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Automatic Construction of the Initial Orbitals for Efficient Generalized Valence Bond Calculations of Large Systems
Author(s) -
Qingchun Wang,
Jingxiang Zou,
Enhua Xu,
Péter Pulay,
Shuhua Li
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of chemical theory and computation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.001
H-Index - 185
eISSN - 1549-9626
pISSN - 1549-9618
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jctc.8b00854
Subject(s) - complete active space , valence bond theory , basis set , atomic orbital , modern valence bond theory , molecular orbital theory , generalized valence bond , slater type orbital , natural bond orbital , molecular orbital , singlet state , linear combination of atomic orbitals , chemistry , physics , atomic physics , localized molecular orbitals , three center two electron bond , quantum mechanics , density functional theory , electron , molecule , excited state
We propose an efficient general strategy for generating initial orbitals for generalized valence bond (GVB) calculations which makes routine black-box GVB calculations on large systems feasible. Two schemes are proposed, depending on whether the restricted Hartree-Fock (RHF) wave function is stable (scheme I) or not (scheme II). In both schemes, the first step is the construction of active occupied orbitals and active virtual orbitals. In scheme I, active occupied orbitals are composed of the valence orbitals (the inner core orbitals are excluded), and the active virtual orbitals are obtained from the original virtual space by requiring its maximum overlap with the virtual orbital space of the same system at a minimal basis set. In scheme II, active occupied orbitals and active virtual orbitals are obtained from the set of unrestricted natural orbitals (UNOs), which are transformed from two sets of unrestricted HF spatial orbitals. In the next step, the active occupied orbitals and active virtual ones are separately transformed to localized orbitals. Localized occupied and virtual orbital pairs are formed using the Kuhn-Munkres (KM) algorithm and are used as the initial guess for the GVB orbitals. The optimized GVB wave function is obtained using the second-order self-consistent-field algorithm in the GAMESS program. With this procedure, GVB energies have been obtained for the lowest singlet and triplet states of polyacenes (up to decacene with 96 pairs) and the singlet ground state of two di-copper-oxygen-ammonia complexes. We have also calculated the singlet-triplet gaps for some polyacenes and the relative energy between two di-copper-oxygen-ammonia complexes with the block-correlated second-order perturbation theory based on the GVB reference.

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