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10.5 Visualizing and Plotting Orbitals, Densities, and Other Volumetric Data

10.5.3 Visualization of Natural Transition Orbitals

(July 14, 2022)

For excited states calculated using the CIS, RPA, TDDFT, EOM-CC, and ADC methods, construction of Natural Transition Orbitals (NTOs), as described in Sections 7.14.3 and 10.2.9, is requested using the $rem variable NTO_PAIRS. This variable also determines the number of hole/particle NTO pairs that are output for each excited state and the number of natural orbitals or natural difference orbitlas. Although the total number of hole/particle pairs is equal to the number of occupied MOs, typically only a very small number of these pairs (often just one pair) have significant amplitudes. (Additional large-amplitude NTOs may be encountered in cases of strong electronic coupling between multiple chromophores. 660 Lange A. W., Herbert J. M.
J. Am. Chem. Soc.
(2009), 131, pp. 124115.
Link
)

NTO_PAIRS

NTO_PAIRS
       Controls the writing of hole/particle NTO pairs for excited state.
TYPE:
       INTEGER
DEFAULT:
       0
OPTIONS:
       N Write N NTO pairs per excited state.
RECOMMENDATION:
       If activated (N>0), a minimum of two NTO pairs will be printed for each state. Increase the value of N if additional NTOs are desired.

When NTO_PAIRS >0, Q-Chem will generate the NTOs in MolDen format. The NTOs are state-specific, in the sense that each excited state has its own NTOs, and therefore a separate MolDen file is required for each excited state. These files are written to the job’s scratch directory, in a sub-directory called NTOs, so to obtain the NTOs the scratch directory must be saved using the –save option that is described in Section 2.2. The output files in the NTOs directory have an obvious file-naming convention. The “hole” NTOs (which are linear combinations of the occupied MOs) are printed to the MolDen files in order of increasing importance, with the corresponding excitation amplitudes replacing the canonical MO eigenvalues. (This is a formatting convention only; the excitation amplitudes are unrelated to the MO eigenvalues.) Following the holes are the “particle” NTOs, which represent the excited electron and are linear combinations of the virtual MOs. These are written in order of decreasing amplitude. To aid in distinguishing the two sets within the MolDen files, the amplitudes of the holes are listed with negative signs, while the corresponding NTO for the excited electron has the same amplitude with a positive sign.

Due to the manner in which the NTOs are constructed (see Section 7.14.3), NTO analysis is available only when the number of virtual orbitals exceeds the number of occupied orbitals, which may not be the case for minimal basis sets.

Example 10.10  Generating MolDen-formatted natural transition orbitals for several excited states of uracil.

$molecule
   0 1
   N    -2.181263     0.068208     0.000000
   C    -2.927088    -1.059037     0.000000
   N    -4.320029    -0.911094     0.000000
   C    -4.926706     0.301204     0.000000
   C    -4.185901     1.435062     0.000000
   C    -2.754591     1.274555     0.000000
   N    -1.954845     2.338369     0.000000
   H    -0.923072     2.224557     0.000000
   H    -2.343008     3.268581     0.000000
   H    -4.649401     2.414197     0.000000
   H    -6.012020     0.301371     0.000000
   H    -4.855603    -1.768832     0.000000
   O    -2.458932    -2.200499     0.000000
$end

$rem
   METHOD          B3LYP
   BASIS           6-31+G*
   CIS_N_ROOTS     3
   NTO_PAIRS       2
$end