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Journal ArticleDOI

New Method for Calculating Wave Functions in Crystals and Molecules

James C. Phillips, +1 more
- 15 Oct 1959 - 
- Vol. 116, Iss: 2, pp 287-294
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TLDR
In this article, it is shown that advantage of crystal symmetry can be taken to construct wave functions which are best described as the smooth part of symmetrized Bloch functions.
Abstract
For metals and semiconductors the calculation of crystal wave functions is simplest in a plane wave representation. However, in order to obtain rapid convergence it is necessary that the valence electron wave functions be made orthogonal to the core wave functions. Herring satisfied this requirement by choosing as basis functions "orthogonalized plane waves." It is here shown that advantage can be taken of crystal symmetry to construct wave functions ${\ensuremath{\phi}}_{\ensuremath{\alpha}}$ which are best described as the smooth part of symmetrized Bloch functions. The wave equation satisfied by ${\ensuremath{\phi}}_{\ensuremath{\alpha}}$ contains an additional term of simple character which corresponds to the usual complicated orthogonalization terms and has a simple physical interpretation as an effective repulsive potential. Qualitative estimates of this potential in analytic form are presented. Several examples are worked out which display the cancellation between attractive and repulsive potentials in the core region which is responsible for rapid convergence of orthogonalized plane wave calculations for $s$ states; the slower convergence of $p$ states is also explained. The formalism developed here can also be regarded as a rigorous formulation of the "empirical potential" approach within the one-electron framework; the present results are compared with previous approaches. The method can be applied equally well to the calculation of wave functions in molecules.

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Atoms in a laser field

TL;DR: The method of quasienergy states (QES) for describing a quantum system in the field of a monochromatic light wave is presented in this paper, where the perturbation theory for QES and quasistationary (decay) QES is developed.
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Relativistic energy‐consistent pseudopotentials—Recent developments

TL;DR: It is shown how small‐core and large‐core potentials can be combined in accurate, yet computationally economic, spin‐free‐state‐shifted relativistic electronic structure calculations of molecular ground and excited states.
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Band Theory, Valence Bond, and Tight‐Binding Calculations

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that a large part of the correlation error can be removed by permitting different orbitals for different spins, which leads to a scheme intermediate between band theory and valence bond method and, by means of a single parameter, one can obtain an essential lowering of the energy curve and the correct asymptotic behavior for separated atoms or constituents.
Journal ArticleDOI

The electronic properties of liquid metals

TL;DR: In this article, the density of states and mean free path from a direct approach to Schrodinger's equation were obtained for liquid metal properties, and the difficulty of explaining the phenomena by methods which are orthodox in solid state physics is pointed out and some simple models suited to liquids are described and compared.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resolution of the Band Gap Prediction Problem for Materials Design

TL;DR: It is shown that the hybrid B3PW91 density functional returns band gaps with a mean absolute deviation from experiment of 0.22 eV, which represents a solution to the band gap prediction problem and is 3-4 orders of magnitude faster computationally.
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