Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces (2024)

Abstract

We present a modification of the Delta self-consistent field (Delta SCF) method of calculating energies of excited states in order to make it applicable to resonance calculations of molecules adsorbed on metal surfaces, where the molecular orbitals are highly hybridized. The Delta SCF approximation is a density-functional method closely resembling standard density-functional theory (DFT), the only difference being that in Delta SCF one or more electrons are placed in higher lying Kohn-Sham orbitals instead of placing all electrons in the lowest possible orbitals as one does when calculating the ground-state energy within standard DFT. We extend the Delta SCF method by allowing excited electrons to occupy orbitals which are linear combinations of Kohn-Sham orbitals. With this extra freedom it is possible to place charge locally on adsorbed molecules in the calculations, such that resonance energies can be estimated, which is not possible in traditional Delta SCF because of very delocalized Kohn-Sham orbitals. The method is applied to N2, CO, and NO adsorbed on different metallic surfaces and compared to ordinary Delta SCF without our modification, spatially constrained DFT, and inverse-photoemission spectroscopy measurements. This comparison shows that the modified Delta SCF method gives results in close agreement with experiment, significantly closer than the comparable methods. For N2 adsorbed on ruthenium (0001) we map out a two-dimensional part of the potential energy surfaces in the ground state and the 2 resonance. From this we conclude that an electron hitting the resonance can induce molecular motion, optimally with 1.5 eV transferred to atomic movement. Finally we present some performance test of the Delta SCF approach on gas-phase N2 and CO in order to compare the results to higher accuracy methods. Here we find that excitation energies are approximated with accuracy close to that of time-dependent density-functional theory. Especially we see very good agreement in the minimum shift of the potential energy surfaces in the excited state compared to the ground state.

Original languageEnglish
JournalPhysical Review B Condensed Matter
Volume78
Issue number7
Pages (from-to)075441
ISSN0163-1829
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008

Bibliographical note

Copyright 2008 American Physical Society

Keywords

  • STATES
  • SYSTEMS
  • ; AUGMENTED-WAVE METHOD
  • DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY
  • GREENS-FUNCTION
  • DESORPTION
  • ELECTRON-GAS
  • CO
  • INVERSE-PHOTOEMISSION
  • EXCITATION-ENERGIES

Access to Document

OpenUrl availability

Full text

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    View full fingerprint

    Cite this

    • APA
    • Author
    • BIBTEX
    • Harvard
    • Standard
    • RIS
    • Vancouver

    Gavnholt, J., Olsen, T., Engelund, M. (2008). Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces. Physical Review B Condensed Matter, 78(7), 075441. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.78.075441

    Gavnholt, Jeppe ; Olsen, Thomas ; Engelund, Mads et al. / Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces. In: Physical Review B Condensed Matter. 2008 ; Vol. 78, No. 7. pp. 075441.

    @article{057ce20a5c9f4f29961a46e0e46c9389,

    title = "Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces",

    abstract = "We present a modification of the Delta self-consistent field (Delta SCF) method of calculating energies of excited states in order to make it applicable to resonance calculations of molecules adsorbed on metal surfaces, where the molecular orbitals are highly hybridized. The Delta SCF approximation is a density-functional method closely resembling standard density-functional theory (DFT), the only difference being that in Delta SCF one or more electrons are placed in higher lying Kohn-Sham orbitals instead of placing all electrons in the lowest possible orbitals as one does when calculating the ground-state energy within standard DFT. We extend the Delta SCF method by allowing excited electrons to occupy orbitals which are linear combinations of Kohn-Sham orbitals. With this extra freedom it is possible to place charge locally on adsorbed molecules in the calculations, such that resonance energies can be estimated, which is not possible in traditional Delta SCF because of very delocalized Kohn-Sham orbitals. The method is applied to N2, CO, and NO adsorbed on different metallic surfaces and compared to ordinary Delta SCF without our modification, spatially constrained DFT, and inverse-photoemission spectroscopy measurements. This comparison shows that the modified Delta SCF method gives results in close agreement with experiment, significantly closer than the comparable methods. For N2 adsorbed on ruthenium (0001) we map out a two-dimensional part of the potential energy surfaces in the ground state and the 2 resonance. From this we conclude that an electron hitting the resonance can induce molecular motion, optimally with 1.5 eV transferred to atomic movement. Finally we present some performance test of the Delta SCF approach on gas-phase N2 and CO in order to compare the results to higher accuracy methods. Here we find that excitation energies are approximated with accuracy close to that of time-dependent density-functional theory. Especially we see very good agreement in the minimum shift of the potential energy surfaces in the excited state compared to the ground state.",

    keywords = "STATES, SYSTEMS, ; AUGMENTED-WAVE METHOD, DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY, GREENS-FUNCTION, DESORPTION, ELECTRON-GAS, CO, INVERSE-PHOTOEMISSION, EXCITATION-ENERGIES",

    author = "Jeppe Gavnholt and Thomas Olsen and Mads Engelund and Jakob Schi{\o}tz",

    note = "Copyright 2008 American Physical Society",

    year = "2008",

    doi = "10.1103/PhysRevB.78.075441",

    language = "English",

    volume = "78",

    pages = "075441",

    journal = "Physical Review B Condensed Matter",

    issn = "0163-1829",

    publisher = "American Physical Society",

    number = "7",

    }

    Gavnholt, J, Olsen, T, Engelund, M 2008, 'Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces', Physical Review B Condensed Matter, vol. 78, no. 7, pp. 075441. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.78.075441

    Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces. / Gavnholt, Jeppe; Olsen, Thomas; Engelund, Mads et al.
    In: Physical Review B Condensed Matter, Vol. 78, No. 7, 2008, p. 075441.

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

    TY - JOUR

    T1 - Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces

    AU - Gavnholt, Jeppe

    AU - Olsen, Thomas

    AU - Engelund, Mads

    AU - Schiøtz, Jakob

    N1 - Copyright 2008 American Physical Society

    PY - 2008

    Y1 - 2008

    N2 - We present a modification of the Delta self-consistent field (Delta SCF) method of calculating energies of excited states in order to make it applicable to resonance calculations of molecules adsorbed on metal surfaces, where the molecular orbitals are highly hybridized. The Delta SCF approximation is a density-functional method closely resembling standard density-functional theory (DFT), the only difference being that in Delta SCF one or more electrons are placed in higher lying Kohn-Sham orbitals instead of placing all electrons in the lowest possible orbitals as one does when calculating the ground-state energy within standard DFT. We extend the Delta SCF method by allowing excited electrons to occupy orbitals which are linear combinations of Kohn-Sham orbitals. With this extra freedom it is possible to place charge locally on adsorbed molecules in the calculations, such that resonance energies can be estimated, which is not possible in traditional Delta SCF because of very delocalized Kohn-Sham orbitals. The method is applied to N2, CO, and NO adsorbed on different metallic surfaces and compared to ordinary Delta SCF without our modification, spatially constrained DFT, and inverse-photoemission spectroscopy measurements. This comparison shows that the modified Delta SCF method gives results in close agreement with experiment, significantly closer than the comparable methods. For N2 adsorbed on ruthenium (0001) we map out a two-dimensional part of the potential energy surfaces in the ground state and the 2 resonance. From this we conclude that an electron hitting the resonance can induce molecular motion, optimally with 1.5 eV transferred to atomic movement. Finally we present some performance test of the Delta SCF approach on gas-phase N2 and CO in order to compare the results to higher accuracy methods. Here we find that excitation energies are approximated with accuracy close to that of time-dependent density-functional theory. Especially we see very good agreement in the minimum shift of the potential energy surfaces in the excited state compared to the ground state.

    AB - We present a modification of the Delta self-consistent field (Delta SCF) method of calculating energies of excited states in order to make it applicable to resonance calculations of molecules adsorbed on metal surfaces, where the molecular orbitals are highly hybridized. The Delta SCF approximation is a density-functional method closely resembling standard density-functional theory (DFT), the only difference being that in Delta SCF one or more electrons are placed in higher lying Kohn-Sham orbitals instead of placing all electrons in the lowest possible orbitals as one does when calculating the ground-state energy within standard DFT. We extend the Delta SCF method by allowing excited electrons to occupy orbitals which are linear combinations of Kohn-Sham orbitals. With this extra freedom it is possible to place charge locally on adsorbed molecules in the calculations, such that resonance energies can be estimated, which is not possible in traditional Delta SCF because of very delocalized Kohn-Sham orbitals. The method is applied to N2, CO, and NO adsorbed on different metallic surfaces and compared to ordinary Delta SCF without our modification, spatially constrained DFT, and inverse-photoemission spectroscopy measurements. This comparison shows that the modified Delta SCF method gives results in close agreement with experiment, significantly closer than the comparable methods. For N2 adsorbed on ruthenium (0001) we map out a two-dimensional part of the potential energy surfaces in the ground state and the 2 resonance. From this we conclude that an electron hitting the resonance can induce molecular motion, optimally with 1.5 eV transferred to atomic movement. Finally we present some performance test of the Delta SCF approach on gas-phase N2 and CO in order to compare the results to higher accuracy methods. Here we find that excitation energies are approximated with accuracy close to that of time-dependent density-functional theory. Especially we see very good agreement in the minimum shift of the potential energy surfaces in the excited state compared to the ground state.

    KW - STATES

    KW - SYSTEMS

    KW - ; AUGMENTED-WAVE METHOD

    KW - DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY

    KW - GREENS-FUNCTION

    KW - DESORPTION

    KW - ELECTRON-GAS

    KW - CO

    KW - INVERSE-PHOTOEMISSION

    KW - EXCITATION-ENERGIES

    U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevB.78.075441

    DO - 10.1103/PhysRevB.78.075441

    M3 - Journal article

    SN - 0163-1829

    VL - 78

    SP - 075441

    JO - Physical Review B Condensed Matter

    JF - Physical Review B Condensed Matter

    IS - 7

    ER -

    Gavnholt J, Olsen T, Engelund M, Schiøtz J. Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces. Physical Review B Condensed Matter. 2008;78(7):075441. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevB.78.075441

    Delta self-consistent field method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces (2024)
    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Pres. Carey Rath

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5966

    Rating: 4 / 5 (61 voted)

    Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Pres. Carey Rath

    Birthday: 1997-03-06

    Address: 14955 Ledner Trail, East Rodrickfort, NE 85127-8369

    Phone: +18682428114917

    Job: National Technology Representative

    Hobby: Sand art, Drama, Web surfing, Cycling, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Leather crafting, Creative writing

    Introduction: My name is Pres. Carey Rath, I am a faithful, funny, vast, joyous, lively, brave, glamorous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.