Series Expansion of a Scalable Hermitian Excitonic Renormalization Method
Utilizing the sparsity of the electronic structure problem, fragmentation methods have been researched for decades with great success, pushing the limits of ab initio quantum chemistry ever further. Recently, this set of methods was expanded to include a fundamentally different approach called excit...
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Zusammenfassung: | Utilizing the sparsity of the electronic structure problem, fragmentation
methods have been researched for decades with great success, pushing the limits
of ab initio quantum chemistry ever further. Recently, this set of methods was
expanded to include a fundamentally different approach called excitonic
renormalization, providing promising initial results. It builds a supersystem
Hamiltonian in a second-quantized-like representation from transition-density
tensors of isolated fragments, contracted with biorthogonalized molecular
integrals. This makes the method fully modular in terms of the quantum chemical
methods applied to each fragment and enables massive truncation of the
state-space required. Proof-of-principle tests have previously shown that an
excitonically renormalized Hamiltonian can efficiently scale to hundreds of
fragments, but the ad hoc approach to building the Hamiltonian was not scalable
to larger fragments. On the other hand, initial tests of the originally
proposed modular Hamiltonian build, presented here, have shown the accuracy to
be poor on account of its non-Hermitian character. In this study, we bridge the
gap between these with an operator expansion that is shown to converge rapidly,
tending towards a Hermitian Hamiltonian while retaining the modularity,
yielding an accurate, scalable method. The accuracy is tested here for a
beryllium dimer. At distances near equilibrium and longer, the zeroth-order
method is comparable to CCSD(T), and the first-order method to FCI. The
second-order method agrees with FCI for distances well up the inner repulsive
wall of the potential. Deviations occurring at shorter bond distances are
discussed along with approaches to scaling to larger fragments. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.07628 |