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Phys. Rev. A 72, 052505 (2005) [8 pages]

Spin and symmetry adaptation of the variational two-electron reduced-density-matrix method

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Gergely Gidofalvi and David A. Mazziotti*
Department of Chemistry and the James Franck Institute, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA

Received 2 August 2005; published 14 November 2005

The variational two-electron reduced-density-matrix (2-RDM) method computes the ground-state energy and 2-RDM of an atom or molecule without calculation of the many-electron wave function. Recently, the computational efficiency of the 2-RDM method has been significantly enhanced through the use of a first-order algorithm for semidefinite programming [ Mazziotti Phys. Rev. Lett. 93 213001 (2004)]. In this paper we develop a spin- and symmetry-adapted formulation of the method that further improves its efficiency by incorporating both the spin and spatial symmetries of many-electron atoms and molecules. While previous work on density-matrix symmetry focused on only one form of the 2-RDM, the variational method employs three different forms of the 2-RDM, known as the D, Q, and G matrices, to restrict the 2-RDM to be approximately N-representable, that is representable by an N-electron wave function. We apply spin symmetries to the three forms of the 2-RDM, each of which breaks into four diagonal spin-blocks, namely one singlet and three triplet blocks. If the molecules have point-group symmetry, each of the 2-RDMs may be further subdivided into smaller diagonal blocks according to the spatial symmetry of the basis functions. The subdivision of the 2-RDMs into diagonal blocks generates significant computational savings in both floating-point operations and memory storage. Calculations illustrate the computational savings. Spin adaptation also enforces the correct expectation value of the Ŝ2 operator, which in earlier work is applied as a separate constraint.

© 2005 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.72.052505
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.72.052505
PACS:
31.10.+z, 31.25.−v

*Email address: damazz@uchicago.edu