Local electronic correlation in multicomponent Møller-Plesset perturbation theory

12 August 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

We present in this contribution the first application of local correlation in the context of multicomponent methods. Multicomponent approaches allow for the targeted simulation of electrons together with other fermions (most commonly protons) as quantum particles. These methods have become increasingly popular over the last years, particularly for the description of nuclear quantum effects (in strong hydrogen bonds, proton tunneling, and many more). However, most implementations are still based on canonical formulations of wave function theory, which we know for decades to be computationally inefficient for capturing dynamical correlation effects. Local correlation approaches, particularly with the use of pair natural orbitals (PNOs), enable asymptotically linear scaling of computational costs with very little impact on the overall accuracy. In this context, the efficient use of density fitting approximations in the integrals calculation proves essential. We start by discussing our implementation of density-fitted NEO-MP2 and NEO-PNO-LMP2, upgrading the electronic correlation treatment up to PNO local coupled cluster. Several challenging examples are provided to benchmark the method in terms of accuracy as well as the computational cost scaling. Following appropriate protocols, anharmonic corrections to localized X-H stretches can be applied routinely with little computational overhead.

Keywords

multicomponent methods
multicomponent correlation
nuclear quantum effects
quantum chemistry
local correlation
MP2
Coupled Cluster
anharmonicity

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