Title: Lecture 11. Quantum Mechanics. Hartree-Fock Self-Consistent-Field Theory
1Lecture 11. Quantum Mechanics. Hartree-Fock
Self-Consistent-Field Theory
- Outline of todays lecture
- Postulates in quantum mechanics
- Schrödinger equation
- Simplify Schrödinger equation
- Atomic units, Born-Oppenheimer approximation
- Solve Schrödinger equation with approximations
- Variation principle, Slater determinant, Hartree
approximation, - Hartree-Fock, Self-Consistent-Field, LCAO-MO,
Basis set
2References
- Molecular Quantum Mechanics, Atkins Friedman
(4th ed. 2005), Ch. 1 8 - Essentials of Computational Chemistry. Theories
and Models, C. J. Cramer, - (2nd Ed. Wiley, 2004) Chapter 4
- Molecular Modeling, A. R. Leach (2nd ed.
Prentice Hall, 2001) Chapter 2 - Introduction to Computational Chemistry, F.
Jensen (1999) Chapter 3 - A Brief Review of Elementary Quantum Chemistry
- http//vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/notes/quantrev
/quantrev.html - Molecular Electronic Structure Lecture
- http//www.chm.bris.ac.uk/pt/harvey/elstruct/intr
oduction.html - Wikipedia (http//en.wikipedia.org) Search for
Schrödinger equation, etc.
3Potential Energy Surface Quantum Mechanics
- How do we obtain the potential energy E?
- MM Evaluate analytic functions (FF)
- QM Solve Schrödinger equation
3N (or 3N-6 or 3N-5) Dimension PES for N-atom
system
Continuum Modeling
Atomistic Modeling
Geometry
Quantum Modeling
Charge Force Field
For geometry optimization, evaluate E, E (
E) at the input structure X (x1,y1,z1,,xi,yi,zi
,,xN,yN,zN) or li,?i,?i.
Length
1?m
1cm
0.1 nm
1 nm
4The Schrödinger Equation
The ultimate goal of most quantum chemistry
approach is the solution of the time-independent
Schrödinger equation.
?
(1-dim)
Hamiltonian operator ? wavefunction (solving a
partial differential equation)
5Postulate 1 of Quantum Mechanics
- The state of a quantum mechanical system is
completely specified by the wavefunction or state
function that depends on the coordinates
of the particle(s) and on time. - The probability to find the particle in the
volume element located at r at time
t is given by . (Born
interpretation) - The wavefunction must be single-valued,
continuous, finite, and normalized (the
probability of find it somewhere is 1). - lt??gt
Probability density
6Born Interpretation of the Wavefunction
Probability Density
7Probability Density Examples
B 0
A 0
A B
nodes
8Postulate 2 of Quantum Mechanics
- Once is known, all properties of the
system can be obtained - by applying the corresponding operators to the
wavefunction. - Observed in measurements are only the
eigenvalues a which satisfy - the eigenvalue equation
eigenvalue
eigenfunction
(Operator)(function) (constant number)?(the
same function)
(Operator corresponding to observable)? (value
of observable)??
Schrödinger equation Hamiltonian operator ?
energy
with
(Hamiltonian operator)
(e.g. with )
9Physical Observables Their Corresponding
Operators
with
(Hamiltonian operator)
(e.g. with )
10Observables, Operators Solving Eigenvalue
Equations an Example
11The Uncertainty Principle
When momentum is known precisely, the position
cannot be predicted precisely, and vice versa.
When the position is known precisely,
Location becomes precise at the expense of
uncertainty in the momentum
12Postulate 3 of Quantum Mechanics
- Although measurements must always yield an
eigenvalue, - the state does not have to be an eigenstate.
- An arbitrary state can be expanded in the
complete set of - eigenvectors ( as
where n ? ?. - We know that the measurement will yield one of
the values ai, but - we don't know which one. However,
- we do know the probability that eigenvalue ai
will occur ( ). - For a system in a state described by a
normalized wavefunction , - the average value of the observable
corresponding to is given by -
lt?A?gt
13The Schrödinger Equation for Atoms Molecules
14Atomic Units (a.u.)
- Simplifies the Schrödinger equation (drops all
the constants) -
- (energy) 1 a.u. 1 hartree 27.211 eV 627.51
kcal/mol, - (length) 1 a.u. 1 bohr 0.52918 Ă…,
- (mass) 1 a.u. electron rest mass,
- (charge) 1 a.u. elementary charge, etc.
(before)
(after)
15Born-Oppenheimer Approximation
- Simplifies further the Schrödinger equation
(separation of variables) - Nuclei are much heavier and slower than
electrons. - Electrons can be treated as moving in the field
of fixed nuclei. - A full Schrödinger equation can be separated into
two - Motion of electron around the nucleus
- Atom as a whole through the space
- Focus on the electronic Schrödinger equation
16Born-Oppenheimer Approximation
(before)
(electronic)
(nuclear)
E
(after)
17Electronic Schrödinger Equation in Atomic Unit
18Variational Principle
- Nuclei positions/charges number of electrons in
the molecule - Set up the Hamiltonian operator
- Solve the Schrödinger equation for wavefunction
?, but how? - Once ? is known, properties are obtained by
applying operators - No exact solution of the Schrödinger eq for
atoms/molecules (gtH) - Any guessed ?trial is an upper bound to the true
ground state E. - Minimize the functional E? by searching through
all acceptable - N-electron wavefunctions
19Hartree Approximation (1928)Single-Particle
Approach
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)
20Antisymmetry of Electrons and Paulis Exclusion
Principle
- Electrons are indistinguishable. ? Probability
doesnt change. - Electrons are fermion (spin ½). ? antisymmetric
wavefunction - No two electrons can occupy the same state (space
spin).
21Slater determinants
- A determinant changes sign when two rows (or
columns) are exchanged. - ? Exchanging two electrons leads to a change in
sign of the wavefunction. -
- A determinant with two identical rows (or
columns) is equal to zero. - ? No two electrons can occupy the same state.
Paulis exclusion principle
antisymmetric
0
22N-Electron Wavefunction Slater Determinant
- N-electron wavefunction aprroximated by a product
of N one-electron - wavefunctions (hartree product).
- It should be antisymmetrized (
).
23Hartree-Fock (HF) Approximation
- Restrict the search for the minimum E? to a
subset of ?, which - is all antisymmetric products of N spin
orbitals (Slater determinant) - Use the variational principle to find the best
Slater determinant - (which yields the lowest energy) by varying
spin orbitals
(orthonormal)
24Hartree-Fock (HF) Energy
25Hartree-Fock (HF) Energy Evaluation
finite basis set
Molecular Orbitals as linear combinations of
Atomic Orbitals (LCAO-MO)
where
26Hartree-Fock (HF) Equation Evaluation
- No-electron contribution (nucleus-nucleus
repulsion just a constant) - One-electron operator h (depends only on the
coordinates of one electron) - Two-electron contribution (depends on the
coordinates of two electrons)
27- Potential energy due to nuclear-nuclear Coulombic
repulsion (VNN)
In some textbooks ESD doesnt include VNN, which
will be added later (Vtot ESD VNN).
- Electronic kinetic energy (Te)
- Potential energy due to nuclear-electronic
Coulombic attraction (VNe)
28- Potential energy due to two-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
29(No Transcript)
30Hartree-Fock (HF) Energy Integrals
31Self-Interaction
- Coulomb term J when i j (Coulomb interaction
with oneself) - Beautifully cancelled by exchange term K in HF
scheme
? 0
0
32Constrained Minimization of EHF?SD
33Hartree-Fock (HF) Equation
- Fock operator effective one-electron operator
- two-electron repulsion operator (1/rij) replaced
by one-electron operator VHF(i) - by taking it into account in average way
Two-electron repulsion cannot be separated
exactly into one-electron terms. By imposing the
separability, the Molecular Orbital Approximation
inevitably involves an incorrect treatment of
the way in which the electrons interact with each
other.
34Self-Consistent Field (HF-SCF) Method
- Fock operator depends on the solution.
- HF is not a regular eigenvalue problem that can
be solved in a closed form. - Start with a guessed set of orbitals
- Solve HF 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).
35Koopmans Theorem
- As well as the total energy, one also obtains a
set of orbital energies.
- Remove an electron from occupied orbital a.
Orbital energy Approximate ionization energy
36Koopmans Theorem Examples
37Restricted vs Unrestricted HF
38Accuracy of Molecular Orbital (MO) Theory
39Electron Correlation
- A single Slater determinant never corresponds to
the exact wavefunction. - 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)
40Summary