Author ORCID Identifier

Zehao Zhou

Shane M. Parker

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

11-30-2021

Abstract

Computing ab initio molecular linear response properties, e.g., electronic excitation energies and transition moments, requires the solution of large eigenvalue problems or large systems of equations. These large eigenvalue problems or large systems of equations are commonly solved iteratively using Krylov space algorithms, such as the Davidson algorithm for eigenvalue problems. A critical ingredient in Krylov space algorithms is the preconditioner which is used to generate optimal update vectors in each iteration. We propose to use semiempirical approximations as preconditioners to accelerate the calculation of ab initio properties. The crucial advantage to improving the preconditioner is that the converged result is unchanged, so there is no tradeoff between accuracy and speedup. Furthermore, the structure of the algorithm is retained so existing implementations of Krylov space algorithms require only minimal modifications to incorporate the proposed semiempirical preconditioner. We demonstrate our approach by accelerating the calculation of electronic excitation energies and electric polarizabilities from linear response time-dependent density functional theory using the simplified time-dependent density functional theory semiempirical model. For excitation energies, the semiempirical preconditioner reduces the number of iterations on average by 37% and up to 70%. The semiempirical preconditioner reduces the number of iterations for computing the polarizability by 15% on average and up to 33%. We show that the preconditioner can be further improved by tuning the empirical parameters defining the semiempirical model, leading to an additional reduction in the number of iterations by about 20%. Our approach bridges the gap between semiempirical models and ab initio methods and charts a path towards combining the speed of semiempirical models with the accuracy of ab initio methods.

Keywords

chemistry, Krylov space algorithm, ab initio method

Publication Title

The Journal of Chemical Physics

Rights

© 2021 Author(s). Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.

Included in

Chemistry Commons

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