PROJECTS
Development, implementation and application of the analytical calculation of energy derivatives, especially nuclear gradients, of electron-correlation methods employing wavefunctions that depend explicitly on the interelectronic distances
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
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Prof. Dr.
Willem Maarten Klopper Universität Karlsruhe Physikalische Chemie Engesserstraße 15 |
PROJECT RESEARCH ASSISTANT
ABSTRACT
The explicitly correlated approach in computational
quantum chemistry comprises a family of methods using
wavefunctions that depend explicitly on all electron-electron
distances in the atom or molecule of interest. Today, functions
of the interelectronic distances are utilized in various forms.
They appear in linear or exponential (Gaussian) terms in the
wavefunction, in similarity-transformed Hamiltonians and in the
Jastrow functions of quantum Monte-Carlo calculations. All of
these methods have the potential to compute the ground- and
excited-state energies of a molecule with very high accuracy,
without the need for an inacceptably large basis set of one-electron
orbitals. However, to the best of our knowledge, these accurate
energies can only be computed in a prescribed and fixed nuclear
configuration and none of the explicitly correlated methods can
be used to compute analytically the first derivative of the
energy with respect to nuclear displacements. It is the goal of
the present project to develop and implement (for the first time)
the analytical calculation of nuclear energy gradients at the
level of second-order perturbation theory with terms linear in
the interelectronic distances.