The incomplete basis‐set problem. V. Application of CIBS to many‐electron systems

1982 ◽  
Vol 77 (6) ◽  
pp. 3068-3080 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith McDowell ◽  
Lynn Lewis
Keyword(s):  
2005 ◽  
Vol 70 (7) ◽  
pp. 979-1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leszek Z. Stolarczyk

The Hodge operator ("star" operator) plays an important role in the theory of differential forms, where it serves as a tool for the switching between the exterior derivative and co-derivative. In the theory of many-electron systems involving a finite-dimensional fermionic Fock space, one can define the Hodge operator as a unique (i.e., invariant with respect to linear transformations of the spin-orbital basis set) antilinear operator. The similarity transformation based on the Hodge operator results in the switching between the fermion creation and annihilation operators. The present paper gives a self-contained account on the algebraic structures which are necessary for the construction of the Hodge operator: the fermionic Fock space, the corresponding Grassmann algebra, and the generalized creation and annihilation operators. The Hodge operator is then defined, and its properties are reviewed. It is shown how the notion of the Hodge operator can be employed in a construction of the electronic time-reversal operator.


2020 ◽  
Vol 89 (10) ◽  
pp. 104704
Author(s):  
Hiroaki Kusunose ◽  
Rikuto Oiwa ◽  
Satoru Hayami
Keyword(s):  

2000 ◽  
Vol 77 (11) ◽  
pp. 835-845 ◽  
Author(s):  
GWF Drake ◽  
S P Goldman

A new method is presented for the calculation of the mean excitation energy (Bethe logarithm) for helium and other two-electron systems. The method requires only a single matrix diagonalization within a correlated Hylleraas basis set extended to contain a wide range of distance scales. High-precision results are obtained for the ground states of Ps—and H—, and all the S- and P-states of heliumlike ions up to n = 5, including finite mass corrections. The results are used to calculate revised values for the quantum electrodynamic shifts for helium, and a comparison with experiment is presented.PACS Nos.: 31.15Pf, 31.30Jv, and 32.10Hq


2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (8) ◽  
pp. 684
Author(s):  
Hamid Al-Jibbouri

Within the KaKB, KaLa, and KBLa shells in the position space, the properties of a series of three-electron systems, for instance, B+2, C+3, and N+4 ions, have been studied. This required the partitioning of the two-particle space-spin density and was explicit for the Hartree–Fock description which have been proposed by considering a basis set based on single-zeta B-type orbitals (BTOs). The one- and two-body radial electronic densities R(r1), R(r1, r2), moments ⟨rn1⟩, X-ray form factor F(s), nucleus density R(0), nuclear magnetic shielding constant qd, and the diamagnetic susceptibility бs in the position space are reported. Our results are realized via the Mathematica program and compared with previous theoretical values in the literature.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 2197-2221
Author(s):  
Theraviyum Chithambarathanu ◽  
M. Darathi ◽  
J. DaisyMagdaline ◽  
S. Gunasekaran

The molecular vibrations of Trichloro isocyanuric acid (C3Cl3N3O3) and Trithio cyanuric acid (C3H3N3S3) have been investigated in polycrystalline sample at room temperature by Fourier Transform Infrared (FT-IR) and FT-Raman spectroscopies in the region 4000-450 cm-1 and 4000-50 cm-1 respectively, which provide a wealth of structural information about the molecules. The spectra are interpreted with the aid of normal co-ordinate analysis following full structure optimization and force field calculations based on density functional theory   (DFT) using standard B3LYP / 6-311++ G (d, p) basis set for investigating the structural and spectroscopic properties. The vibrational frequencies are calculated and the scaled values are compared with experimental FT-IR and FT-Raman spectra. The scaled theoretical wave numbers shows very good agreement with experimental ones. The complete vibrational assignments are performed on the basis of potential energy distribution (PED) of vibrational modes, calculated with scaled quantum (SQM) method. Stability of the molecule arising from hyper conjugative interactions, charge delocalization has been analyzed using natural bond orbital (NBO) analysis. The results show that change in electron density (ED) in σ* and π* anti-bonding orbitals and second order delocalization   energy (E2) confirm the occurrence of Intra molecular Charge Transfer (ICT) within the molecule. The thermodynamic properties like heat capacity, entropy, enthalpy and zero point energy have been calculated for the molecule. The frontier molecular orbitals have been visualized and the HOMO-LUMO energy gap has been calculated. The Molecular Electrostatic Potential (MEP) analysis reveals the sites for electrophilic attack and nucleophilic reactions in the molecule.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatiana Woller ◽  
Ambar Banerjee ◽  
Nitai Sylvetsky ◽  
Xavier Deraet ◽  
Frank De Proft ◽  
...  

<p>Expanded porphyrins provide a versatile route to molecular switching devices due to their ability to shift between several π-conjugation topologies encoding distinct properties. Taking into account its size and huge conformational flexibility, DFT remains the workhorse for modeling such extended macrocycles. Nevertheless, the stability of Hückel and Möbius conformers depends on a complex interplay of different factors, such as hydrogen bonding, p···p stacking, steric effects, ring strain and electron delocalization. As a consequence, the selection of an exchange-correlation functional for describing the energy profile of topological switches is very difficult. For these reasons, we have examined the performance of a variety of wavefunction methods and density functionals for describing the thermochemistry and kinetics of topology interconversions across a wide range of macrocycles. Especially for hexa- and heptaphyrins, the Möbius structures have a pronouncedly stronger degree of static correlation than the Hückel and figure-eight structures, and as a result the relative energies of singly-twisted structures are a challenging test for electronic structure methods. Comparison of limited orbital space full CI calculations with CCSD(T) calculations within the same active spaces shows that post-CCSD(T) correlation contributions to relative energies are very minor. At the same time, relative energies are weakly sensitive to further basis set expansion, as proven by the minor energy differences between MP2/cc-pVDZ and explicitly correlated MP2-F12/cc-pVDZ-F12 calculations. Hence, our CCSD(T) reference values are reasonably well-converged in both 1-particle and n-particle spaces. While conventional MP2 and MP3 yield very poor results, SCS-MP2 and particularly SOS-MP2 and SCS-MP3 agree to better than 1 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup> with the CCSD(T) relative energies. Regarding DFT methods, only M06-2X provides relative errors close to chemical accuracy with a RMSD of 1.2 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup>. While the original DSD-PBEP86 double hybrid performs fairly poorly for these extended p-systems, the errors drop down to 2 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup> for the revised revDSD-PBEP86-NL, again showing that same-spin MP2-like correlation has a detrimental impact on performance like the SOS-MP2 results. </p>


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