lecture 14. density functional theory (dft) references ratner ch.11.5, engel ch.15.6.3 lewars ch.7,...

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Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density functional theory (Klaus Capelle) http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/cond-mat/pdf/0211/0211443.pdf Nobel lecture: Electronic structure of matter — wave functions and density functionals (Walter Kohn; 1998) http://prola.aps.org/pdf/RMP/v71/i5/p1253_1

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Page 1: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT)

References

• Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3• Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6

• A bird’s-eye view of density functional theory (Klaus Capelle)http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/cond-mat/pdf/0211/0211443.pdf

• Nobel lecture: Electronic structure of matter — wave functions and density functionals (Walter Kohn; 1998)http://prola.aps.org/pdf/RMP/v71/i5/p1253_1

Page 2: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Postulate #1 of quantum mechanics

•The state of a quantum mechanical system is completely specified by the wavefunction or state function that depends on the coordinates of the particle(s) and on time.

•The probability density to find the particle in the volume element located at r at time t is given by . (Born interpretation)

•The wavefunction must be single-valued, continuous, finite, and normalized (the probability of find it somewhere is 1).

= <|>

dtrtr ),(),(

),( trΨ

drdtd

1),(2 trd

Probabilitydensity

Page 3: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Wave Function vs. Electron Density

N electrons are

indistinguishable

Probability density of finding electron 1 with arbitrary spin within the volume element dr1 while the N-1 electrons have arbitrary positions and spin

• Function of three spatial variables r• Observable (measured by diffraction)

• Possible to extend to spin-dependent electron density

•Probability density of finding any electron within a volume element dr1

Wavefunction • Function of 3N variables (r1, r2, …, rN) • Not observable

Page 4: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Electron Density as the Basic Variable

•Wavefunction as the center quantity

– Cannot be probed experimentally

– Depends on 4N (3N spatial, N spin) variables for N-electron system

•Can we replace the wavefunction by a simpler quantity?

•Electron density (r) as the center quantity

– Depends on 3 spatial variables independent of the system size

Page 5: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Density suffices.

• Unique definition of the molecular system (through Schrödinger equation)(N, {RA}, {ZA}) Hamiltonian operator wavefunction properties

– N = number of electrons

– {RA} = nuclear positions

– {ZA} = nuclear charges

• Unique definition of the molecular system (through density, too)(N, {RA}, {ZA}) electron density properties

– (r) has maxima (cusps) at {RA}

Page 6: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Electron Density as the Basic Variable 1st Attempt: Thomas-Fermi model (1927)

• Kinetic energy based on the uniform electron gas (Coarse approximation)

• Classical expression for nuclear-electron and electron-electron interaction(Exchange-correlation completely neglected)

• The energy is given completely in terms of the electron density (r).• The first example of density functional for energy.• No recourse to the wavefunction.

Page 7: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Slater’s Approximation of HF Exchange: X method (1951)

• Approximation to the non-local exchange contribution of the HF scheme

• Interaction between the charge density and the Fermi hole (same spin)

• Simple approximation to the Fermi hole (spherically symmetric)

• Exchange energy expressed as a density functional

• Semi-empirical parameter (2/3~1) introduced to improve the quality

X or Hartree-Fock-Slater (HFS)method

(from uniform electron gas)

Page 8: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Thomas-Fermi-Dirac Model

• Combinations of the above two:– Thomas-Fermi model for kinetic & classical Coulomb

contributions– Modified X model for exchange contribution

• Pure density functionals

• NOT very successful in chemical application

Page 9: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Hohenberg-Kohn Theorems (1964)

Reference

P. Hohenberg and W. Kohn, Phys. Rev. (1964) 136, B864http://prola.aps.org/pdf/PR/v136/i3B/pB864_1

Page 10: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Hohenberg-Kohn Theorem #1 (1964) Proof of Existence

Page 11: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The ground state electron density (r)

in fact uniquely determines the external potential Vext and thus

the Hamilton operator H and thus all the properties of the system.

Hohenberg-Kohn Theorem #1 (1964) Proof of Existence

There cannot be two different Vext (thus two different wavefuntion ) that yield the same ground state electron density (r).

Page 12: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Proof

Page 13: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Hohenberg-Kohn Functional

Hohenberg-Kohn functional

•Since the complete ground state energy is a functional of the ground state electron density, so must be its individual components.

system-independent, i.e.independent of (N,{RA},{ZA})

Page 14: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Hohenberg-Kohn Functional: Holy Grail of DFT

Page 15: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Finding Unknown Functional: Major Challenge in DFT

• The explicit form of the functionals lies completely in the dark.

• Finding explicit forms for the unknown functionals represent the major challenge in DFT.

Classical coulomb interactionNon-classical contributionSelf-interaction, exchange, correlation

Kinetic energy

Page 16: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Hohenberg-Kohn Theorem #2 (1964) Variational Principle

FHK[] delivers the lowest energy if and only if the input density

is the true ground state density 0.

* Limited only to the ground state energy. No excited state information!

Proof

from the variational principle of wavefunction theory

Page 17: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Variational Principle in DFT Levy’s Constrained Search (1979)

• Use the variation principle in wavefunction theory (Chapter 1)

• Do it in two separate steps:

1. Search over the subset of all the antisymmetric wavefunctions X that yield a particular density X upon quadrature Identify X

min which delivers the lowest energy EX for the given density X

2. Search over all densities (=A,B,…,X,…) Identify the density for which the wavefunction

min from (Step 1) delivers the lowest energy of all.

Search over all allowed, antisymmetric N-electron wavefunction

Page 18: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Variational Principle in DFT

• Determined simply by the density• Independent of the wavefunction• The same for all the wavefunctions integrating to a particular density

Universal functional

Page 19: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

HK Theorem in Real Life? Pragmatic Point of View

• The variational principle applies to the exact functional only.The true functional is not available. We use an approximation for F[].

The variational principle in DFT does not hold any more in real life.

The energies obtained from an “approximate” density functional theory can be lower than the exact ones!

• Offers no solution to practical considerations. Only of theoretical value.

Page 20: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Kohn-Sham Approach (1965)

Reference

W. Kohn and L.J. Sham, Phys. Rev. (1965) 140, A1133http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PR/v140/i4A/pA1133_1

Page 21: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Implement Hohenberg-Kohn Theorems: Thomas-Fermi?

• Hohenberg-Kohn theorems

• Hohenberg-Kohn universal functional

• Thomas-Fermi(-Dirac) model for kinetic energy: fails miserably

“No molecular system is stable with respect to its fragments!”

Classical coulombknown

Explicit forms remain a mystery.

(from uniform electron gas)

Page 22: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Hartree-Fock, a Single-Particle Approach: Better than TF

Section IV.C, Nobel lecture: Electronic structure of matter — wave functions and density functionals (Walter Kohn; 1998)

Page 23: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Better Model for the Kinetic Energy: Orbitals & Non-Interacting Reference System (HF for DFT?)

• A single Slater determinant constructed from N spin orbitals (HF scheme)– Approximation to the true N-electron wavefunction– Exact wavefunction of a fictitious system of N non-

interacting electrons (fermions) under an effective potential

VHF

– The kinetic energy is exactly expressed as

• Use this expression in order to compute the major fraction of the kinetic energy of the interacting system at hand

Section IV.C, Nobel lecture: Electronic structure of matter — wave functions and density functionals (Walter Kohn; 1998)

Page 24: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Non-Interacting Reference System: Kohn-Sham Orbital

• Hamiltonian with an effective local potential Vs (no e-e

interaction)

• The ground state wavefunction (Slater determinant)

• One-electron Kohn-Sham orbitals determined by

with the one-electron Kohn-Sham operator

satisfy

Ground state density of the real target system of interacting electrons

Vs chosen to satisfy the density condition

Page 25: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Kohn-Sham One-Electron Equations

• If we are not able to accurately determine the kinetic energy through an explicit functional, we should be a bit less ambitious and 1) concentrate on computing as much as we can of the true

kinetic energy exactly; and then2) deal with the remainder in an approximate manner.

• Non-interacting reference system with the same density as the real one

Exchange-Correlation energy (Junkyard of all the unknowns)

( )Kohn-Sham orbitals

Page 26: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Kohn-Sham Equations. Vs and SCF

only term unknown

• Energy expression

• Variational principle (minimize E under the constraint )

whereiterativesolution

SCF

Density-based

Wavefunction-based

Page 27: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

A bird’s-eye view of density functional theory (Klaus Capelle), Section 4http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/cond-mat/pdf/0211/0211443.pdf

The Kohn-Sham Approach: Wave Function is Back!

Page 28: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Kohn-Sham Equation is “in principle” exact!

Section IV.C, Nobel lecture: Electronic structure of matter — wave functions and density functionals (Walter Kohn; 1998)

Hartree-Fock:

•By using a single Slater determinant which can’t be the true wavefunction, the approximation is introduced right from the start

Kohn-Sham:

• If the exact forms of EXC and VXC were known (which is not the case), it would lead to the exact energy.

•Approximation only enters when we decide on the explicit form of the unknown functional, EXC and VXC.

•The central goal is to find better approximations to those exchange-correlation functionals.

Page 29: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Kohn-Sham Procedure I

where

Page 30: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Kohn-Sham Procedure II

Page 31: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Kohn-Sham Procedure III

Page 32: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Exchange-Correlation Energy: Hartree-Fock vs. Kohn-Sham

• Hatree-Fock

• Kohn-Sham

Page 33: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Quest for Approximate Exchange-Correlation (XC) Functionals

• The Kohn-Sham approach allows an exact treatment of most of the contributions to the electronic energy.

• All remaining unknown parts are collective folded into the

“junkyard” exchange-correlation functional (EXC).

• The Kohn-Sham approach makes sense only if EXC is known

exactly, which is unfortunately not the case.

• The quest for finding better and better XC functionals (EXC) is

at the very heart of the density functional theory.

Page 34: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Is There a Systematic Strategy?

Conventional wavefunction theory• The results solely depends on the choice of the approximate

wavefunction.• The true wavefunction can be constructed by

– Full configuration interaction (infinite number of Slater determinants)

– Complete (infinite) basis set expansion• Never realized just because it’s too complicated to be ever

solved,but we know how it can be improved step by step in a systematic manner

Density functional theory• The explicit form of the exact functional is a total mystery.• We don’t know how to approach toward the exact functional.• There is no systematic way to improve approximate functionals.• However, there are a few physical constraints for a reasonable

functional.

Page 35: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Local Density Approximation (LDA)

Model • Hypothetical homogeneous, uniform electron gas

• Model of an idealized simple metal with a perfect crystal (the positive cores are smeared out to a uniform background charge)• Far from realistic situation (atom,molecule) with rapidly varying density

• The only system for which we know EXC exactly

(Slater or Dirac exchange functional in Thomas-Fermi-Dirac model)

(constant everywhere)

Page 36: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

The Local Density Approximation (LDA)

Exchange•

Correlation• • From numerical simulations,

(VWN)

Page 37: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density
Page 38: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Gradient Expansion Approximation (GEA)

• LDA: not sufficient for chemical accuracy, solid-state application only includes only (r), the first term of Taylor expansion

• In order to account for the non-homogeneity, let’s supplement with the second term, (r) (gradient)

• Works when the density is not uniform but very slowly varying• Does not perform well (Even worse than LDA)

Violates basic requirements of true holes (sum rules, non-positiveness) (LDA meets those requirements.)

Page 39: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Generalized Gradient Approximation (GGA)

• Contains the gradients of the charge density and the hole constraints

• Enforce the restrictions valid for the true holes– When it’s not negative, just set it to zero.– Truncate the holes to satisfy the correct sum rules.

Reduced density gradient of spin Local inhomogeneity parameter

Page 40: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Exact Exchange Approach?

• Exchange contribution is bigger than correlation contribution.

Exchange energy of a Slater determinant can be calculated exactly (HF).

• Exact HF exchange + approximate functionals only for correlation (parts missing in HF)

• Good for atoms, Bad for molecules (32 kcal/mol G2 error) *HF 78 kcal/mol

Why?

The resulting total hole has the wrong characteristics (not localized).

• “Local” Slater exchange from uniform electron gas seems a better model.

“delocalized”(due to a single Slater determinant)

“local” model functional(should be delocalized to compensate Ex)

This division is artificial anyway.

Page 41: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Slater’s Approximation of HF Exchange: X method (1951)

• Approximation to the non-local exchange contribution of the HF scheme

• Interaction between the charge density and the Fermi hole (same spin)

• Simple approximation to the Fermi hole (spherically symmetric)

• Exchange energy expressed as a density functional

• Semi-empirical parameter (2/3~1) introduced to improve the quality

X or Hartree-Fock-Slater (HFS)method

(from uniform electron gas)

Page 42: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Becke’s Hybrid Functionals: Adiabatic Connection

0

where

Non-interacting, Exchange only (of a Slater determinant), Exact

Fully-interacting, Unknown, Approximated with XC functionals 1

linear

Half-and-half (Becke93) (6.5 kcal/mol G2 error)

Empirical Fit (Becke93) (2-3 kcal/mol G2 error)

“B3LYP”

Page 43: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density
Page 44: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Summary: XC Functionals

• LDA: Good structural properties, Fails in energies with overbinding

• GGA (BP86, BLYP, BPW91, PBE): Good energetics (< 5 kcal/mol wrt G2)

• Hybrid (B3LYP): The most satisfactory results

Page 45: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Self-Interaction Problem

• Consider a one-electron system (e.g. H)– There’s absolutely no electron-electron interaction.– The general KS equation should still hold.

– Classical electron repulsion

– To remove this wrong self-interaction error, we must demand

– None of the current approximate XC functions (which are set up independent of J[]) is self-interaction free.

0 even for one-electron system

(naturally taken care of in HF)

Page 46: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Self-Interaction in HF

• Coulomb term J when i = j (Coulomb interaction with oneself)

• Beautifully cancelled by exchange term K in HF scheme

• HF scheme is free of self-interaction errors.

= 0

0

Page 47: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

Self-Interaction Error J[]+EXC[]

Page 48: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density

HK Theorem in Real Life?

• The variational principle applies to the exact functional only.The true functional is not available. We use an approximation for F[].

The variational principle in DFT does not hold any more in real life.

The energies obtained from an “approximate” density functional theory can be lower than the exact ones!

Page 49: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density
Page 50: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density
Page 51: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density
Page 52: Lecture 14. Density Functional Theory (DFT) References Ratner Ch.11.5, Engel Ch.15.6.3 Lewars Ch.7, Cramer Ch.8, Jensen Ch.6 A bird’s-eye view of density