Helium

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Multiperturbation Approach to Potential Energy Surfaces for Polyatomic Molecules

Journal Title, Volume, Page: 
J. Chem. Phys. 102, 4919 (1995)
Year of Publication: 
1995
Authors: 
Donald H. Galvan
Instituto de Fisica de UNAM, Laboratorio de Ensenada, Apto. Postal 2681, Ensenada, Baja California 22800, Mexico
Moh’d Abu‐Jafar
Department of Physics and Molecular Science Program, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Carbondale, Illinois 62901‐4401
Current Affiliation: 
Department of Physics, Faculty of Sciences, An-Najah National University, Palestine
Frank C. Sanders
Department of Physics and Molecular Science Program, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Carbondale, Illinois 62901‐4401
Preferred Abstract (Original): 
In Z-dependent perturbation theory, the lowest-order wave functions for a polyatomic molecule are not only independent of the nuclear charges, but also of the total number of nuclear centers and electrons in the molecule. The complexity of the problem is then determined by the highest order retained in the calculation. Choosing the simplest possible unperturbed Hamiltonian, we describe an n-electron, m-center polyatomic molecule as n ‘‘hydrogenic’’ electrons on a single center perturbed by electron–electron and electron–nucleus Coulomb interactions. With this H0 , the first-order wave function for any polyatomic molecule will be a sum of products of hydrogenic orbitals with either two-electron, one-center or one-electron, two-center first-order wave functions. These first-order wave functions are obtained from calculations on He-like and H2 1-like systems. Similarly, the nth-order wave function decouples so that the most complex terms are just the nth-order wave functions of all the p-electron, q-center subsystems (p1q5n12) contained in the molecule. We illustrate applications of this method with some results, complete through third order in the energy, for H31-like molecules. These are compared with accurate variational results available in the literature. We conclude that, through this order, this perturbation approach is capable of yielding results comparable in accuracy to variational calculations of moderate complexity. The ease and efficiency with which such results can be obtained suggests that this method would be useful for generating detailed potential energy surfaces for polyatomic molecules. © 1995 American Institute of Physics.
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