sfBSE/output/H2/SF-TDDFT/bhhlyp/h2_2.00.log
2021-01-22 16:55:53 +01:00

406 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext

Running Job 1 of 1 h2_2.00.inp
qchem h2_2.00.inp_2861.0 /mnt/beegfs/tmpdir/qchem2861/ 0
/share/apps/common/q-chem/5.2.1/exe/qcprog.exe_s h2_2.00.inp_2861.0 /mnt/beegfs/tmpdir/qchem2861/
Welcome to Q-Chem
A Quantum Leap Into The Future Of Chemistry
Q-Chem 5.2, Q-Chem, Inc., Pleasanton, CA (2019)
Yihan Shao, Zhengting Gan, E. Epifanovsky, A. T. B. Gilbert, M. Wormit,
J. Kussmann, A. W. Lange, A. Behn, Jia Deng, Xintian Feng, D. Ghosh,
M. Goldey, P. R. Horn, L. D. Jacobson, I. Kaliman, T. Kus, A. Landau,
Jie Liu, E. I. Proynov, R. M. Richard, R. P. Steele, E. J. Sundstrom,
H. L. Woodcock III, P. M. Zimmerman, D. Zuev, B. Albrecht, E. Alguire,
S. A. Baeppler, D. Barton, Z. Benda, Y. A. Bernard, E. J. Berquist,
K. B. Bravaya, H. Burton, D. Casanova, Chun-Min Chang, Yunqing Chen,
A. Chien, K. D. Closser, M. P. Coons, S. Coriani, S. Dasgupta,
A. L. Dempwolff, M. Diedenhofen, Hainam Do, R. G. Edgar, Po-Tung Fang,
S. Faraji, S. Fatehi, Qingguo Feng, K. D. Fenk, J. Fosso-Tande,
J. Gayvert, Qinghui Ge, A. Ghysels, G. Gidofalvi, J. Gomes,
J. Gonthier, A. Gunina, D. Hait, M. W. D. Hanson-Heine,
P. H. P. Harbach, A. W. Hauser, M. F. Herbst, J. E. Herr,
E. G. Hohenstein, Z. C. Holden, Kerwin Hui, B. C. Huynh, T.-C. Jagau,
Hyunjun Ji, B. Kaduk, K. Khistyaev, Jaehoon Kim, P. Klunzinger, K. Koh,
D. Kosenkov, L. Koulias, T. Kowalczyk, C. M. Krauter, A. Kunitsa,
Ka Un Lao, A. Laurent, K. V. Lawler, Joonho Lee, D. Lefrancois,
S. Lehtola, D. S. Levine, Yi-Pei Li, You-Sheng Lin, Fenglai Liu,
E. Livshits, A. Luenser, P. Manohar, E. Mansoor, S. F. Manzer,
Shan-Ping Mao, Yuezhi Mao, N. Mardirossian, A. V. Marenich,
T. Markovich, L. A. Martinez-Martinez, S. A. Maurer, N. J. Mayhall,
S. C. McKenzie, J.-M. Mewes, P. Morgante, A. F. Morrison,
J. W. Mullinax, K. Nanda, T. S. Nguyen-Beck, R. Olivares-Amaya,
J. A. Parkhill, Zheng Pei, T. M. Perrine, F. Plasser, P. Pokhilko,
S. Prager, A. Prociuk, E. Ramos, D. R. Rehn, F. Rob, M. Scheurer,
M. Schneider, N. Sergueev, S. M. Sharada, S. Sharma, D. W. Small,
T. Stauch, T. Stein, Yu-Chuan Su, A. J. W. Thom, A. Tkatchenko,
T. Tsuchimochi, N. M. Tubman, L. Vogt, M. L. Vidal, O. Vydrov,
M. A. Watson, J. Wenzel, M. de Wergifosse, T. A. Wesolowski, A. White,
J. Witte, A. Yamada, Jun Yang, K. Yao, S. Yeganeh, S. R. Yost,
Zhi-Qiang You, A. Zech, Igor Ying Zhang, Xing Zhang, Yan Zhao,
Ying Zhu, B. R. Brooks, G. K. L. Chan, C. J. Cramer, M. S. Gordon,
W. J. Hehre, A. Klamt, M. W. Schmidt, C. D. Sherrill, D. G. Truhlar,
A. Aspuru-Guzik, R. Baer, A. T. Bell, N. A. Besley, Jeng-Da Chai,
A. E. DePrince, III, R. A. DiStasio Jr., A. Dreuw, B. D. Dunietz,
T. R. Furlani, Chao-Ping Hsu, Yousung Jung, Jing Kong, D. S. Lambrecht,
WanZhen Liang, C. Ochsenfeld, V. A. Rassolov, L. V. Slipchenko,
J. E. Subotnik, T. Van Voorhis, J. M. Herbert, A. I. Krylov,
P. M. W. Gill, M. Head-Gordon
Contributors to earlier versions of Q-Chem not listed above:
R. D. Adamson, B. Austin, J. Baker, G. J. O. Beran, K. Brandhorst,
S. T. Brown, E. F. C. Byrd, A. K. Chakraborty, C.-L. Cheng,
Siu Hung Chien, D. M. Chipman, D. L. Crittenden, H. Dachsel,
R. J. Doerksen, A. D. Dutoi, L. Fusti-Molnar, W. A. Goddard III,
A. Golubeva-Zadorozhnaya, S. R. Gwaltney, G. Hawkins, A. Heyden,
S. Hirata, G. Kedziora, F. J. Keil, C. Kelley, Jihan Kim, R. A. King,
R. Z. Khaliullin, P. P. Korambath, W. Kurlancheek, A. M. Lee, M. S. Lee,
S. V. Levchenko, Ching Yeh Lin, D. Liotard, R. C. Lochan, I. Lotan,
P. E. Maslen, N. Nair, D. P. O'Neill, D. Neuhauser, E. Neuscamman,
C. M. Oana, R. Olson, B. Peters, R. Peverati, P. A. Pieniazek,
Y. M. Rhee, J. Ritchie, M. A. Rohrdanz, E. Rosta, N. J. Russ,
H. F. Schaefer III, N. E. Schultz, N. Shenvi, A. C. Simmonett, A. Sodt,
D. Stuck, K. S. Thanthiriwatte, V. Vanovschi, Tao Wang, A. Warshel,
C. F. Williams, Q. Wu, X. Xu, W. Zhang
Please cite Q-Chem as follows:
Y. Shao et al., Mol. Phys. 113, 184-215 (2015)
DOI: 10.1080/00268976.2014.952696
Q-Chem 5.2.1 for Intel X86 EM64T Linux
Parts of Q-Chem use Armadillo 8.300.2 (Tropical Shenanigans).
http://arma.sourceforge.net/
Q-Chem begins on Fri Jan 22 16:33:41 2021
Host:
0
Scratch files written to /mnt/beegfs/tmpdir/qchem2861//
Jul1719 |scratch|qcdevops|jenkins|workspace|build_RNUM 6358
Processing $rem in /share/apps/common/q-chem/5.2.1/config/preferences:
MEM_TOTAL 5000
NAlpha2: 4
NElect 2
Mult 3
Checking the input file for inconsistencies... ...done.
--------------------------------------------------------------
User input:
--------------------------------------------------------------
$comment
SF-TDDFT
$end
$molecule
0 3
H 0 0 0
H 0 0 2.00
$end
$rem
JOBTYPE = sp
METHOD = BHHLYP
BASIS = CC-PVQZ
PURECART = 2222
SCF_CONVERGENCE = 9
THRESH = 12
MAX_SCF_CYCLES = 100
MAX_CIS_CYCLES = 100
SPIN_FLIP = TRUE
UNRESTRICTED = TRUE
CIS_N_ROOTS = 20
RPA = FALSE
$end
--------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------
Standard Nuclear Orientation (Angstroms)
I Atom X Y Z
----------------------------------------------------------------
1 H 0.0000000000 0.0000000000 -1.0000000000
2 H 0.0000000000 0.0000000000 1.0000000000
----------------------------------------------------------------
Molecular Point Group D*h NOp =***
Largest Abelian Subgroup D2h NOp = 1
Nuclear Repulsion Energy = 0.26458861 hartrees
There are 2 alpha and 0 beta electrons
Q-Chem warning in module forms1/BasisType.C, line 1983:
You are not using the predefined 5D/6D in this basis set.
Requested basis set is cc-pVQZ
There are 20 shells and 70 basis functions
Total QAlloc Memory Limit 5000 MB
Mega-Array Size 188 MB
MEM_STATIC part 192 MB
Distance Matrix (Angstroms)
H ( 1)
H ( 2) 2.000000
A cutoff of 1.0D-12 yielded 210 shell pairs
There are 2653 function pairs
Smallest overlap matrix eigenvalue = 1.50E-03
Scale SEOQF with 1.000000e+00/1.000000e+00/1.000000e+00
Standard Electronic Orientation quadrupole field applied
Nucleus-field energy = -0.0000000021 hartrees
Guess from superposition of atomic densities
Warning: Energy on first SCF cycle will be non-variational
SAD guess density has 0.090382 electrons
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
General SCF calculation program by
Eric Jon Sundstrom, Paul Horn, Yuezhi Mao, Dmitri Zuev, Alec White,
David Stuck, Shaama M.S., Shane Yost, Joonho Lee, David Small,
Daniel Levine, Susi Lehtola, Hugh Burton, Evgeny Epifanovsky,
Bang C. Huynh
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Exchange: 0.5000 Hartree-Fock + 0.5000 B88
Correlation: 1.0000 LYP
Using SG-1 standard quadrature grid
A unrestricted SCF calculation will be
performed using DIIS
SCF converges when DIIS error is below 1.0e-09
---------------------------------------
Cycle Energy DIIS error
---------------------------------------
1 0.1883608903 8.13e-04
2 -0.9532364344 8.32e-03
3 -0.9547206301 8.07e-03
4 -0.9771195707 3.49e-03
5 -0.9863671241 1.55e-04
6 -0.9864114051 3.60e-05
7 -0.9864132343 7.10e-07
8 -0.9864132354 2.68e-07
9 -0.9864132354 1.03e-08
10 -0.9864132354 2.41e-10 Convergence criterion met
---------------------------------------
SCF time: CPU 1.51s wall 2.00s
<S^2> = 2.000000000
SCF energy in the final basis set = -0.9864132354
Total energy in the final basis set = -0.9864132354
Spin-flip DFT calculation will be performed
CIS energy converged when residual is below 10e- 6
---------------------------------------------------
Iter Rts Conv Rts Left Ttl Dev Max Dev
---------------------------------------------------
1 0 20 0.054675 0.004173
2 0 20 0.002186 0.000391
3 7 13 0.000043 0.000005
4 20 0 0.000002 0.000001 Roots Converged
---------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------
SF-DFT Excitation Energies
(The first "excited" state might be the ground state)
---------------------------------------------------
Excited state 1: excitation energy (eV) = 3.6796
Total energy for state 1: -0.85118959 au
<S**2> : 0.0428
S( 1) --> S( 2) amplitude = -0.2746 alpha
S( 2) --> S( 1) amplitude = 0.9343 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 1) amplitude = -0.1752 alpha
Excited state 2: excitation energy (eV) = 5.0343
Total energy for state 2: -0.80140678 au
<S**2> : 1.9650
S( 1) --> S( 1) amplitude = 0.7074 alpha
S( 1) --> V( 1) amplitude = -0.1651 alpha
S( 2) --> S( 2) amplitude = -0.6464 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 2) amplitude = -0.2252 alpha
Excited state 3: excitation energy (eV) = 8.8291
Total energy for state 3: -0.66195093 au
<S**2> : 0.1662
S( 1) --> S( 1) amplitude = 0.6731 alpha
S( 2) --> S( 2) amplitude = 0.7318 alpha
Excited state 4: excitation energy (eV) = 10.3449
Total energy for state 4: -0.60624347 au
<S**2> : 0.1683
S( 1) --> S( 2) amplitude = 0.9100 alpha
S( 1) --> V( 2) amplitude = 0.1903 alpha
S( 2) --> S( 1) amplitude = 0.3249 alpha
Excited state 5: excitation energy (eV) = 13.5467
Total energy for state 5: -0.48857946 au
<S**2> : 0.9488
S( 1) --> S( 2) amplitude = -0.2372 alpha
S( 1) --> V( 2) amplitude = 0.2483 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 1) amplitude = 0.9252 alpha
Excited state 6: excitation energy (eV) = 14.2869
Total energy for state 6: -0.46137820 au
<S**2> : 0.9994
S( 1) --> S( 1) amplitude = 0.1989 alpha
S( 1) --> V( 1) amplitude = 0.4725 alpha
S( 2) --> S( 2) amplitude = -0.1998 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 2) amplitude = 0.8298 alpha
Excited state 7: excitation energy (eV) = 17.2126
Total energy for state 7: -0.35386261 au
<S**2> : 0.9030
S( 1) --> V( 1) amplitude = 0.8584 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 2) amplitude = -0.4967 alpha
Excited state 8: excitation energy (eV) = 17.2973
Total energy for state 8: -0.35075080 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 7) amplitude = 0.1961 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 4) amplitude = 0.9800 alpha
Excited state 9: excitation energy (eV) = 17.2973
Total energy for state 9: -0.35075080 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 6) amplitude = -0.1961 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 3) amplitude = 0.9800 alpha
Excited state 10: excitation energy (eV) = 18.0430
Total energy for state 10: -0.32334433 au
<S**2> : 0.9054
S( 1) --> S( 2) amplitude = -0.1881 alpha
S( 1) --> V( 2) amplitude = 0.9020 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 1) amplitude = -0.2908 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 5) amplitude = 0.2479 alpha
Excited state 11: excitation energy (eV) = 19.2905
Total energy for state 11: -0.27749928 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 4) amplitude = 0.8540 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 7) amplitude = 0.5188 alpha
Excited state 12: excitation energy (eV) = 19.2905
Total energy for state 12: -0.27749927 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 3) amplitude = 0.8540 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 6) amplitude = -0.5188 alpha
Excited state 13: excitation energy (eV) = 19.3006
Total energy for state 13: -0.27713060 au
<S**2> : 0.9512
S( 1) --> V( 2) amplitude = -0.2474 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 5) amplitude = 0.9548 alpha
Excited state 14: excitation energy (eV) = 21.7620
Total energy for state 14: -0.18667500 au
<S**2> : 0.9766
S( 1) --> V( 5) amplitude = 0.9733 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 8) amplitude = 0.1923 alpha
Excited state 15: excitation energy (eV) = 22.4428
Total energy for state 15: -0.16165436 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 4) amplitude = -0.5195 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 7) amplitude = 0.8541 alpha
Excited state 16: excitation energy (eV) = 22.4428
Total energy for state 16: -0.16165436 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 3) amplitude = 0.5195 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 6) amplitude = 0.8541 alpha
Excited state 17: excitation energy (eV) = 24.5769
Total energy for state 17: -0.08322844 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 7) amplitude = 0.9797 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 4) amplitude = -0.1970 alpha
Excited state 18: excitation energy (eV) = 24.5769
Total energy for state 18: -0.08322844 au
<S**2> : 1.0000
S( 1) --> V( 6) amplitude = 0.9797 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 3) amplitude = 0.1970 alpha
Excited state 19: excitation energy (eV) = 28.5390
Total energy for state 19: 0.06237603 au
<S**2> : 1.0002
S( 1) --> V( 5) amplitude = -0.1892 alpha
S( 2) --> V( 8) amplitude = 0.9776 alpha
Excited state 20: excitation energy (eV) = 31.1767
Total energy for state 20: 0.15930848 au
<S**2> : 0.9999
S( 1) --> V( 8) amplitude = 0.9858 alpha
---------------------------------------------------
SETman timing summary (seconds)
CPU time 1.07s
System time 0.00s
Wall time 1.30s
--------------------------------------------------------------
Orbital Energies (a.u.)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Alpha MOs
-- Occupied --
-0.4344 -0.3338
-- Virtual --
0.1937 0.2136 0.3411 0.3411 0.3832 0.4820 0.4820 0.7289
1.0140 1.0772 1.5127 1.6833 1.6833 1.7298 1.7298 1.7823
1.7823 1.8637 1.9024 1.9025 1.9611 1.9611 2.0108 2.1875
2.1875 2.7644 2.8718 2.9302 4.1596 4.2265 4.2265 4.3270
4.3270 4.5946 5.8076 5.8076 5.8335 5.8530 5.8531 5.8640
5.8640 5.8653 5.8653 5.8746 5.8747 5.9391 5.9391 6.1457
7.7915 7.7915 7.8664 7.8666 7.8929 7.9072 7.9073 8.0711
8.0711 8.6063 9.2982 9.3708 9.4349 9.4349 9.4927 9.4927
9.5331 9.6997 22.0643 22.8337
--------------------------------------------------------------
Ground-State Mulliken Net Atomic Charges
Atom Charge (a.u.) Spin (a.u.)
--------------------------------------------------------
1 H -0.000000 1.000000
2 H 0.000000 1.000000
--------------------------------------------------------
Sum of atomic charges = -0.000000
Sum of spin charges = 2.000000
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Cartesian Multipole Moments
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Charge (ESU x 10^10)
-0.0000
Dipole Moment (Debye)
X -0.0000 Y -0.0000 Z 0.0000
Tot 0.0000
Quadrupole Moments (Debye-Ang)
XX -2.6695 XY 0.0000 YY -2.6695
XZ 0.0000 YZ -0.0000 ZZ -3.3030
Octopole Moments (Debye-Ang^2)
XXX 0.0000 XXY 0.0000 XYY 0.0000
YYY -0.0000 XXZ 0.0000 XYZ 0.0000
YYZ 0.0000 XZZ 0.0000 YZZ -0.0000
ZZZ 0.0000
Hexadecapole Moments (Debye-Ang^3)
XXXX -3.3670 XXXY 0.0000 XXYY -1.1223
XYYY 0.0000 YYYY -3.3670 XXXZ 0.0000
XXYZ 0.0000 XYYZ 0.0000 YYYZ 0.0000
XXZZ -4.1474 XYZZ 0.0000 YYZZ -4.1474
XZZZ 0.0000 YZZZ -0.0000 ZZZZ -22.3204
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Archival summary:
1\1\lcpq-curie.ups-tlse.fr\SP\ProcedureUnspecified\BasisUnspecified\2(3)\emonino\FriJan2216:33:442021FriJan2216:33:442021\0\\#,ProcedureUnspecified,BasisUnspecified,\\0,3\H\H,1,2\\\@
Total job time: 3.12s(wall), 2.68s(cpu)
Fri Jan 22 16:33:44 2021
*************************************************************
* *
* Thank you very much for using Q-Chem. Have a nice day. *
* *
*************************************************************