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Towards an exact description of electronic wavefunctions in real solids

Author

Listed:
  • George H. Booth

    (University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, UK)

  • Andreas Grüneis

    (University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, UK
    University of Vienna, Faculty of Physics and Center for Computational Materials Science, Sensengasse 8/12, A-1090 Vienna, Austria)

  • Georg Kresse

    (University of Vienna, Faculty of Physics and Center for Computational Materials Science, Sensengasse 8/12, A-1090 Vienna, Austria)

  • Ali Alavi

    (University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, UK)

Abstract

The properties of all materials arise largely from the quantum mechanics of their constituent electrons under the influence of the electric field of the nuclei. The solution of the underlying many-electron Schrödinger equation is a ‘non-polynomial hard’ problem, owing to the complex interplay of kinetic energy, electron–electron repulsion and the Pauli exclusion principle. The dominant computational method for describing such systems has been density functional theory. Quantum-chemical methods—based on an explicit ansatz for the many-electron wavefunctions and, hence, potentially more accurate—have not been fully explored in the solid state owing to their computational complexity, which ranges from strongly exponential to high-order polynomial in system size. Here we report the application of an exact technique, full configuration interaction quantum Monte Carlo to a variety of real solids, providing reference many-electron energies that are used to rigorously benchmark the standard hierarchy of quantum-chemical techniques, up to the ‘gold standard’ coupled-cluster ansatz, including single, double and perturbative triple particle–hole excitation operators. We show the errors in cohesive energies predicted by this method to be small, indicating the potential of this computationally polynomial scaling technique to tackle current solid-state problems.

Suggested Citation

  • George H. Booth & Andreas Grüneis & Georg Kresse & Ali Alavi, 2013. "Towards an exact description of electronic wavefunctions in real solids," Nature, Nature, vol. 493(7432), pages 365-370, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:493:y:2013:i:7432:d:10.1038_nature11770
    DOI: 10.1038/nature11770
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    Cited by:

    1. Huziel E. Sauceda & Luis E. Gálvez-González & Stefan Chmiela & Lauro Oliver Paz-Borbón & Klaus-Robert Müller & Alexandre Tkatchenko, 2022. "BIGDML—Towards accurate quantum machine learning force fields for materials," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 13(1), pages 1-16, December.
    2. Xiang Li & Zhe Li & Ji Chen, 2022. "Ab initio calculation of real solids via neural network ansatz," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 13(1), pages 1-9, December.

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