May 1996
Semiempirical molecular orbital calculations with linear system size scaling
May 01, 1996 Filed In:Theory
Abstract: Details are provided for
the implementation of a density matrix
divide-and-conquer approximation into the framework
of molecular orbital theory on nonperiodic systems.
Originally developed for density functional theory,
the divide-and-conquer procedure is one of the most
promising in a growing list of techniques that
exhibit linear scaling with respect to the number of
basis functions in the system. The key to linear
scaling is the division of the electronic structure
calculation into a series of calculations over a set
of small, overlapping subsystems. A semiempirical
molecular orbital program designed around the
divide-and-conquer approach has been written and a
number of tests are carried out on polyglycine
structures in order to evaluate its performance. For
the systems examined, linear scaling is indeed
observed, and the accuracy of the calculations can be
controlled quite readily by the manner in which the
system is divided into its component subsystems. For
very large structures, the expense associated with
the computation of two-center interactions will
ultimately dominate the calculation, and quadratic
scaling will become apparent. Techniques to linearize
this aspect of the calculation are investigated and
discussed.
Authors: Steven L. Dixon and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: J. Chem. Phys. 1996, 104(17), 6643-6649. (see link for full paper).
Authors: Steven L. Dixon and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: J. Chem. Phys. 1996, 104(17), 6643-6649. (see link for full paper).