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Chapter 3 Electronic Structures 728345 Introduction • Wave function System • Schrödinger Equation Wave function – Hydrogenic atom – Many-electron atom • Effective nuclear charge • Hartree product • LCAO expansion (AO basis sets) – Variational principle – Self consistent field theory – Hartree-Fock approximation • Antisymmetric wave function • Slater determinants – Molecular orbital • LCAO-MO – Electron Correlation Potential Energy Surfaces • Molecular mechanics uses empirical functions for the interaction of atoms in molecules to approximately calculate potential energy surfaces, which are due to the behavior of the electrons and nuclei • Electrons are too small and too light to be described by classical mechanics and need to be described by quantum mechanics • Accurate potential energy surfaces for molecules can be calculated using modern electronic structure methods Wave Function • is the wavefunction (contains everything we are allowed to know about the system) • ||2 is the probability distribution of the particles • Analytic solutions of the wave function can be obtained only for very simple systems, such as particle in a box, harmonic oscillator, hydrogen atom • Approximations are required so that molecules can be treated • The average value or expectation value of an operator can be calculated by * Ôd d * O The Schrödinger Equation • Quantum mechanics explains how entities like electrons have both particle-like and wave-like characteristics. • The Schrödinger equation describes the wavefunction of a particle. • The energy and other properties can be obtained by solving the Schrödinger equation. – The time-dependent Schrödinger equation 2 2 (r , t ) V ( r , t ) i 2 m t – If V is not a function of time, the Schrödinger equation can be simplified by using the separation of variables technique. (r , t ) (r ) (t ) (t ) e iEt / – The time-independent Schrödinger equation H (r ) E (r ) 2 2 H V (r ) 2m • The various solutions of Schrödinger equation correspond to different stationary states of the system. The one with the lowest energy is called the ground state. H 1 (r ) E1 1 (r ) H 2 (r ) E2 2 (r ) H 3 (r ) E3 3 (r ) E E E 1 Wave Functions at Different States 2 3 Energy PES’s of Different States 2 1 Coordinate 3 The Variational Principle • Any approximate wavefunction (a trial wavefunction) will always yield an energy higher than the real ground state energy E() E when – Parameters in an approximate wavefunction can be varied to minimize the Evar – this yields a better estimate of the ground state energy and a better approximation to the wavefunction – To solve the Schrödinger equation is to find the set of parameters that minimize the energy of the resultant wavefunction. E() E when The Molecular Hamiltonian • For a molecular system (r , R) – The Hamiltonian is made up of kinetics and potential energy terms. 2 2 1 H 2m 40 e j ek r j k j jk Z I Z J e2 1 Z I e2 e2 V 40 I i rIi r R i j i I J I ij IJ – Atomic Units • Length • Charge • Mass • Energy a0 e me hartree o 2 a0 0.52917725 A 2 me e e2 hartree a0 The Born-Oppenheimer Approximation • The nuclear and electronic motions can be approximately separated because the nuclei move very slowly with respect to the electrons. • The Born-Oppenheimer (BO) approximation allows the two parts of the problem can be solved independently. – The Electronic Hamiltonian neglecting the kinetic energy term for the nuclei. H elec Z I Z J e2 1 Z I e2 e2 2 i 2 i I i RI ri i j i ri r j I J I RI RJ Helec elec (r , R) E eff ( R) elec (r , R) – The Nuclear Hamiltonian is used for nuclear motion, describing the vibrational, rotational, and translational states of the nuclei. H nucl T nucl ( R) E eff ( R) Nuclear motion on the BO surface • Classical treatment of the nuclei (e,g. classical trajectories) 2 R nuc E F ma , F , a R nuc t 2 • Quantum treatment of the nuclei (e.g. molecular vibrations) ˆ total el nuc , H nuc nuc nuc ˆ H nuc nuclei A 2 2 E (R nuc ) 2m A Solving the Schrödinger Equation • An exact solution to the Schrödinger equation is not possible for most of the molecular systems. • A number of simplifying assumptions and procedures do make an approximate solution possible for a large range of molecules. Hartree Approximation • Assume that a many electron wavefunction can be written as a product of one electron functions (r ) 1 (r1 )2 (r2 )n (rn ) – If we use the variational energy, solving the many electron Schrödinger equation is reduced to solving a series of one electron Schrödinger equations – Each electron interacts with the average distribution of the other electrons – No electron-electron interaction is accounted explicitly Hartree-Fock Approximation • The Pauli principle requires that a wavefunction for electrons must change sign when any two electrons are permuted (1,2) = - (2,1) • The Hartree-product wavefunction must be antisymmetrized can be done by writing the wave function as a determinant • Slater Determinant or HF wave function 1 (1) 1 (2) 1 2 (1) 2 (2) 1 (n) 2 (n) n! n (1) n (1) n (n) 1 2 n Spin Orbitals • Each spin orbital i describes the distribution of one electron (space and spin) • In a HF wavefunction, each electron must be in a different spin orbital (or else the determinant is zero) • Each spatial orbital can be combined with an alpha (, , spin up) or beta spin (, , spin down) component to form a spin orbital • Slater Determinant with Spin Orbitals 1 (r1 ) (1) 1 (r2 ) (2) 1 1 (r3 ) (3) (r ) n! 1 (r4 ) (4) 1 (r1 ) (1) 1 (r2 ) (2) 1 (r3 ) (3) 1 (r4 ) (4) 2 (r1 ) (1) 2 (r2 ) (2) 2 (r3 ) (3) 2 (r4 ) (4) 2 (r1 ) (1) (r1 ) (1) 2 (r2 ) (2) (r2 ) (2) 2 (r3 ) (3) (r3 ) (3) 2 (r4 ) (4) (r4 ) (4) n 2 n 2 n 2 n 2 1 (rn ) (n) 1 (rn ) (n) 2 (rn ) (n) 2 (rn ) (n) (rn ) (n) n 2 Fock Equation • Take the Hartree-Fock wavefunction and put it into the variational energy expression Ĥd d * 1 2 n Evar * • Minimize the energy with respect to changes in each orbital Evar / i 0 yields the Fock equation F̂i ii Fock Equation • Fock equation is an 1-electron problem F̂i ii – The Fock operator is an effective one electron Hamiltonian for an orbital – is the orbital energy • Each orbital sees the average distribution of all the other electrons • Finding a many electron wave function is reduced to finding a series of one electron orbitals Fock Operator ˆ V ˆ Jˆ K ˆ Fˆ T NE • kinetic energy & nuclear-electron attraction operators 2 2 nuclei e ZA 2 ˆT V̂ne riA 2me A • Coulomb operator: electron-electron repulsion) e2 j rij j d }i electrons Jˆ i { j • Exchange operator: purely quantum mechanical arises from the fact that the wave function must switch sign when a pair of electrons is switched 2 electrons e ˆ { K i d } j i j rij j Solving the Fock Equations F̂i ii 1. obtain an initial guess for all the orbitals i 2. use the current i to construct a new Fock operator 3. solve the Fock equations for a new set of i 4. if the new i are different from the old i, go back to step 2. When the new i are as the old i, self-consistency has been achieved. Hence the method is also known as self-consistent field (SCF) method Hartree-Fock Orbitals • For atoms, the Hartree-Fock orbitals can be computed numerically • The ‘s resemble the shapes of the hydrogen orbitals (s, p, d …) i R(r )Y , • Radial part is somewhat different, because of interaction with the other electrons (e.g. electrostatic repulsion and exchange interaction with other electrons) Hartree-Fock Orbitals • For homonuclear diatomic molecules, the Hartree-Fock orbitals can also be computed numerically (but with much more difficulty) • the ‘s resemble the shapes of the H2+ (1electron) orbitals • , , bonding and anti-bonding orbitals LCAO Approximation • Numerical solutions for the Hartree-Fock orbitals only practical for atoms and diatomics • Diatomic orbitals resemble linear combinations of atomic orbitals, e.g. sigma bond in H2 1sA + 1sB • For polyatomic, approximate the molecular orbital by a linear combination of atomic orbitals (LCAO) c Basis Function • The molecular orbitals can be expressed as linear combinations of a pre-defined set of one-electron functions know as a basis functions. An individual MO is defined as N i ci 1 • : a normalized basis function • ci : a molecular orbital expansion coefficients d p g p p1 • gp : a normalized Gaussian function; g ( , r ) cx • dp : a fixed constant within a given basis set N i ci d p g p 1 p n m l r 2 y ze The Roothann-Hall Equations • The variational principle leads to a set of equations describing the molecular orbital expansion coefficients, ci, derived by Roothann and Hall N ( F S )c i 1 i 0 1,2, N – Roothann Hall equation in matrix form FC SC F H P | 12 | N N core 1 1 core • H : the energy of a single electron in the field of the bare nuclei • P : the density matrix; P 2 occ.orb. c c * i 1 i i – The Roothann-Hall equation is nonlinear and must be solved iteratively by the procedure called the Self Consistent Field (SCF) method. Roothaan-Hall Equations • Basis set expansion leads to a matrix form of the Fock equations FC i SCi i F Ci i S Fock matrix column vector of the MO coefficients orbital energy overlap matrix Solving the Roothaan-Hall Equations 1. choose a basis set 2. calculate all the one and two electron integrals 3. obtain an initial guess for all the molecular orbital coefficients Ci 4. use the current Ci to construct a new Fock matrix 5. solve FC i SCi i for a new set of Ci 6. if the new Ci are different from the old Ci, go back to step 4. Solving the Roothaan-Hall Equations • Known as the self consistent field (SCF) equations, since each orbital depends on all the other orbitals, and they are adjusted until they are all converged • Calculating all two electron integrals is a major bottleneck, because they are difficult (6D integrals) and very numerous (formally N4) • Iterative solution may be difficult to converge • Formation of the Fock matrix in each cycle is costly, since it involves all N4 two electron integrals The SCF Method • The general strategy of SCF method – Evaluate the integrals (one- and two-electron integrals) – Form an initial guess for the molecular orbital coefficients and construct the density matrix – Form the Fock matrix – Solve for the density matrix – Test for convergence. • If it fails, begin the next iteration. • If it succeeds, proceed on the next tasks. Closed and Open Shell Methods • Restricted HF method (closed shell) – Both and electrons are forced to be in the same N orbital i i ci 1 • Unrestricted HF method (open shell) – and electrons are in different orbitals (different set of ci ) N i ci 1 N i ci 1 AO Basis Sets • Slater-type orbitals (STOs) n,l ,m r, , Nn,l ,m, Yl ,m , r n1 exp r • Gaussian-type orbitals (GTOs) a,b,c r, , Na' ,b,c, x a y b z c exp r 2 orbital radial size • Contracted GTO (CGTOs or STO-nG) n,l ,m r , , ci a ,b,c,i r , , i • Satisfied basis sets • Yield predictable chemical accuracy in the energies • Are cost effective • Are flexible enough to be used for atoms in various bonding environments Different types of Basis • The fundamental core & valence basis – A minimal basis: # CGTO = # AO – A double zeta (DZ): # CGTO = 2 #AO – A triple zeta (TZ): # CGTO = 3 # AO • Polarization Functions – Functions of one higher angular momentum than appears in the valence orbital space • Diffuse Functions – Functions with higher principle quantum number than appears in the valence orbital space Widely Used Basis Functions • STO-3G: 3 primitive functions for each AO – Single : one CGTO function for each AO – Double : two CGTO functions for each AO – Triple : three CGTO functions for each AO • Pople’s basis sets – core – – – 3-21G valence 6-311G Diffuse functions 6-31G** 6-311++G(d,p) Polarization functions Hartree Equation • The total energy of the atomic orbital j 2 2 Ze 2 e2 j j j j j j (r )k (r ' ) j (r )k (r ' ) 2m r r r' k • The LCAO expansion C j j, he j j j he C j , j C j ,