerable weight) of pairs of structures differing by a ‘charge hop’ between the atoms concerned. The conventional VB structures are found to be equivalent to certain groupings of VB structures (non-polar and polar) and do, indeed, predict bonds between spin-paired atoms and repulsion between the atoms of different pairs. It is then possible to make full use of chemical intuition, using a plausible combination of conventional structures as a starting approximation in the more rigorous theory. A numerical illustration is provided by a discussion of the Kekulé structures of benzene. Some important characteristics of energy calculations in the VB theory are pointed out. Quantities of intra - and inter -atomic origin are well separated, and the method is apparently well suited to development along either ab initio or empirical lines.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1049 ◽  
pp. 012016
Author(s):  
L S Ang ◽  
S S M Fauzi ◽  
M Umi Hanim ◽  
A Amin Zhafran ◽  
M N N Najwa-Alyani

1975 ◽  
Vol 63 (11) ◽  
pp. 5066-5066 ◽  
Author(s):  
John O. Eaves ◽  
Saul T. Epstein
Keyword(s):  

2003 ◽  
Vol 637 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey A. Toropov ◽  
Alla P. Toropova

Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (14) ◽  
pp. 4227
Author(s):  
Alessandro Cossard ◽  
Silvia Casassa ◽  
Carlo Gatti ◽  
Jacques K. Desmarais ◽  
Alessandro Erba

The chemistry of f-electrons in lanthanide and actinide materials is yet to be fully rationalized. Quantum-mechanical simulations can provide useful complementary insight to that obtained from experiments. The quantum theory of atoms in molecules and crystals (QTAIMAC), through thorough topological analysis of the electron density (often complemented by that of its Laplacian) constitutes a general and robust theoretical framework to analyze chemical bonding features from a computed wave function. Here, we present the extension of the Topond module (previously limited to work in terms of s-, p- and d-type basis functions only) of the Crystal program to f- and g-type basis functions within the linear combination of atomic orbitals (LCAO) approach. This allows for an effective QTAIMAC analysis of chemical bonding of lanthanide and actinide materials. The new implemented algorithms are applied to the analysis of the spatial distribution of the electron density and its Laplacian of the cesium uranyl chloride, Cs2UO2Cl4, crystal. Discrepancies between the present theoretical description of chemical bonding and that obtained from a previously reconstructed electron density by experimental X-ray diffraction are illustrated and discussed.


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