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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Ab Initio Effective Potentials for Use in Molecular Calculations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the efficacy of ab initio effective potentials in replacing the core electrons of atoms for use in molecular calculations and found that the use of these effective potentialS to replace the core orbitals of such molecules as LiH, Li2, BH, or LiH2, leads to wavefunctions in excellent agreement with all-electron ab- initio results.
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Variational optimization of effective atom centered potentials for molecular properties.

TL;DR: A method is presented which, in conjunction with density functional perturbation theory, allows to optimize effective core potentials in order to reproduce ground-state molecular properties from arbitrarily accurate reference calculations within standard density functional calculations.
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The theory of the cohesive energies of solids

TL;DR: Reliable calculations based on first principles are now possible for a wide range of problems, which will significantly increase the predictive power of solid-state theory in the coming years.
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KSSOLV—a MATLAB toolbox for solving the Kohn-Sham equations

TL;DR: KSSOLV, a MATLAB toolbox for solving a class of nonlinear eigenvalue problems known as the Kohn-Sham equations, is described, designed to enable researchers in computational and applied mathematics to investigate the convergence properties of the existing algorithms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effective core potential parameters for first‐ and second‐row atoms

TL;DR: In this paper, an improved effective core potential (ECP) technique is described and used to give ECP parameters for the atoms of the first two rows of the periodic table, which results in CPU time reductions of the order of 50% in addition to reduced disk storage.
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