The search for new optical devices is a major field of materials sciences. Here, polarizabilities and hyperpolarizabilities provide particularly important information on molecular systems. The response of the molecular systems in the presence of an external, monochromatic, oscillatory electric field is determined by the solution of the time-dependent SCF (TDSCF) equations. Within the dipole approximation, the perturbation is represented as the interaction of the molecule with a single Fourier component of the external field, :
(10.65) |
with
(10.66) |
Here, is the field frequency and is the dipole moment
operator. The TDSCF equations can be solved via standard techniques of
perturbation theory.
1078
J. Chem. Phys.
(1986),
85,
pp. 976.
Link
As a solution, one obtains the
first-order perturbed density matrix [] and the
second-order perturbed density matrices []. From these quantities, the following properties can be
calculated:
Static polarizability:
Dynamic polarizability:
Static hyperpolarizability:
Second harmonic generation:
Electro-optical Pockels effect:
Optical rectification:
Here, is the matrix representation of the component of the dipole moment.
For third-order properties (), rather than computing them using a
second-order TDSCF calculation and solving for explicitly,
we calculate them from first-order properties using Wigner’s
rule.
582
J. Comput. Chem.
(1991),
12,
pp. 487.
Link
The TDSCF calculation is more time-consuming than the SCF calculation that
precedes it (where the field-free, unperturbed ground state of the molecule is
obtained). Q-Chem’s implementation of the TDSCF equations is MO based and
the cost therefore formally scales asymptotically as . The
prefactor of the cubic-scaling step is rather small, however, and in practice
(over a wide range of molecular sizes) the calculation is dominated by the cost
of contractions with two-electron integrals, which is formally
scaling but with a very large prefactor. The cost of these integral
contractions can be reduced from quadratic to using LinK/CFMM
methods (Section 4.6).
651
J. Chem. Phys.
(2007),
127,
pp. 204103.
Link
All derivatives are
computed analytically.
The TDSCF module in Q-Chem is known as “MOProp”, since it corresponds (formally) to time propagation of the molecular orbitals. (For actual time propagation of the MOs, see Section 7.4.) The MOProp module has the following features:
LinK and CFMM support to evaluate Coulomb- and exchange-like matrices
Analytic derivatives
DIIS acceleration
Both restricted and unrestricted implementations of CPSCF and TDSCF equations are available, for both Hartree-Fock and Kohn-Sham DFT.