diis
The SCF implementation of the Direct Inversion in the Iterative Subspace (DIIS)
method
995
Chem. Phys. Lett.
(1980),
73,
pp. 393.
Link
,
996
J. Comput. Chem.
(1982),
3,
pp. 556.
Link
uses the property of an SCF solution that
requires the density matrix to commute with the Fock matrix:
(4.30) |
During the SCF cycles, prior to achieving self-consistency, it is therefore possible to define an error vector e, which is non-zero except at convergence:
(4.31) |
Here is obtained by diagonalizing , and
(4.32) |
The DIIS coefficients , are obtained by a least-squares constrained minimization of the error vectors, viz
(4.33) |
where the constraint is imposed to yield a set of linear equations, of dimension :
(4.34) |
Convergence criteria require the largest element of the th error vector to be below a cutoff threshold, usually a.u. for single point energies, but often increased to a.u. for optimizations and frequency calculations.
The rate of convergence may be improved by restricting the number of previous Fock matrices used for determining the DIIS coefficients,
(4.35) |
Here is the size of the DIIS subspace, which is set using the $rem variable DIIS_SUBSPACE_SIZE. As the Fock matrix nears self-consistency, the linear matrix equations in Eq. (4.34) tend to become severely ill-conditioned and it is often necessary to reset the DIIS subspace (this is automatically carried out by the program).
Finally, on a practical note, we observe that DIIS has a tendency to converge to global minima rather than local minima when employed for SCF calculations. This seems to be because only at convergence is the density matrix in the DIIS iterations idempotent. On the way to convergence, one is not on the true energy surface, and this seems to permit DIIS to “tunnel” through barriers in wave function space. This is usually a desirable property, and is the motivation for the options that permit initial DIIS iterations before switching to direct minimization to converge to the minimum in difficult cases.
The following $rem variables permit some customization of the DIIS iterations:
DIIS_SUBSPACE_SIZE
DIIS_SUBSPACE_SIZE
Controls the size of the DIIS and/or RCA subspace during the SCF.
TYPE:
INTEGER
DEFAULT:
15
OPTIONS:
User-defined
RECOMMENDATION:
None
DIIS_PRINT
DIIS_PRINT
Controls the output from DIIS SCF optimization.
TYPE:
INTEGER
DEFAULT:
0
OPTIONS:
0
Minimal print out.
1
Chosen method and DIIS coefficients and solutions.
2
Level 1 plus changes in multipole moments.
3
Level 2 plus Multipole moments.
4
Level 3 plus extrapolated Fock matrices.
RECOMMENDATION:
Use the default
Note: In Q-Chem 3.0 the DIIS error is determined by the maximum error rather than the RMS error. For backward compatibility the RMS error can be forced by using the following $rem:
DIIS_ERR_RMS
DIIS_ERR_RMS
Changes the DIIS convergence metric from the maximum to the RMS error.
TYPE:
LOGICAL
DEFAULT:
FALSE
OPTIONS:
TRUE, FALSE
RECOMMENDATION:
Use the default, the maximum error provides a more reliable criterion.
DIIS_SEPARATE_ERRVEC
DIIS_SEPARATE_ERRVEC
Control optimization of DIIS error vector in unrestricted calculations.
TYPE:
LOGICAL
DEFAULT:
FALSE
Use a combined and error vector.
OPTIONS:
FALSE
Use a combined and error vector.
TRUE
Use separate error vectors for the and spaces.
RECOMMENDATION:
When using DIIS in Q-Chem a convenient optimization for unrestricted
calculations is to sum the and error vectors into a single
vector which is used for extrapolation. This is often extremely effective, but
in some pathological systems with symmetry breaking, can lead to false
solutions being detected, where the and components of the
error vector cancel exactly giving a zero DIIS error. While an extremely
uncommon occurrence, if it is suspected, set
DIIS_SEPARATE_ERRVEC = TRUE to check.