saving work in results before leaving
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\documentclass[aip,jcp,reprint,noshowkeys,superscriptaddress]{revtex4-1}
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\usepackage{graphicx,dcolumn,bm,xcolor,microtype,multirow,amscd,amsmath,amssymb,amsfonts,physics,longtable,wrapfig,bbold}
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\usepackage{graphicx,dcolumn,bm,xcolor,microtype,multirow,amscd,amsmath,amssymb,amsfonts,physics,longtable,wrapfig,bbold,siunitx}
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\usepackage[version=4]{mhchem}
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\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
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@ -367,7 +367,7 @@ As hinted at the end of section~\ref{sec:gw}, the diagonal and off-diagonal part
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\bO & \bC^{\text{2h1p}} & \bO \\
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\bO & \bO & \bC^{\text{2p1h}} \\
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\end{pmatrix}
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&
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& \\
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\bH^\text{od}(s) &=
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\begin{pmatrix}
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\bO & \bV^{\text{2h1p}} & \bV^{\text{2p1h}} \\
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@ -544,7 +544,7 @@ In fact, the dynamic part after the change of variable is closely related to the
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The two qs$GW$ variants considered in this work have been implemented in an in-house program.
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The $GW$ implementation closely follows the one of mol$GW$. \cite{Bruneval_2016}
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The geometries have been optimized at the CC3 level in the aug-cc-pvtz basis set without frozen core using the CFOUR program.
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The geometries have been optimized at the CC3 level in the aug-cc-pVTZ basis set without frozen core using the CFOUR program.
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The reference CCSD(T) IP energies have been obtained using default parameters of Gaussian 16.
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This means that the cations used an unrestricted HF reference while the neutral ground-state energies have been obtained in a restricted formalism.
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@ -567,19 +567,56 @@ Then the accuracy of the IP yielded by the Sym and SRG schemes will be statistic
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\centering
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\includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{fig1.pdf}
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\caption{
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This figure is terrible, I will clean it. I put it here just to start writing the results discussion. Maybe fig 1 with only He and Ne but also the $\eta$ evolution because possible to converge for these molecules. Then figure 2 with H2O and BeO with SRG GW and SRG GF(2).
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Add caption
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\label{fig:fig1}}
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\end{figure*}
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%%% %%% %%% %%%
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This section starts by considering the Neon atom and the water molecule in the aug-cc-pVTZ cartesian basis set in Fig.~\ref{fig:fig1}.
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The HF values (orange lines) lie below the reference CCSD(T) ones, a result which is now well-understood.
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Indeed, this is due to an over(under? \ant{I will check this...}) screening of the interactions in the mean-field treatment. \cite{Lewis_2019}
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The usual Sym-qs$GW$ scheme (blue lines) brings a quantitative improvement as both IP energies are now within \SI{0.5}{\electronvolt} of the reference.
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The Neon atom is a well-behaved system and could be converged without regularization parameter while for water it was set to 0.01 to help convergence.
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Figure~\ref{fig:fig1} also displays the SRG-qs$GW$ IP energies as a function of the flow parameter.
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At $s=0$, the IPs are equal to their HF counterpart as expected from the discussion of Sec.~\ref{sec:srggw}.
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For $s\to\infty$ both IPs reach a plateau that are significantly better than their $s=0$ starting point.
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Even more, the values associated with these plateau are more accurate than their Sym-qs$GW$ counterparts.
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The SRG-qs$GW$ IPs do not increase smoothly between the HF values and their limits as for small $s$ values they are actually worst than the HF IPs.
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The behavior of the SRG-qsGF2 IPS is similar to the SRG-qs$GW$ one.
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Add sentence about $GW$ better than GF2 when the results will be here.
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The decrease and then increase behavior of the IPs can be rationalised using results from perturbation theory for GF(2).
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We refer the reader to the chapter 8 of Ref.~\onlinecite{Schirmer_2018} for more details about this analysis.
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The GF(2) IP admits the following perturbation expansion...
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Because $GW$ relies on an infinite resummation of diagram such a perturbation analysis is difficult to make in this case.
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But the mechanism causing the increase/decrease of the $GW$ IPs as a function of $s$ should be closely related to the GF(2) one exposed above.
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\begin{itemize}
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\item Li2 interesting because HF underestimate IP
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\item LiH interesting because Sym-qs$GW$ worst than HF
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\item BeO interesting because usually difficult to converge in qs$GW$ (cf Forster 2021)
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\end{itemize}
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%%% FIG 2 %%%
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\begin{figure*}
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\centering
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\includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{fig2.pdf}
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\caption{
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Add caption
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\label{fig:fig2}}
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\end{figure*}
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%%% %%% %%% %%%
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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\subsection{Comparison of the Sym-qs and SRG-qs approximations}
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\label{sec:SRG_vs_Sym}
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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The test set considered in this study is composed of the GW20 set of molecules introduced by Berkelbach \ant{check ref} and co-workers.
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This set is made of the 20 smallest molecules of the GW100 benchmark set.
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The test set considered in this study is composed of the GW20 set of molecules introduced by Lewis and Berkelbach. \cite{Lewis_2019}
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This set is made of the 20 smallest atoms and molecules of the GW100 benchmark set.
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We also added the MgO and O3 molecules which are part of GW100 and are known to be difficult to converged for qs$GW$.
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In addition, we considered the Quest 1 and 2 sets which is made of small and medium size organic molecules.
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