4.7 Article

Target State Optimized Density Functional Theory for Electronic Excited and Diabatic States

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.2c01317

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A flexible self-consistent field method called target state optimization (TSO) is introduced, which can explore electronic excited configurations and localized diabatic states. The TSO method partitions molecular orbitals into different subspaces based on the excitation or localization pattern of a target state, allowing for variationally optimized excited or diabatic configurations without collapsing back to the ground state. TSO-DFT has been shown to outperform conventional TD-DFT calculations for core excitation, doubly excited states, and charge-transfer states.
A flexible self-consistent field method, called target state optimization (TSO), is presented for exploring electronic excited configurations and localized diabatic states. The key idea is to partition molecular orbitals into different subspaces according to the excitation or localization pattern for a target state. Because of the orbital-subspace constraint, orbitals belonging to different subspaces do not mix. Furthermore, the determinant wave function for such excited or diabatic configurations can be variationally optimized as a ground state procedure, unlike conventional Delta SCF methods, without the possibility of collapsing back to the ground state or other lower-energy configurations. The TSO method can be applied both in Hartree-Fock theory and in Kohn-Sham density functional theory (DFT). The density projection procedure and the working equations for implementing the TSO method are described along with several illustrative applications. For valence excited states of organic compounds, it was found that the computed excitation energies from TSO-DFT and timedependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) are of similar quality with average errors of 0.5 and 0.4 eV, respectively. For core excitation, doubly excited states and charge-transfer states, the performance of TSO-DFT is clearly superior to that from conventional TD-DFT calculations. It is shown that variationally optimized charge-localized diabatic states can be defined using TSO-DFT in energy decomposition analysis to gain both qualitative and quantitative insights on intermolecular interactions. Alternatively, the variational diabatic states may be used in molecular dynamics simulation of charge transfer processes. The TSO method can also be used to define basis states in multistate density functional theory for excited states through nonorthogonal state interaction calculations. The software implementing TSO-DFT can be accessed from the authors.

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