English

Multireference electron correlation methods: Journeys along potential energy surfaces

Chemical Physics 2019-11-19 v1

Abstract

Multireference electron correlation methods describe static and dynamical electron correlation in a balanced way, and therefore, can yield accurate and predictive results even when single-reference methods or multiconfigurational self-consistent field (MCSCF) theory fails. One of their most prominent applications in quantum chemistry is the exploration of potential energy surfaces (PES). This includes the optimization of molecular geometries, such as equilibrium geometries and conical intersections, and on-the-fly photodynamics simulations; both depend heavily on the ability of the method to properly explore the PES. Since such applications require the nuclear gradients and derivative couplings, the availability of analytical nuclear gradients greatly improves the utility of quantum chemical methods. This review focuses on the developments and advances made in the past two decades. To motivate the readers, we first summarize the notable applications of multireference electron correlation methods to mainstream chemistry, including geometry optimizations and on-the-fly dynamics. Subsequently, we review the analytical nuclear gradient and derivative coupling theories for these methods, and the software infrastructure that allows one to make use of these quantities in applications. The future prospects are discussed at the end of this review.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1911.06836,
  title  = {Multireference electron correlation methods: Journeys along potential energy surfaces},
  author = {Jae Woo Park and Rachael Al-Saadon and Matthew K. MacLeod and Toru Shiozaki and Bess Vlaisavljevich},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1911.06836},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

Submitted to Chem. Rev. Comments welcome

R2 v1 2026-06-23T12:17:32.696Z