Issue |
ESAIM: M2AN
Volume 41, Number 2, March-April 2007
Special issue on Molecular Modelling
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 249 - 259 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/m2an:2007021 | |
Published online | 16 June 2007 |
First-order semidefinite programming for the two-electron treatment of many-electron atoms and molecules
Department of Chemistry and the James Franck Institute,
The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. damazz@uchicago.edu
Received:
10
September
2005
The ground-state energy and properties of any many-electron atom or molecule may be rigorously computed by variationally computing the two-electron reduced density matrix rather than the many-electron wavefunction. While early attempts fifty years ago to compute the ground-state 2-RDM directly were stymied because the 2-RDM must be constrained to represent an N-electron wavefunction, recent advances in theory and optimization have made direct computation of the 2-RDM possible. The constraints in the variational calculation of the 2-RDM require a special optimization known as a semidefinite programming. Development of first-order semidefinite programming for the 2-RDM method has reduced the computational costs of the calculation by orders of magnitude [Mazziotti, Phys. Rev. Lett. 93 (2004) 213001]. The variational 2-RDM approach is effective at capturing multi-reference correlation effects that are especially important at non-equilibrium molecular geometries. Recent work on 2-RDM methods will be reviewed and illustrated with particular emphasis on the importance of advances in large-scale semidefinite programming.
Mathematics Subject Classification: 90C22 / 81Q05 / 52A40
Key words: Semidefinite programming / electron correlation / reduced density matrices / N-representability conditions.
© EDP Sciences, SMAI, 2007
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