4.7 Article

Natural virtual orbitals for the GW method in the random-phase approximation and beyond

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 158, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0144469

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The GW method is popular for determining vertical ionization energies in molecular systems, but it may be computationally intensive depending on the formalism and range of orbitals used. Correlated natural virtual orbitals based on MP2 and direct MP2 correlation energies are implemented to alleviate the computational scaling issue. These correlated NVOs significantly improve efficiency for larger molecular systems and basis sets.
The increasingly popular GW method is becoming a convenient tool to determine vertical ionization energies in molecular systems. However, depending on the formalism used and the range of orbitals investigated, it may be hampered by a steep computational scaling. To alleviate this issue, correlated natural virtual orbitals (NVOs) based on second-order Moller-Plesset (MP2) and direct MP2 correlation energies are implemented, and the resulting correlated NVOs are tested on GW quasiparticle energies. Test cases include the popular GW variants G(0)W(0) and evGW(0) as well as more elaborate vertex corrections. We find that for increasingly larger molecular systems and basis sets, NVOs considerably improve efficiency. Furthermore, we test the performance of the truncated (frozen) NVO ansatz on the GW100 test set. For the latter, it is demonstrated that, using a carefully chosen truncation threshold, NVOs lead to a negligible loss in accuracy while providing speedups of one order of magnitude. Furthermore, we compare the resulting quasiparticle energies to very accurate vertical ionization energies obtained from coupled-cluster theory with singles, doubles, and noniterative triples [CCSD(T)], confirming that the loss in accuracy introduced by truncating the NVOs is negligible compared to the methodical errors in the GW approximation. It is also demonstrated that the choice of basis set impacts results far more than using a suitably truncated NVO space. Therefore, at the same computational expense, more accurate results can be obtained using NVOs. Finally, we provide improved reference CCSD(T) values for the GW100 test set, which have been obtained using the def2-QZVPP basis set.

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