Towards Efficient and Accurate Description of Many-electron Problems

Towards Efficient and Accurate Description of Many-electron Problems

Author: Feizhi Ding

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13:

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Understanding electronic behavior in molecular and nano-scale systems is fundamental to the development and design of novel technologies and materials for application in a variety of scientific contexts from fundamental research to energy conversion. This dissertation aims to provide insights into this goal by developing novel methods and applications of first-principle electronic structure theory. Specifically, we will present new methods and applications of excited state multi-electron dynamics based on the real-time (RT) time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) and time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) formalism, and new development of the multi-configuration self-consist field theory (MCSCF) for modeling ground-state electronic structure. The RT-TDHF/TDDFT based developments and applications can be categorized into three broad and coherently integrated research areas: (1) modeling of the interaction between moleculars and external electromagnetic perturbations. In this part we will first prove both analytically and numerically the gauge invariance of the TDHF/TDDFT formalisms, then we will present a novel, efficient method for calculating molecular nonlinear optical properties, and last we will study quantum coherent plasmon in metal namowires using RT-TDDFT; (2) modeling of excited-state charge transfer in molecules. In this part, we will investigate the mechanisms of bridge-mediated electron transfer, and then we will introduce a newly developed non-equilibrium quantum/continuum embedding method for studying charge transfer dynamics in solution; (3) developments of first-principles spin-dependent many-electron dynamics. In this part, we will present an {ab initio} non-relativistic spin dynamics method based on the two-component generalized Hartree-Fock approach, and then we will generalized it to the two-component TDDFT framework and combine it with the Ehrenfest molecular dynamics approach for modeling the interaction between electron spins and nuclear motion. All these developments and applications will open up new computational and theoretical tools to be applied to the development and understanding of chemical reactions, nonlinear optics, electromagnetism, and spintronics. Lastly, we present a new algorithm for large-scale MCSCF calculations that can utilize massively parallel machines while still maintaining optimal performance for each single processor. This will great improve the efficiency in the MCSCF calculations for studying chemical dissociation and high-accuracy quantum-mechanical simulations.


Brillouin-Wigner Methods for Many-Body Systems

Brillouin-Wigner Methods for Many-Body Systems

Author: Stephen Wilson

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2009-12-01

Total Pages: 235

ISBN-13: 9048133734

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Brillouin-Wigner Methods for Many-Body Systems gives an introduction to many-body methods in electronic structure theory for the graduate student and post-doctoral researcher. It provides researchers in many-body physics and theoretical chemistry with an account of Brillouin-Wigner methodology as it has been developed in recent years to handle the multireference correlation problem. Moreover, the frontiers of this research field are defined. This volume is of interest to atomic and molecular physicists, physical chemists and chemical physicists, quantum chemists and condensed matter theorists, computational chemists and applied mathematicians.


Towards Accurate and Efficient Description of Excited States

Towards Accurate and Efficient Description of Excited States

Author: Bo Peng

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 130

ISBN-13:

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The microscopic and molecular-level characterization and understanding of excited states properties and dynamics plays an important role in modern scientic research. Tremendous examples can be found in photovoltaics, photocatalysis, spintronics, and plasmonics. Over the past several decades, despite progress towards this direction through experimental approaches, such as crystallography and spectroscopy, it is important to realize that many chemical transformations, especially when associated with excited states, are still dicult to be precisely detected and accurately characterized in experiments. One typical example is optically forbidden (dark) states, which are experimentally barely accessible, but very often determine the excited state dynamics. Fortunately, quantum chemical calculations of such excited states are usually able to provide accurate and predictive information, and do indeed contribute to the fundamental understanding of excited state properties and dynamics. To describe excited states properly with quantum mechanics, essentially, one needs to adopt a quantum chemical method that is able to describe electron correlations towards "chemical accuracy" (1 kcal/mol). Among all available quantum chemical methods, the density functional theory/time-dependent density functional theory (DFT/TDDFT) are extremely popular. Their favorable trade-off between accuracy and computational cost has made them standard technique in most branches of chemistry and materials science. However, DFT/TDDFT results depend on the specic exchange-correlation (XC) functional adopted. The wave-function-based ab initio methods, on the other hand, can be systematically improved to provide reliable results. A typical example is the coupled-cluster (CC) model, in which various correlation effects can be categorized according to the rank of excitations included in the approximate form of the cluster and excitation operators, and its accuracy can then be systematically improved by including higher excitations explicitly or perturbatively. In particular, the CC model with single and double excitations corrected by perturbative triples, a.k.a. CCSD(T), has been recognized as the "gold standard" for computational chemistry. However, these wave-function-based methods always suffered from very high computational cost (e.g. the canonical procedure of CCSD(T) scales as O(N7) with N the number of basis functions representing system size), which precludes them from being applied to large systems. The main objective of this work is to develop quantum chemical methods that provide better trade-off between accuracy and eciency for the description of electron correlations in some electron excitation scenarios where conventional methods may encounter problems. Several newly developed approximations and algorithms based on DFT, TDDFT, and CC will be presented in the following chapters. The applications of these methods include the computations of excitation energy, excited state wave function, and excited state dynamics. The structure of this thesis is as follows. In Chapter 1, the theoretical background of quantum chemical methods for the study of excited states is given. The emphasis is on DFT, TDDFT and CC. Chapter 2 describes a guided self-consistent-field (SCF) method developed in this work. The working procedure of this method is presented within DFT framework. The application of this method to the computation of the d-d transition energies in some metal complexes is discussed. In Chapter 3, a factorization method is introduced to deal with states coupling driven by pure electron-electron interaction. In combination with DFT and TDDFT technique, its application in estimating the transition rate of a spin- fliped Auger process in large CdSe quantum dots is discussed. Chapter 4 discusses the real-time TDDFT method. The case study is focusing on the exciton dynamics in a two-silver-atomic-chain prototype system that goes beyond the capability of canonical models of electronic energy transfer. In Chapter 5 a variant of the equation-of-motion CC (EOM-CC) method aiming at solving interior eigenpairs of the EOM Hamiltonian matrix is discussed. A benchmark of this method is done by computing the K-edge core excitation energies of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur in some molecules.


Chemical Modelling

Chemical Modelling

Author: Alan Hinchliffe

Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry

Published: 2007-10-31

Total Pages: 525

ISBN-13: 1847553311

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Chemical Modelling: Applications and Theory comprises critical literature reviews of molecular modelling, both theoretical and applied. Molecular modelling in this context refers to modelling the structure, properties and reactions of atoms, molecules & materials. Each chapter is compiled by experts in their fields and provides a selective review of recent literature. With chemical modelling covering such a wide range of subjects, this Specialist Periodical Report serves as the first port of call to any chemist, biochemist, materials scientist or molecular physicist needing to acquaint themselves of major developments in the area. Specialist Periodical Reports provide systematic and detailed review coverage in major areas of chemical research. Compiled by teams of leading authorities in the relevant subject areas, the series creates a unique service for the active research chemist, with regular, in-depth accounts of progress in particular fields of chemistry. Subject coverage within different volumes of a given title is similar and publication is on an annual or biennial basis. Current subject areas covered are Amino Acids, Peptides and Proteins, Carbohydrate Chemistry, Catalysis, Chemical Modelling. Applications and Theory, Electron Paramagnetic Resonance, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Organometallic Chemistry. Organophosphorus Chemistry, Photochemistry and Spectroscopic Properties of Inorganic and Organometallic Compounds. From time to time, the series has altered according to the fluctuating degrees of activity in the various fields, but these volumes remain a superb reference point for researchers.


Advances in Quantum Chemistry

Advances in Quantum Chemistry

Author: John R. Sabin

Publisher: Gulf Professional Publishing

Published: 2003-01-13

Total Pages: 504

ISBN-13: 9780120348428

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Advances in Quantum Chemistry presents surveys of current developments in this rapidly developing field that falls between the historically established areas of mathematics, physics, chemistry, and biology. With invited reviews written by leading international researchers, each presenting new results, it provides a single vehicle for following progress in this interdisciplinary area.


Efficient and Accurate Treatment of Electron Correlations with Correlation Matrix Renormalization Theory

Efficient and Accurate Treatment of Electron Correlations with Correlation Matrix Renormalization Theory

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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We present an efficient method for calculating the electronic structure and total energy of strongly correlated electron systems. The method extends the traditional Gutzwiller approximation for one-particle operators to the evaluation of the expectation values of two particle operators in the many-electron Hamiltonian. The method is free of adjustable Coulomb parameters, and has no double counting issues in the calculation of total energy, and has the correct atomic limit. We demonstrate that the method describes well the bonding and dissociation behaviors of the hydrogen and nitrogen clusters, as well as the ammonia composed of hydrogen and nitrogen atoms. We also show that the method can satisfactorily tackle great challenging problems faced by the density functional theory recently discussed in the literature. The computational workload of our method is similar to the Hartree-Fock approach while the results are comparable to high-level quantum chemistry calculations.


Hot Carrier Degradation in Semiconductor Devices

Hot Carrier Degradation in Semiconductor Devices

Author: Tibor Grasser

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-10-29

Total Pages: 518

ISBN-13: 3319089943

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This book provides readers with a variety of tools to address the challenges posed by hot carrier degradation, one of today’s most complicated reliability issues in semiconductor devices. Coverage includes an explanation of carrier transport within devices and book-keeping of how they acquire energy (“become hot”), interaction of an ensemble of colder and hotter carriers with defect precursors, which eventually leads to the creation of a defect, and a description of how these defects interact with the device, degrading its performance.


Many-Electron Densities and Reduced Density Matrices

Many-Electron Densities and Reduced Density Matrices

Author: Jerzy Cioslowski

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2000-09-30

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13: 9780306464546

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Science advances by leaps and bounds rather than linearly in time. I t is not uncommon for a new concept or approach to generate a lot of initial interest, only to enter a quiet period of years or decades and then suddenly reemerge as the focus of new exciting investigations. This is certainly the case of the reduced density matrices (a k a N-matrices or RDMs), whose promise of a great simplification of quantum-chemical approaches faded away when the prospects of formulating the auxil iary yet essential N-representability conditions turned quite bleak. How ever, even during the period that followed this initial disappointment, the 2-matrices and their one-particle counterparts have been ubiquitous in the formalisms of modern electronic structure theory, entering the correlated-level expressions for the first-order response properties, giv ing rise to natural spinorbitals employed in the configuration interaction method and in rigorous analysis of electronic wavefunctions, and al lowing direct calculations of ionization potentials through the extended Koopmans'theorem. The recent research of Nakatsuji, Valdemoro, and Mazziotti her alds a renaissance of the concept of RDlvls that promotes them from the role of interpretive tools and auxiliary quantities to that of central variables of new electron correlation formalisms. Thanks to the economy of information offered by RDMs, these formalisms surpass the conven tional approaches in conciseness and elegance of formulation. As such, they hold the promise of opening an entirely new chapter of quantum chemistry.


Computational Many-Particle Physics

Computational Many-Particle Physics

Author: Holger Fehske

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2007-12-10

Total Pages: 774

ISBN-13: 3540746862

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Looking for the real state of play in computational many-particle physics? Look no further. This book presents an overview of state-of-the-art numerical methods for studying interacting classical and quantum many-particle systems. A broad range of techniques and algorithms are covered, and emphasis is placed on their implementation on modern high-performance computers. This excellent book comes complete with online files and updates allowing readers to stay right up to date.


Theory of the Inhomogeneous Electron Gas

Theory of the Inhomogeneous Electron Gas

Author: Stig Lundqvist

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-11-11

Total Pages: 405

ISBN-13: 1489904158

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The theory of the inhomogeneous electron gas had its origin in the Thomas Fermi statistical theory, which is discussed in the first chapter of this book. This already leads to significant physical results for the binding energies of atomic ions, though because it leaves out shell structure the results of such a theory cannot reflect the richness of the Periodic Table. Therefore, for a long time, the earlier method proposed by Hartree, in which each electron is assigned its own personal wave function and energy, dominated atomic theory. The extension of the Hartree theory by Fock, to include exchange, had its parallel in the density description when Dirac showed how to incorporate exchange in the Thomas-Fermi theory. Considerably later, in 1951, Slater, in an important paper, showed how a result similar to but not identical with that of Dirac followed as a simplification of the Hartree-Fock method. It was Gombas and other workers who recognized that one could also incorporate electron correlation consistently into the Thomas-Fermi-Dirac theory by using uniform electron gas relations locally, and progress had been made along all these avenues by the 1950s.