Theory almost done
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%% This BibTeX bibliography file was created using BibDesk.
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%% Created for Pierre-Francois Loos at 2019-04-11 14:20:29 +0200
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%% Created for Pierre-Francois Loos at 2019-04-12 14:53:34 +0200
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%% Saved with string encoding Unicode (UTF-8)
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@article{Whi-JCP-73,
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Author = {J. L. Whitten},
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Date-Added = {2019-04-12 14:52:42 +0200},
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Date-Modified = {2019-04-12 14:53:34 +0200},
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Doi = {10.1063/1.1679012},
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Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
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Pages = {4496},
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Title = {Coulombic potential energy integrals and approximations},
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Volume = {58},
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Year = {1973}}
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@article{BarLoo-JCP-17,
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Author = {Barca, Giuseppe MJ and Loos, Pierre-Fran{\c c}ois},
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Date-Added = {2019-04-11 14:20:15 +0200},
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@ -420,23 +420,21 @@ Defining $\n{\modZ}{\FC}$ as the FC (i.e.~valence-only) one-electron density obt
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%=================================================================
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%\subsection{Computational considerations}
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%=================================================================
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Regarding now the main computational source of the present approach, it consists in the evaluation
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of $\W{\Bas}{}(\br{})$ [See Eqs.~\eqref{eq:wcoal}] at each quadrature grid point.
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All through this paper, we use pair density matrix of a single Slater determinant (typically HF)
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for $\Gam{rs}{tu}$ and therefore the computational bottleneck reduces to the evaluation
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at each quadrature grid point of
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\begin{equation}
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\label{eq:fcoal}
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\f{\Bas}{\HF}(\br{}) = \sum_{pq \in \Bas} \sum_{ij}^{\occ} \SO{p}{} \SO{q}{} \V{pq}{ij} \SO{i}{} \SO{j}{},
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\end{equation}
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which scales as $\Nb^2\times \Ne^2 \times \Ng$ and is embarrassingly parallel.
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Within the present formulation, the bottleneck is the four-index transformation to obtain the two-electron integrals on the MO basis which appear in \eqref{eq:fcoal}. Nevertheless, this step has in general to be performed before a correlated WFT calculations and therefore it represent a minor limitation.
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When the four-index transformation become prohibitive, by performing successive matrix multiplications, one could rewrite the equations directly in the AO basis where it scales formally as $\order{\Ng \Nb^4}$ but where one can take advantage of the sparsity atomic-orbital-based algorithms to significantly speed up the calculations.
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One of the most computationally intensive task of the present approach is the evaluation of $\W{\Bas}{}(\br{})$ [see Eqs.~\eqref{eq:wcoal}] at each quadrature grid point.
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This embarrassingly parallel step scales, in the general (multi-determinantal) case, as $\Ng \Nb^4$ (where $\Nb$ is the number of basis functions in $\Bas$) but is reduced to $\order*{ \Ng \Ne^2 \Nb^2}$ in the case of a single Slater determinant.
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%\begin{equation}
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% \label{eq:fcoal}
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% \f{\Bas}{\HF}(\br{}) = \sum_{pq \in \Bas} \sum_{ij}^{\occ} \SO{p}{} \SO{q}{} \V{pq}{ij} \SO{i}{} \SO{j}{},
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%\end{equation}
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In our current implementation, the bottleneck is the four-index transformation to get the two-electron integrals in the molecular orbital basis which appear in Eqs.~\eqref{eq:n2basis} and \eqref{eq:fbasis}.
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Nevertheless, this step usually has to be performed for most correlated WFT calculations.
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Modern integral decomposition techniques (such as density fitting \cite{Whi-JCP-73}) could be employed to significantly speed up this step.
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%When the four-index transformation become prohibitive, by performing successive matrix multiplications, one could rewrite the equations directly in the AO basis where it scales formally as $\order{\Ng \Nb^4}$ but where one can take advantage of the sparsity atomic-orbital-based algorithms to significantly speed up the calculations.
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To conclude this session, we point out that the present basis set correction has, independently of the DFT functional, the following properties:
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i) it can be applied to any WFT model that provides an energy and a density,
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ii) it does not correct one-electron systems, and
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iii) it vanishes in the limit of a complete basis set, hence guaranteeing an unaltered CBS limit for the given WFT model.
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To conclude this section, we point out that, independently of the DFT functional, the present basis set correction
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i) can be applied to any WFT model that provides an energy and a density,
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ii) does not correct one-electron systems, and
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iii) vanishes in the limit of a complete basis set, hence guaranteeing an unaltered CBS limit for a given WFT model.
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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\section{Results}
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