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n-electron valence state perturbation theory

In quantum chemistry, n-electron valence state perturbation theory (NEVPT) is a perturbative treatment applicable to multireference CASCI-type wavefunctions. It can be considered as a generalization of the well-known second-order Møller–Plesset perturbation theory to multireference Complete Active Space cases. The theory is directly integrated into many quantum chemistry packages such as MOLCAS, Molpro, DALTON, PySCF and ORCA.

The research performed into the development of this theory led to various implementations. The theory here presented refers to the deployment for the Single-State NEVPT, where the perturbative correction is applied to a single electronic state. Research implementations has been also developed for Quasi-Degenerate cases, where a set of electronic states undergo the perturbative correction at the same time, allowing interaction among themselves. The theory development makes use of the quasi-degenerate formalism by Lindgren and the Hamiltonian multipartitioning technique from Zaitsevskii and Malrieu.

Theory edit

Let   be a zero-order CASCI wavefunction, defined as a linear combination of Slater determinants

 

obtained diagonalizing the true Hamiltonian   inside the CASCI space

 

where   is the projector inside the CASCI space. It is possible to define perturber wavefunctions in NEVPT as zero-order wavefunctions of the outer space (external to CAS) where   electrons are removed from the inactive part (core and virtual orbitals) and added to the valence part (active orbitals). At second order of perturbation  . Decomposing the zero-order CASCI wavefunction as an antisymmetrized product of the inactive part   and a valence part  

 

then the perturber wavefunctions can be written as

 

The pattern of inactive orbitals involved in the procedure can be grouped as a collective index  , so to represent the various perturber wavefunctions as  , with   an enumerator index for the different wavefunctions. The number of these functions is relative to the degree of contraction of the resulting perturbative space.

Supposing indexes   and   referring to core orbitals,   and   referring to active orbitals and   and   referring to virtual orbitals, the possible excitation schemes are:

  1. two electrons from core orbitals to virtual orbitals (the active space is not enriched nor depleted of electrons, therefore  )
  2. one electron from a core orbital to a virtual orbital, and one electron from a core orbital to an active orbital (the active space is enriched with one electron, therefore  )
  3. one electron from a core orbital to a virtual orbital, and one electron from an active orbital to a virtual orbital (the active space is depleted with one electron, therefore  )
  4. two electrons from core orbitals to active orbitals (active space enriched with two electrons,  )
  5. two electrons from active orbitals to virtual orbitals (active space depleted with two electrons,  )

These cases always represent situations where interclass electronic excitations happen. Other three excitation schemes involve a single interclass excitation plus an intraclass excitation internal to the active space:

  1. one electron from a core orbital to a virtual orbital, and an internal active-active excitation ( )
  2. one electron from a core orbital to an active orbital, and an internal active-active excitation ( )
  3. one electron from an active orbital to a virtual orbital, and an internal active-active excitation ( )

Totally Uncontracted Approach edit

A possible approach is to define the perturber wavefunctions into Hilbert spaces   defined by those determinants with given k and l labels. The determinants characterizing these spaces can be written as a partition comprising the same inactive (core + virtual) part   and all possible valence (active) parts  

 

The full dimensionality of these spaces can be exploited to obtain the definition of the perturbers, by diagonalizing the Hamiltonian inside them

 

This procedure is impractical given its high computational cost: for each   space, a diagonalization of the true Hamiltonian must be performed. Computationally, is preferable to improve the theoretical development making use of the modified Dyall's Hamiltonian  . This Hamiltonian behaves like the true Hamiltonian inside the CAS space, having the same eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the true Hamiltonian projected onto the CAS space. Also, given the decomposition for the wavefunction defined before, the action of the Dyall's Hamiltonian can be partitioned into

 

stripping out the constant contribution of the inactive part and leaving a subsystem to be solved for the valence part

 

The total energy   is the sum of   and the energies of the orbitals involved in the definition of the inactive part  . This introduces the possibility to perform a single diagonalization of the valence Dyall's Hamiltonian on the CASCI zero-order wavefunction and evaluate the perturber energies using the property depicted above.

Strongly Contracted Approach edit

A different choice in the development of the NEVPT approach is to choose a single function for each space  , leading to the Strongly Contracted (SC) scheme. A set of perturbative operators are used to produce a single function for each space, defined as the projection inside each space   of the application of the Hamiltonian to the contracted zero order wavefunction. In other words,

 

where   is the projector onto the subspace. This can be equivalently written as the application of a specific part of the Hamiltonian to the zero-order wavefunction

 

For each space, appropriate operators can be devised. We will not present their definition, as it could result overkilling. Suffice to say that the resulting perturbers are not normalized, and their norm

 

plays an important role in the Strongly Contracted development. To evaluate these norms, the spinless density matrix of rank not higher than three between the   functions are needed.

An important property of the   is that any other function of the space   which is orthogonal to   do not interact with the zero-order wavefunction through the true Hamiltonian. It is possible to use the   functions as a basis set for the expansion of the first-order correction to the wavefunction, and also for the expression of the zero-order Hamiltonian by means of a spectral decomposition

 

where   are the normalized  .

The expression for the first-order correction to the wavefunction is therefore

 

and for the energy is

 

This result still misses a definition of the perturber energies  , which can be defined in a computationally advantageous approach by means of the Dyall's Hamiltonian

 

leading to

 

Developing the first term and extracting the inactive part of the Dyall's Hamiltonian it can be obtained

 

with   equal to the sum of the orbital energies of the newly occupied virtual orbitals minus the orbital energies of the unoccupied core orbitals.

The term that still needs to be evaluated is the bracket involving the commutator. This can be obtained developing each   operator and substituting. To obtain the final result it is necessary to evaluate Koopmans matrices and density matrices involving only active indexes. An interesting case is represented by the contribution for the   case, which is trivial and can be demonstrated identical to the Møller–Plesset second-order contribution

 

NEVPT2 can therefore be seen as a generalized form of MP2 to multireference wavefunctions.

Partially Contracted Approach edit

An alternative approach, named Partially Contracted (PC) is to define the perturber wavefunctions in a subspace   of   with dimensionality higher than one (like in case of the Strongly Contracted approach). To define this subspace, a set of functions   is generated by means of the   operators, after decontraction of their formulation. For example, in the case of the   operator

 

The Partially Contracted approach makes use of functions   and  . These functions must be orthonormalized and purged of linear dependencies which may arise. The resulting set spans the   space.

Once all the   spaces have been defined, we can obtain as usual a set of perturbers from the diagonalization of the Hamiltonian (true or Dyall) inside this space

 

As usual, the evaluation of the Partially Contracted perturbative correction by means of the Dyall Hamiltonian involves simply manageable entities for nowadays computers.

Although the Strongly Contracted approach makes use of a perturbative space with very low flexibility, in general it provides values in very good agreement with those obtained by the more decontracted space defined for the Partially Contracted approach. This can be probably explained by the fact that the Strongly Contracted perturbers are a good average of the totally decontracted perturbative space.

The Partially Contracted evaluation has a very little overhead in computational cost with respect to the Strongly Contracted one, therefore they are normally evaluated together.

Properties edit

NEVPT is blessed with many important properties, making the approach very solid and reliable. These properties arise both from the theoretical approach used and on the Dyall's Hamiltonian particular structure:

  • Size consistency: NEVPT is size consistent (strict separable). Briefly, if A and B are two non-interacting systems, the energy of the supersystem A-B is equal to the sum of the energy of A plus the energy of B taken by themselves ( ). This property is of particular importance to obtain correctly behaving dissociation curves.
  • Absence of intruder states: in perturbation theory, divergencies can occur if the energy of some perturber happens to be nearly equal to the energy of the zero-order wavefunction. This situation, which is due to the presence of an energy difference at the denominator, can be avoided if the energies associated to the perturbers are guaranteed to be never nearly equal to the zero-order energy. NEVPT satisfies this requirement.
  • Invariance under active orbital rotation: The NEVPT results are stable if an intraclass active-active orbital mixing occurs. This arises both from the structure of the Dyall Hamiltonian and the properties of a CASSCF wavefunction. This property has been also extended to the intraclass core-core and virtual-virtual mixing, thanks to the Non Canonical NEVPT approach, allowing to apply a NEVPT evaluation without performing an orbital canonization (which is required, as we saw previously)
  • Spin purity is guaranteed: The resulting wave functions are guaranteed to be spin pure, due to the spin-free formalism.
  • Efficiency: although not a formal theoretical property, computational efficiency is highly important for the evaluation on medium-size molecular systems. The current limit of the NEVPT application is largely dependent on the feasibility of the previous CASSCF evaluation, which scales factorially with respect to the active space size. The NEVPT implementation using the Dyall's Hamiltonian involves the evaluation of Koopmans' matrices and density matrices up to the four-particle density matrix spanning only active orbitals. This is particularly convenient, given the small size of currently used active spaces.
  • Partitioning into additive classes: The perturbative correction to the energy is additive on eight different contributions. Although the evaluation of each contribution has a different computational cost, this fact can be used to improve performance, by parallelizing each contribution to a different processor.

See also edit

References edit

  • Angeli, C.; Cimiraglia, R.; Evangelisti, S.; Leininger, T.; Malrieu, J. -P. (2001). "Introduction of n-electron valence states for multireference perturbation theory". The Journal of Chemical Physics. 114 (23): 10252. Bibcode:2001JChPh.11410252A. doi:10.1063/1.1361246.
  • Angeli, C.; Cimiraglia, R.; Malrieu, J. P. (2001). "N-electron valence state perturbation theory: A fast implementation of the strongly contracted variant". Chemical Physics Letters. 350 (3–4): 297. Bibcode:2001CPL...350..297A. doi:10.1016/S0009-2614(01)01303-3.
  • Angeli, C.; Cimiraglia, R.; Malrieu, J. P. (2002). "N-electron valence state perturbation theory: A spinless formulation and an efficient implementation of the strongly contracted and of the partially contracted variants". The Journal of Chemical Physics. 117 (20): 9138. Bibcode:2002JChPh.117.9138A. doi:10.1063/1.1515317.

electron, valence, state, perturbation, theory, quantum, chemistry, nevpt, perturbative, treatment, applicable, multireference, casci, type, wavefunctions, considered, generalization, well, known, second, order, møller, plesset, perturbation, theory, multirefe. In quantum chemistry n electron valence state perturbation theory NEVPT is a perturbative treatment applicable to multireference CASCI type wavefunctions It can be considered as a generalization of the well known second order Moller Plesset perturbation theory to multireference Complete Active Space cases The theory is directly integrated into many quantum chemistry packages such as MOLCAS Molpro DALTON PySCF and ORCA The research performed into the development of this theory led to various implementations The theory here presented refers to the deployment for the Single State NEVPT where the perturbative correction is applied to a single electronic state Research implementations has been also developed for Quasi Degenerate cases where a set of electronic states undergo the perturbative correction at the same time allowing interaction among themselves The theory development makes use of the quasi degenerate formalism by Lindgren and the Hamiltonian multipartitioning technique from Zaitsevskii and Malrieu Contents 1 Theory 1 1 Totally Uncontracted Approach 1 2 Strongly Contracted Approach 1 3 Partially Contracted Approach 2 Properties 3 See also 4 ReferencesTheory editLet PS m 0 displaystyle Psi m 0 nbsp be a zero order CASCI wavefunction defined as a linear combination of Slater determinants PS m 0 I C A S C I m I displaystyle Psi m 0 sum I in rm CAS C I m left I right rangle nbsp obtained diagonalizing the true Hamiltonian H displaystyle hat mathcal H nbsp inside the CASCI space P C A S H P C A S PS m 0 E m 0 PS m 0 displaystyle hat mathcal P rm CAS hat mathcal H hat mathcal P rm CAS left Psi m 0 right rangle E m 0 left Psi m 0 right rangle nbsp where P C A S displaystyle hat mathcal P rm CAS nbsp is the projector inside the CASCI space It is possible to define perturber wavefunctions in NEVPT as zero order wavefunctions of the outer space external to CAS where k displaystyle k nbsp electrons are removed from the inactive part core and virtual orbitals and added to the valence part active orbitals At second order of perturbation 2 k 2 displaystyle 2 leq k leq 2 nbsp Decomposing the zero order CASCI wavefunction as an antisymmetrized product of the inactive part F c displaystyle Phi c nbsp and a valence part PS m v displaystyle Psi m v nbsp PS m 0 F c PS m v displaystyle left Psi m 0 right rangle left Phi c Psi m v right rangle nbsp then the perturber wavefunctions can be written as PS l m k F l k PS m v k displaystyle left Psi l mu k right rangle left Phi l k Psi mu v k right rangle nbsp The pattern of inactive orbitals involved in the procedure can be grouped as a collective index l displaystyle l nbsp so to represent the various perturber wavefunctions as PS l m k displaystyle Psi l mu k nbsp with m displaystyle mu nbsp an enumerator index for the different wavefunctions The number of these functions is relative to the degree of contraction of the resulting perturbative space Supposing indexes i displaystyle i nbsp and j displaystyle j nbsp referring to core orbitals a displaystyle a nbsp and b displaystyle b nbsp referring to active orbitals and r displaystyle r nbsp and s displaystyle s nbsp referring to virtual orbitals the possible excitation schemes are two electrons from core orbitals to virtual orbitals the active space is not enriched nor depleted of electrons therefore k 0 displaystyle k 0 nbsp one electron from a core orbital to a virtual orbital and one electron from a core orbital to an active orbital the active space is enriched with one electron therefore k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp one electron from a core orbital to a virtual orbital and one electron from an active orbital to a virtual orbital the active space is depleted with one electron therefore k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp two electrons from core orbitals to active orbitals active space enriched with two electrons k 2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp two electrons from active orbitals to virtual orbitals active space depleted with two electrons k 2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp These cases always represent situations where interclass electronic excitations happen Other three excitation schemes involve a single interclass excitation plus an intraclass excitation internal to the active space one electron from a core orbital to a virtual orbital and an internal active active excitation k 0 displaystyle k 0 nbsp one electron from a core orbital to an active orbital and an internal active active excitation k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp one electron from an active orbital to a virtual orbital and an internal active active excitation k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp Totally Uncontracted Approach edit A possible approach is to define the perturber wavefunctions into Hilbert spaces S l k displaystyle S l k nbsp defined by those determinants with given k and l labels The determinants characterizing these spaces can be written as a partition comprising the same inactive core virtual part F l k displaystyle Phi l k nbsp and all possible valence active parts PS I k displaystyle Psi I k nbsp S l k d e f F l k PS I k displaystyle S l k stackrel mathrm def Phi l k Psi I k nbsp The full dimensionality of these spaces can be exploited to obtain the definition of the perturbers by diagonalizing the Hamiltonian inside them P S l k H P S l k F l k PS m v k E l m F l k PS m v k displaystyle hat mathcal P S l k hat mathcal H hat mathcal P S l k left Phi l k Psi mu v k right rangle E l mu left Phi l k Psi mu v k right rangle nbsp This procedure is impractical given its high computational cost for each S l k displaystyle S l k nbsp space a diagonalization of the true Hamiltonian must be performed Computationally is preferable to improve the theoretical development making use of the modified Dyall s Hamiltonian H D displaystyle hat mathcal H D nbsp This Hamiltonian behaves like the true Hamiltonian inside the CAS space having the same eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the true Hamiltonian projected onto the CAS space Also given the decomposition for the wavefunction defined before the action of the Dyall s Hamiltonian can be partitioned into H D F l k PS m v k E l m k F l k PS m v k displaystyle hat mathcal H D left Phi l k Psi mu v k right rangle E l mu k left Phi l k Psi mu v k right rangle nbsp stripping out the constant contribution of the inactive part and leaving a subsystem to be solved for the valence part H v D PS m v k E m k PS m v k displaystyle hat mathcal H v D left Psi mu v k right rangle E mu k left Psi mu v k right rangle nbsp The total energy E l m k displaystyle E l mu k nbsp is the sum of E m k displaystyle E mu k nbsp and the energies of the orbitals involved in the definition of the inactive part F l k displaystyle Phi l k nbsp This introduces the possibility to perform a single diagonalization of the valence Dyall s Hamiltonian on the CASCI zero order wavefunction and evaluate the perturber energies using the property depicted above Strongly Contracted Approach edit A different choice in the development of the NEVPT approach is to choose a single function for each space S l k displaystyle S l k nbsp leading to the Strongly Contracted SC scheme A set of perturbative operators are used to produce a single function for each space defined as the projection inside each space P S l k displaystyle hat mathcal P S l k nbsp of the application of the Hamiltonian to the contracted zero order wavefunction In other words PS l k P S l k H PS m 0 displaystyle Psi l k hat mathcal P S l k hat mathcal H Psi m 0 nbsp where P S l k displaystyle hat mathcal P S l k nbsp is the projector onto the subspace This can be equivalently written as the application of a specific part of the Hamiltonian to the zero order wavefunction PS l k V l k PS m 0 displaystyle Psi l k V l k Psi m 0 nbsp For each space appropriate operators can be devised We will not present their definition as it could result overkilling Suffice to say that the resulting perturbers are not normalized and their norm N l k PS l k PS l k PS m 0 V l k V l k PS m 0 displaystyle N l k left langle Psi l k left right Psi l k right rangle left langle Psi m 0 left left V l k right V l k right Psi m 0 right rangle nbsp plays an important role in the Strongly Contracted development To evaluate these norms the spinless density matrix of rank not higher than three between the PS m 0 displaystyle Psi m 0 nbsp functions are needed An important property of the PS l k displaystyle Psi l k nbsp is that any other function of the space S l k displaystyle S l k nbsp which is orthogonal to PS l k displaystyle Psi l k nbsp do not interact with the zero order wavefunction through the true Hamiltonian It is possible to use the PS l k displaystyle Psi l k nbsp functions as a basis set for the expansion of the first order correction to the wavefunction and also for the expression of the zero order Hamiltonian by means of a spectral decomposition H 0 l k PS l k E l k PS l k m PS m 0 E m 0 PS m 0 displaystyle hat mathcal H 0 sum lk left Psi l k prime right rangle E l k left langle Psi l k prime right rangle sum m left Psi m 0 right rangle E m 0 left langle Psi m 0 right nbsp where PS l k displaystyle left Psi l k prime right rangle nbsp are the normalized PS l k displaystyle left Psi l k right rangle nbsp The expression for the first order correction to the wavefunction is therefore PS m 1 k l PS l k PS l k H PS m 0 E m 0 E l k k l PS l k N l k E m 0 E l k displaystyle Psi m 1 sum kl left Psi l k prime right rangle frac left langle Psi l k prime left hat mathcal H right Psi m 0 right rangle E m 0 E l k sum kl left Psi l k prime right rangle frac sqrt N l k E m 0 E l k nbsp and for the energy is E m 2 k l PS l k H PS m 0 2 E m 0 E l k k l N l k E m 0 E l k displaystyle E m 2 sum kl frac left left langle Psi l k prime left hat mathcal H right Psi m 0 right rangle right 2 E m 0 E l k sum kl frac N l k E m 0 E l k nbsp This result still misses a definition of the perturber energies E l k displaystyle E l k nbsp which can be defined in a computationally advantageous approach by means of the Dyall s Hamiltonian E l k 1 N l k PS l k H D PS l k displaystyle E l k frac 1 N l k left langle Psi l k left hat mathcal H D right Psi l k right rangle nbsp leading to N l k E l k PS m 0 V l k H D V l k PS m 0 PS m 0 V l k V l k H D PS m 0 PS m 0 V l k H D V l k PS m 0 displaystyle N l k E l k left langle Psi m 0 left left V l k right hat mathcal H D V l k right Psi m 0 right rangle left langle Psi m 0 left left V l k right V l k hat mathcal H D right Psi m 0 right rangle left langle Psi m 0 left left V l k right left hat mathcal H D V l k right right Psi m 0 right rangle nbsp Developing the first term and extracting the inactive part of the Dyall s Hamiltonian it can be obtained E l k E m 0 D ϵ l 1 N l k PS m 0 V l k H v V l k PS m 0 displaystyle E l k E m 0 Delta epsilon l frac 1 N l k left langle Psi m 0 left left V l k right left hat mathcal H v V l k right right Psi m 0 right rangle nbsp with D ϵ l displaystyle Delta epsilon l nbsp equal to the sum of the orbital energies of the newly occupied virtual orbitals minus the orbital energies of the unoccupied core orbitals The term that still needs to be evaluated is the bracket involving the commutator This can be obtained developing each V displaystyle V nbsp operator and substituting To obtain the final result it is necessary to evaluate Koopmans matrices and density matrices involving only active indexes An interesting case is represented by the contribution for the V i j r s 0 displaystyle V ijrs 0 nbsp case which is trivial and can be demonstrated identical to the Moller Plesset second order contribution E m 2 S r s i j 0 N r s i j 0 ϵ r ϵ s ϵ i ϵ j displaystyle E m 2 left S rsij 0 right frac N rsij 0 epsilon r epsilon s epsilon i epsilon j nbsp NEVPT2 can therefore be seen as a generalized form of MP2 to multireference wavefunctions Partially Contracted Approach edit An alternative approach named Partially Contracted PC is to define the perturber wavefunctions in a subspace S l k displaystyle overline S l k nbsp of S l k displaystyle S l k nbsp with dimensionality higher than one like in case of the Strongly Contracted approach To define this subspace a set of functions F displaystyle Phi nbsp is generated by means of the V l k displaystyle V l k nbsp operators after decontraction of their formulation For example in the case of the V r s i 1 displaystyle V rsi 1 nbsp operator V r s i 1 g r s a r s i a E r i E s a s r i a E s i E r a r s displaystyle V rsi 1 gamma rs sum a left left langle rs left right ia right rangle E ri E sa left langle sr left right ia right rangle E si E ra right quad r leq s nbsp The Partially Contracted approach makes use of functions F r i s a E r i E s a PS m 0 displaystyle Phi risa E ri E sa Psi m 0 nbsp and F r i s a E s i E r a PS m 0 displaystyle Phi risa E si E ra Psi m 0 nbsp These functions must be orthonormalized and purged of linear dependencies which may arise The resulting set spans the S r s i 1 displaystyle overline S rsi 1 nbsp space Once all the S l k displaystyle overline S l k nbsp spaces have been defined we can obtain as usual a set of perturbers from the diagonalization of the Hamiltonian true or Dyall inside this space P S l k H P S l k PS l m k E l m k PS l m k displaystyle hat mathcal P overline S l k hat mathcal H hat mathcal P overline S l k left Psi l mu k right rangle E l mu k left Psi l mu k right rangle nbsp As usual the evaluation of the Partially Contracted perturbative correction by means of the Dyall Hamiltonian involves simply manageable entities for nowadays computers Although the Strongly Contracted approach makes use of a perturbative space with very low flexibility in general it provides values in very good agreement with those obtained by the more decontracted space defined for the Partially Contracted approach This can be probably explained by the fact that the Strongly Contracted perturbers are a good average of the totally decontracted perturbative space The Partially Contracted evaluation has a very little overhead in computational cost with respect to the Strongly Contracted one therefore they are normally evaluated together Properties editNEVPT is blessed with many important properties making the approach very solid and reliable These properties arise both from the theoretical approach used and on the Dyall s Hamiltonian particular structure Size consistency NEVPT is size consistent strict separable Briefly if A and B are two non interacting systems the energy of the supersystem A B is equal to the sum of the energy of A plus the energy of B taken by themselves E A B E A E B displaystyle E A B E A E B nbsp This property is of particular importance to obtain correctly behaving dissociation curves Absence of intruder states in perturbation theory divergencies can occur if the energy of some perturber happens to be nearly equal to the energy of the zero order wavefunction This situation which is due to the presence of an energy difference at the denominator can be avoided if the energies associated to the perturbers are guaranteed to be never nearly equal to the zero order energy NEVPT satisfies this requirement Invariance under active orbital rotation The NEVPT results are stable if an intraclass active active orbital mixing occurs This arises both from the structure of the Dyall Hamiltonian and the properties of a CASSCF wavefunction This property has been also extended to the intraclass core core and virtual virtual mixing thanks to the Non Canonical NEVPT approach allowing to apply a NEVPT evaluation without performing an orbital canonization which is required as we saw previously Spin purity is guaranteed The resulting wave functions are guaranteed to be spin pure due to the spin free formalism Efficiency although not a formal theoretical property computational efficiency is highly important for the evaluation on medium size molecular systems The current limit of the NEVPT application is largely dependent on the feasibility of the previous CASSCF evaluation which scales factorially with respect to the active space size The NEVPT implementation using the Dyall s Hamiltonian involves the evaluation of Koopmans matrices and density matrices up to the four particle density matrix spanning only active orbitals This is particularly convenient given the small size of currently used active spaces Partitioning into additive classes The perturbative correction to the energy is additive on eight different contributions Although the evaluation of each contribution has a different computational cost this fact can be used to improve performance by parallelizing each contribution to a different processor See also editElectron correlation Perturbation theory quantum mechanics Post Hartree FockReferences editAngeli C Cimiraglia R Evangelisti S Leininger T Malrieu J P 2001 Introduction of n electron valence states for multireference perturbation theory The Journal of Chemical Physics 114 23 10252 Bibcode 2001JChPh 11410252A doi 10 1063 1 1361246 Angeli C Cimiraglia R Malrieu J P 2001 N electron valence state perturbation theory A fast implementation of the strongly contracted variant Chemical Physics Letters 350 3 4 297 Bibcode 2001CPL 350 297A doi 10 1016 S0009 2614 01 01303 3 Angeli C Cimiraglia R Malrieu J P 2002 N electron valence state perturbation theory A spinless formulation and an efficient implementation of the strongly contracted and of the partially contracted variants The Journal of Chemical Physics 117 20 9138 Bibcode 2002JChPh 117 9138A doi 10 1063 1 1515317 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title N electron valence state perturbation theory amp oldid 1169983794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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