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1.
J Chem Phys ; 149(11): 114108, 2018 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30243273

ABSTRACT

A spin adapted configuration interaction scheme is proposed for the evaluation of ionization potentials in α high spin open shell reference functions. There are three different ways to remove an electron from such a reference, including the removal of an alpha or a beta electron from doubly occupied or an alpha electron from singly occupied molecular orbitals. Ionization operators are constructed for each of these cases, and the resulting second quantized expressions are implemented using an automated code generator environment. To achieve greater computational efficiency, the virtual space is reduced using an averaged pair natural orbital machinery developed earlier and applied with great success in the calculation of X-ray absorption spectra [D. Manganas et al., J. Chem. Phys. A 122, 1215 (2018)]. Various approximate integral evaluation schemes including the resolution of identity and seminumerical techniques are also invoked to further enhance the computational efficiency. Although the resulting method is not particularly accurate in terms of predicting absolute energy values, with a simple shift in the ionization potentials, it is still possible to use it for the qualitative characterization of the basic features of X-ray photoionization spectra. While satellite intensities cannot be computed with the current method, the inclusion of vibrational effects using a path integral technique allows for the computation of vibrational transitions corresponding to main peaks.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 147(17): 174104, 2017 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29117690

ABSTRACT

The similarity transformed equation of motion coupled-cluster approach is extended for applications to high-spin open-shell systems, within the unrestricted Hartree-Fock (UHF) formalism. An automatic active space selection scheme has also been implemented such that calculations can be performed in a black-box fashion. It is observed that both the canonical and automatic active space selecting similarity transformed equation of motion (STEOM) approaches perform about as well as the more expensive equation of motion coupled-cluster singles doubles (EOM-CCSD) method for the calculation of the excitation energies of doublet radicals. The automatic active space selecting UHF STEOM approach can therefore be employed as a viable, lower scaling alternative to UHF EOM-CCSD for the calculation of excited states in high-spin open-shell systems.

3.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 12(1): 114-32, 2016 Jan 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26614092

ABSTRACT

In this work, several variations of the multireference equation of motion (MR-EOM) methodology are investigated for the calculation of excitation spectra. These variants of MR-EOM are characterized by the following aspects: (1) the operators included in the sequence of similarity transformations of the molecular electronic Hamiltonian, (2) whether permutational symmetries (i.e., hermitization, vertex symmetry) are imposed on the final elements of the similarity-transformed Hamiltonian, (3) the size of the manifold over which the similarity-transformed Hamiltonian is diagonalized, (4) whether the two-body cumulant is included in the expressions defining the amplitudes and the elements of the transformed Hamiltonian. The MR-EOM methods are benchmarked for the calculation of the excitation energies of a test set of organic molecules. With the availability of reliable benchmark data for this test set, it is possible to gauge the relative accuracy of these approaches. We also further examine a subset of the MR-EOM methods for the calculation of the excitation energies of some transition-metal complexes. These systems prove to be particularly difficult for single-reference coupled-cluster methods.

4.
J Chem Phys ; 142(19): 194111, 2015 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26001451

ABSTRACT

This paper presents the first application of the multireference equation of motion coupled-cluster (MR-EOMCC) approach to the calculation and characterization of excitation energies of transition metal complexes. The calculated MR-EOM excitation energies are compared with experimental UV/Vis. band maxima, Brueckner based similarity transformed equation of motion (STEOM) calculations and Brueckner based equation of motion coupled cluster (EOM-CCSD(T)) calculations, as well as results calculated with other methods from the literature. The agreement of the excitation energies with experiment is found to be reasonable, and suitable rationalization is given for the discrepancies. An orbital selection scheme is introduced, which can be employed to extend the applicability of the MR-EOMCC methodology to considerably larger systems.

5.
J Chem Phys ; 140(8): 081102, 2014 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24588141

ABSTRACT

The novel multireference equation-of-motion coupled-cluster (MREOM-CC) approaches provide versatile and accurate access to a large number of electronic states. The methods proceed by a sequence of many-body similarity transformations and a subsequent diagonalization of the transformed Hamiltonian over a compact subspace. The transformed Hamiltonian is a connected entity and preserves spin- and spatial symmetry properties of the original Hamiltonian, but is no longer Hermitean. The final diagonalization spaces are defined in terms of a complete active space (CAS) and limited excitations (1h, 1p, 2h, …) out of the CAS. The methods are invariant to rotations of orbitals within their respective subspaces (inactive, active, external). Applications to first row transition metal atoms (Cr, Mn, and Fe) are presented yielding results for up to 524 electronic states (for Cr) with an rms error compared to experiment of about 0.05 eV. The accuracy of the MREOM family of methods is closely related to its favorable extensivity properties as illustrated by calculations on the O2-O2 dimer. The computational costs of the transformation steps in MREOM are comparable to those of closed-shell Coupled Cluster Singles and Doubles (CCSD) approach.

6.
J Chem Phys ; 136(6): 064101, 2012 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22360163

ABSTRACT

We have recently introduced a parameterized coupled-cluster singles and doubles model (pCCSD(α, ß)) that consists of a bivariate parameterization of the CCSD equations and is inspired by the coupled electron pair approximations. In our previous work, it was demonstrated that the pCCSD(-1, 1) method is an improvement over CCSD for the calculation of geometries, harmonic frequencies, and potential energy surfaces for single bond-breaking. In this paper, we find suitable pCCSD parameters for applications in reaction thermochemistry and thermochemical kinetics. The motivation is to develop an accurate and economical methodology that, when coupled with a robust local correlation framework based on localized pair natural orbitals, is suitable for large-scale thermochemical applications for sizeable molecular systems. It is demonstrated that the original pCCSD(-1, 1) method and several other pCCSD methods are a significant improvement upon the standard CCSD approach and that these methods often approach the accuracy of CCSD(T) for the calculation of reaction energies and barrier heights. We also show that a local version of the pCCSD methodology, implemented within the local pair natural orbital (LPNO) based CCSD code in ORCA, is sufficiently accurate for wide-scale chemical applications. The LPNO based methodology allows us for routine applications to intermediate sized (20-100 atoms) molecular systems and is a significantly more accurate alternative to MP2 and density functional theory for the prediction of reaction energies and barrier heights.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Models, Chemical , Thermodynamics , Algorithms , Electrons , Hydrogenation , Quantum Theory
7.
J Chem Phys ; 133(18): 184109, 2010 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21073215

ABSTRACT

The primary characteristics of single reference coupled-cluster (CC) theory are size-extensivity and size-consistency, invariance under orbital rotations of the occupied or virtual space, the exactness of CC theory for N electron systems when the cluster operator is truncated to N-tuple excitations, and the relative insensitivity of CC theory to the choice of the reference determinant. In this work, we propose a continuous class of methods which display the desirable features of the coupled-cluster approach with single and double excitations (CCSD). These methods are closely related to the CCSD method itself and are inspired by the coupled electron pair approximation (CEPA). It is demonstrated that one can systematically improve upon CCSD and obtain geometries, harmonic vibrational frequencies, and total energies from a parameterized version of CCSD or pCCSD(α,ß) by selecting a specific member from this continuous family of approaches. In particular, one finds that one such approach, the pCCSD(-1,1) method, is a significant improvement over CCSD for the calculation of equilibrium structures and harmonic frequencies. Moreover, this method behaves surprisingly well in the calculation of potential energy surfaces for single bond dissociation. It appears that this methodology has significant promise for chemical applications and may be particularly useful in applications to larger molecules within the framework of a high accuracy local correlation approach.

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