News and Development

>News and Development> Reply

Title
Username
Password Combination of English and number with in 12 syllable
Password confirm
E-mail @
Title Vibrational heat-bath configuration interaction with semistochastic perturbation theory using harmonic oscillator or VSCF modals
Date 2024-06-03 Attachment , , , , , , , ,

Vibrational heat-bath configuration interaction with semistochastic perturbation theory using harmonic oscillator or VSCF modals


Tran, HK (Tran, Henry K.)Berkelbach, TC (Berkelbach, Timothy C.)

Journal of Chemical Physics, 2023, Volume 159, 194101.

Vibrational heat-bath configuration interaction (VHCI)-a selected configuration interaction technique for vibrational structure theory-has recently been developed in two independent works [J. H. Fetherolf and T. C. Berkelbach, J. Chem. Phys. 154, 074104 (2021); A. U. Bhatty and K. R. Brorsen, Mol. Phys. 119, e1936250 (2021)], where it was shown to provide accuracy on par with the most accurate vibrational structure methods with a low computational cost. Here, we eliminate the memory bottleneck of the second-order perturbation theory correction using the same (semi)stochastic approach developed previously for electronic structure theory. This allows us to treat, in an unbiased manner, much larger perturbative spaces, which are necessary for high accuracy in large systems. Stochastic errors are easily controlled to be less than 1 cm(-1). We also report two other developments: (i) we propose a new heat-bath criterion and an associated exact implicit sorting algorithm for potential energy surfaces expressible as a sum of products of one-dimensional potentials; (ii) we formulate VHCI to use a vibrational self-consistent field (VSCF) reference, as opposed to the harmonic oscillator reference configuration used in previous reports. Our tests are done with quartic and sextic force fields, for which we find that with VSCF, the minor improvements to accuracy are outweighed by the higher computational cost associated the matrix element evaluations. We expect VSCF-based VHCI to be important for more general potential representations, for which the harmonic oscillator basis function integrals are no longer analytic.