Title: Lecture 5. Many-Electron Atoms. Pt.3 Hartree-Fock Self-Consistent-Field Method
1Lecture 5. Many-Electron Atoms. Pt.3Hartree-Fock
Self-Consistent-Field Method
References
- Ratner Ch. 9, Engel Ch. 10.5, Pilar Ch. 10
- Modern Quantum Chemistry, Ostlund Szabo (1982)
Ch. 2-3.4.5 - Molecular Quantum Mechanics, Atkins Friedman
(4th ed. 2005), Ch.7 - Computational Chemistry, Lewars (2003), Ch.4
- A Brief Review of Elementary Quantum Chemistry
- http//vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/notes/quantrev
/quantrev.html - http//vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/notes/hf-intro
/hf-intro.html
2Hartree (single-particle) self-consistent-field
methodbased on Hartree products (D. R. Hartree,
1928)
Proc. Cambridge Phil. Soc. 24, 89
Nobel lecture (Walter Kohn 1998) Electronic
structure of matter
- Impossible to search through
- all acceptable N-electron
- wavefunctions.
- Lets define a suitable subset.
- N-electron wavefunction
- is approximated by
- a product of N one-electron
- wavefunctions. (Hartree product)
3Constrained minimization with the Hartree product
4Hartree-Fock Self-Consistent-Field Methodbased
on Slater determinants (HartreePauli) (J. C.
Slater V. Fock, 1930) Z. Physik, 61, 126 Phys.
Rev. 35, 210
Restrict the search for the minimum E? to a
subset of ?, a Slater determinant.
- To build many-electron wave functions, assume
that electrons are uncorrelated. (Hartree
products of one-electron orbitals) - To build many-electron wave functions, use Slater
determinants, which is all antisymmetric products
of N spin orbitals, to satisfy the Pauli
principle. - Use the variational principle to find the best
Slater determinant (which yields the lowest
energy) by varying the spatial orbitals ?i.
5Beyond Hartree the ground state of He (singlet)
? 1sgt ?
notation
1s
Slater determinant
? 1s2
Total spin quantum number S Ms 0 (singlet)
S2 ?(1,2) (s1 s2)2 ?(1,2) 0, Sz ?(1,2)
(sz1 sz2) ?(1,2) 0
6Energy of the Slater determinant of the He
atom the singlet ground state
spatial-symmetric
spin-antisymmetric
no spin in the Hamiltonian
Coulombic repulsion between two charge
distributions 1s(1)2 and 1s(2)2
Coulomb integral
lt1sh1sgt lt1sTVNe1sgtTssVs
7Coulombic repulsion between two charge
distributions 1s(1)2 and 1s(2)2
8Excited state of He (singlet and triplet states)
antisymmetric
spatial-symmetric
spin- symmetric
spatial-antisymmetric
spatial-symmetric
spatial-antisymmetric
9Energy of the Slater determinant of the He
atom a triplet first excited state
singlet
triplet
? (quiz)
Coulomb integral gt 0
includes in it wave function (final solution)!
where
Exchange integral (gt0)
10Energy of the Slater determinant of the He
atom a triplet first excited state
singlet
triplet
Coulomb integral gt 0
includes in it wave function (final solution)!
where
Exchange integral (gt0)
11Two-electron interactions (Vee)
- Coulomb integral Jij (local)
- Coulombic repulsion between electron 1 in
orbital i and electron 2 in orbital j - Exchange integral Kij (non-local) only for
electrons of like spins - No immediate classical interpretation entirely
due to antisymmetry of fermions
gt 0, i.e., a destabilization
12Each term includes the wave function (the final
solution) in it!
13Hartree-Fock Self-Consistent-Field Methodbased
on Slater determinants (HartreePauli) (J. C.
Slater V. Fock, 1930)
- Each ? has variational parameters (to be changed
to minimize E) including the effective nuclear
charge ? (instead of the formal nuclear charge Z) - Variational condition
- Variation with respect to the one-electron
orbitals ?i, which are orthonormal
or its combination for lower E
14Constrained (due to the orthonormality of ?i)
minimization of EHF?SD leads to the HF equation.
Pilar Ch.10.1, Ostlund/Szabo Ch.1.3
vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/notes/hf-intro/node7.h
tml
15Constrained minimization with the Slater
determinant
16After constrained minimization with the Slater
determinant
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19Hartree-Fock equation (one-electron equation)
Fock operator effective one-electron operator
Two-electron repulsion operator (1/rij) is
replaced by one-electron operator VHF(i), which
takes it into account in an average way
Two-electron repulsion cannot be separated
exactly into one-electron terms. By imposing the
separability, the orbital approximation
inevitably involves an incorrect treatment of the
way in which the electrons interact with each
other.
20Hartree-Fock Self-Consistent Field (HF-SCF) Method
- Problem
- Fock operator (V) depends on the solution.
- The answer (solution) must be known in order to
solve the problem! - HF is not a regular eigenvalue problem that can
be solved in a closed form. - Solution (iterative approach)
- Start with a guessed set of orbitals.
- Solve the Hartree-Fock equation.
- Use the resulting new set of orbitals in the next
iteration and so on - Until the input and output orbitals differ by
less than a preset threshold (i.e. converged to a
self-consistent field).
21Hartree-Fock equation (One-electron equation)
spherically symmetric
Veff includes
- - Two-electron repulsion operator (1/rij) is
replaced by one-electron operator VHF(i), which
takes it into account in an average way. - - Any one electron sees only the spatially
averaged - position of all other electrons.
- - VHF(i) is spherically symmetric.
- - (Instantaneous) electron correlation
- is ignored.
- Spherical harmonics (s, p, d, ) are valid
- angular-part eigenfunction (as for H-like
atoms). - - Radial-part eigenfunction of H-like atoms are
not valid any more.
optimized
22Electron Correlation
Ref) F. Jensen, Introduction to Computational
Chemistry, 2nd ed., Ch. 4
- A single Slater determinant never corresponds to
the exact wave function. - EHF gt E0 (the exact ground state energy)
- Correlation energy a measure of error introduced
through the HF scheme - EC E0 - EHF (lt 0)
- Dynamical correlation
- Non-dynamical (static) correlation
- Post-Hartree-Fock method
- Møller-Plesset perturbation MP2, MP4,
- Configuration interaction CISD, QCISD, CCSD,
QCISD(T), MCSCF, CAFSCF,
23Solution of HF-SCF equation gives
24Solution of HF-SCF equation Effective nuclear
charge (Z-? is a measure of shielding.)
25Aufbau (Building-up) principle