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Coupled cluster

About: Coupled cluster is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6280 publications have been published within this topic receiving 301055 citations.


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TL;DR: An extension of this scheme that allows for the analysis of interaction energies of open-shell molecular systems calculated at the UHF-DLPNO-CCSD(T) level is presented and the results are used to discuss the mechanism that governs the change in the singlet–triplet energy gap of methylene and heme upon adduct formation.
Abstract: Local energy decomposition (LED) analysis decomposes the interaction energy between two fragments calculated at the domain-based local pair natural orbital CCSD(T) (DLPNO-CCSD(T)) level of theory into a series of chemically meaningful contributions and has found widespread applications in the study of noncovalent interactions. Herein, an extension of this scheme that allows for the analysis of interaction energies of open-shell molecular systems calculated at the UHF-DLPNO-CCSD(T) level is presented. The new scheme is illustrated through applications to the CH2···X (X = He, Ne, Ar, Kr, and water) and heme···CO interactions in the low-lying singlet and triplet spin states. The results are used to discuss the mechanism that governs the change in the singlet–triplet energy gap of methylene and heme upon adduct formation.

72 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, a two-step low-rank factorization of the Hamiltonian and cluster operator, accompanied by truncation of small terms, is proposed to reduce the complexity of the computation.
Abstract: The quantum simulation of quantum chemistry is a promising application of quantum computers. However, for N molecular orbitals, the $\mathcal{O}(N^4)$ gate complexity of performing Hamiltonian and unitary Coupled Cluster Trotter steps makes simulation based on such primitives challenging. We substantially reduce the gate complexity of such primitives through a two-step low-rank factorization of the Hamiltonian and cluster operator, accompanied by truncation of small terms. Using truncations that incur errors below chemical accuracy, we are able to perform Trotter steps of the arbitrary basis electronic structure Hamiltonian with $\mathcal{O}(N^3)$ gate complexity in small simulations, which reduces to $\mathcal{O}(N^2 \log N)$ gate complexity in the asymptotic regime, while our unitary Coupled Cluster Trotter step has $\mathcal{O}(N^3)$ gate complexity as a function of increasing basis size for a given molecule. In the case of the Hamiltonian Trotter step, these circuits have $\mathcal{O}(N^2)$ depth on a linearly connected array, an improvement over the $\mathcal{O}(N^3)$ scaling assuming no truncation. As a practical example, we show that a chemically accurate Hamiltonian Trotter step for a 50 qubit molecular simulation can be carried out in the molecular orbital basis with as few as 4,000 layers of parallel nearest-neighbor two-qubit gates, consisting of fewer than 100,000 non-Clifford rotations. We also apply our algorithm to iron-sulfur clusters relevant for elucidating the mode of action of metalloenzymes.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors formulate and apply Bogoliubov coupled cluster theory to the description of open-shell nuclei up to mass ε ≈ 1.5.
Abstract: Background: Ab initio many-body methods have been developed over the past 10 yr to address closed-shell nuclei up to mass $A\ensuremath{\approx}130$ on the basis of realistic two- and three-nucleon interactions. A current frontier relates to the extension of those many-body methods to the description of open-shell nuclei. Several routes to address open-shell nuclei are currently under investigation, including ideas that exploit spontaneous symmetry breaking.Purpose: Singly open-shell nuclei can be efficiently described via the sole breaking of U(1) gauge symmetry associated with particle-number conservation as a way to account for their superfluid character. While this route was recently followed within the framework of self-consistent Green's function theory, the goal of the present work is to formulate a similar extension within the framework of coupled cluster theory.Methods: We formulate and apply Bogoliubov coupled cluster (BCC) theory, which consists of representing the exact ground-state wave function of the system as the exponential of a quasiparticle excitation cluster operator acting on a Bogoliubov reference state. Equations for the ground-state energy and the cluster amplitudes are derived at the singles and doubles level (BCCSD) both algebraically and diagrammatically. The formalism includes three-nucleon forces at the normal-ordered two-body level. The first BCC code is implemented in $m$ scheme, which will permit the treatment of doubly open-shell nuclei via the further breaking of SU(2) symmetry associated with angular momentum conservation.Results: Proof-of-principle calculations in an ${N}_{\text{max}}=6$ spherical harmonic oscillator basis for $^{16,18}\mathrm{O}$ and $^{18}\mathrm{Ne}$ in the BCCD approximation are in good agreement with standard coupled cluster results with the same chiral two-nucleon interaction, while $^{20}\mathrm{O}$ and $^{20}\mathrm{Mg}$ display underbinding relative to experiment. The breaking of U(1) symmetry, monitored by computing the variance associated with the particle-number operator, is relatively constant for all five nuclei, in both the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov and BCCD approximations.Conclusions: The newly developed many-body formalism increases the potential span of ab initio calculations based on single-reference coupled cluster techniques tremendously, i.e., potentially to reach several hundred additional midmass nuclei. The new formalism offers a wealth of potential applications and further extensions dedicated to the description of ground and excited states of open-shell nuclei. Short-term goals include the implementation of three-nucleon forces at the normal-ordered two-body level. Midterm extensions include the approximate treatment of triples corrections and the development of the equation-of-motion methodology to treat both excited states and odd nuclei. Long-term extensions include exact restoration of U(1) and SU(2) symmetries.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the F12 terms significantly reduce the domain errors and the PNO-LCCSD-F12 method is well parallelized and capable of computing accurate correlation energies for molecules with more than 150 atoms using augmented triple-ζ basis sets and more than 5000 basis functions.
Abstract: We present an efficient explicitly correlated pair natural orbital local coupled cluster (PNO-LCCSD-F12) method. The method is an extension of our previously reported PNO-LCCSD approach (Schwilk et al., J. Chem. Theory Comput. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.7b00554). Near linear scaling with the size of molecule is achieved by using pair, domain, and projection approximations, local density fitting, local resolution of the identity, and by exploiting the sparsity of the local molecular orbitals as well as of the projected atomic orbitals. The effect of the various domain approximations is tested for a wide range of chemical reactions and intermolecular interactions. In accordance with previous findings it is demonstrated that the F12 terms significantly reduce the domain errors. The convergence of the reaction and interaction energies with respect to the parameters that determine the domain sizes and pair approximations is extensively tested. The results obtained with our default thresholds agree within a few tent...

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An automatic and general procedure for the calculation of geometrical derivatives of the energy and general property surfaces for molecular systems is developed and implemented and may be used for both ground and excited electronic states.
Abstract: An automatic and general procedure for the calculation of geometrical derivatives of the energy and general property surfaces for molecular systems is developed and implemented. General expressions for an n-mode representation are derived, where the n-mode representation includes only the couplings between n or less degrees of freedom. The general expressions are specialized to derivative force fields and property surfaces, and a scheme for calculation of the numerical derivatives is implemented. The implementation is interfaced to electronic structure programs and may be used for both ground and excited electronic states. The implementation is done in the context of a vibrational structure program and can be used in combination with vibrational self-consistent field (VSCF), vibrational configuration interaction (VCI), vibrational Moller-Plesset, and vibrational coupled cluster calculations of anharmonic wave functions and calculation of vibrational averaged properties at the VSCF and VCI levels. Sample calculations are presented for fundamental vibrational energies and vibrationally averaged dipole moments and frequency dependent polarizabilities and hyperpolarizabilities of water and formaldehyde.

72 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023163
2022351
2021267
2020344
2019253
2018244