scholarly journals Electronic non-adiabatic states: towards a density functional theory beyond the Born–Oppenheimer approximation

Author(s):  
Nikitas I. Gidopoulos ◽  
E. K. U. Gross

A novel treatment of non-adiabatic couplings is proposed. The derivation is based on a theorem by Hunter stating that the wave function of the complete system of electrons and nuclei can be written, without approximation, as a Born–Oppenheimer (BO)-type product of a nuclear wave function, X ( R ), and an electronic one, Φ R ( r ), which depends parametrically on the nuclear configuration R . From the variational principle, we deduce formally exact equations for Φ R ( r ) and X ( R ). The algebraic structure of the exact nuclear equation coincides with the corresponding one in the adiabatic approximation. The electronic equation, however, contains terms not appearing in the adiabatic case, which couple the electronic and the nuclear wave functions and account for the electron–nuclear correlation beyond the BO level. It is proposed that these terms can be incorporated using an optimized local effective potential.

1996 ◽  
Vol 06 (04) ◽  
pp. 437-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. BOKANOWSKI ◽  
B. GREBERT

A general way to decompose an antisymmetric wave function into its density function and a wave function of a given density is proposed. Its usefulness for molecular quantum chemistry is discussed, in particular in the context of density functional theory.


Author(s):  
John A. Tossell ◽  
David J. Vaughan

In this chapter, the most important quantum-mechanical methods that can be applied to geological materials are described briefly. The approach used follows that of modern quantum-chemistry textbooks rather than being a historical account of the development of quantum theory and the derivation of the Schrödinger equation from the classical wave equation. The latter approach may serve as a better introduction to the field for those readers with a more limited theoretical background and has recently been well presented in a chapter by McMillan and Hess (1988), which such readers are advised to study initially. Computational aspects of quantum chemistry are also well treated by Hinchliffe (1988). In the section that follows this introduction, the fundamentals of the quantum mechanics of molecules are presented first; that is, the “localized” side of Fig. 1.1 is examined, basing the discussion on that of Levine (1983), a standard quantum-chemistry text. Details of the calculation of molecular wave functions using the standard Hartree-Fock methods are then discussed, drawing upon Schaefer (1972), Szabo and Ostlund (1989), and Hehre et al. (1986), particularly in the discussion of the agreement between calculated versus experimental properties as a function of the size of the expansion basis set. Improvements on the Hartree-Fock wave function using configuration-interaction (CI) or many-body perturbation theory (MBPT), evaluation of properties from Hartree-Fock wave functions, and approximate Hartree-Fock methods are then discussed. The focus then shifts to the “delocalized” side of Fig. 1.1, first discussing Hartree-Fock band-structure studies, that is, calculations in which the full translational symmetry of a solid is exploited rather than the point-group symmetry of a molecule. A good general reference for such studies is Ashcroft and Mermin (1976). Density-functional theory is then discussed, based on a review by von Barth (1986), and including both the multiple-scattering self-consistent-field Xα method (MS-SCF-Xα) and more accurate basis-function-density-functional approaches. We then describe the success of these methods in calculations on molecules and molecular clusters. Advances in density-functional band theory are then considered, with a presentation based on Srivastava and Weaire (1987). A discussion of the purely theoretical modified electron-gas ionic models is followed by discussion of empirical simulation, and we conclude by mentioning a recent approach incorporating density-functional theory and molecular dynamics (Car and Parrinello, 1985).


2010 ◽  
Vol 88 (8) ◽  
pp. 858-865 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Jaque ◽  
José V. Correa ◽  
Frank De Proft ◽  
Alejandro Toro-Labbé ◽  
Paul Geerlings

In our continuous effort to retrieve the Woodward–Hoffmann rules from conceptual density functional theory (DFT), we have examined the last type of pericyclic reactions, i.e., chelotropic reactions. Both the initial hardness response and the dual descriptor have been investigated to predict the allowed and forbidden character for the addition of SO2 to butadiene (4n system) and 1,3,5-hexatriene (4n + 2 system). It is shown that with both electronic descriptors, the conrotatory/disrotatory mode for the linear and nonlinear mechanisms are retrieved based on a density-only approach, free from consideration of orbital and (or) wave function symmetry. The dual descriptor moreover reveals that stabilizing interactions are presented only for the linear path, which can be considered as an overall favourable mechanism for a chelotropic reaction.


2016 ◽  
Vol 230 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcin Makowski ◽  
Martyna Hanas

AbstractThe performance of exchange-correlation functionals for the description of atomic excitations is investigated. A benchmark set of excited states is constructed and experimental data is compared to Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory (TDDFT) calculations. The benchmark results show that for the selected group of functionals good accuracy may be achieved and the quality of predictions provided is competitive to computationally more demanding coupled-cluster approaches. Apart from testing the standard TDDFT approaches, also the role of self-interaction error plaguing DFT calculations and the adiabatic approximation to the exchange-correlation kernels is given some insight.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 2399-2413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel O. Odoh ◽  
Giovanni Li Manni ◽  
Rebecca K. Carlson ◽  
Donald G. Truhlar ◽  
Laura Gagliardi

Here we present the separated-pair approximation for wave function theory and show that it performs almost as well as the more demanding complete active space approximation. We show that the combination of an SP wave function with an on-top density functional yields comparable accuracy to CASPT2 at a small fraction of the cost.


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