The GDM method (Section 4.5.7) is an extremely effective energy minimizer but it cannot reliably be applied to optimize excited-state orbitals, as such states are typically unstable stationary points in orbital-rotation space. Energy minimization based approaches therefore tend to ‘slip’ from these saddle points to some local minima (often the ground state, a phenomenon often described as ‘variational collapse’).
Diptarka Hait and Martin Head-Gordon have proposed an alternative way to
optimize excited state orbitals, by minimizing the square of the energy
gradient against orbital degrees of freedom.
451
J. Chem. Theory Comput.
(2020),
16,
pp. 1699.
Link
This energy
gradient should be zero for all stationary points in energy, and thus all such
stationary points are global minima of the squared energy gradient .
Quasi-Newton methods therefore can reliably converge to the stationary point
closest to the initial guess orbitals by minimizing , without the risk
of variational collapse. The resulting SGM approach is thus essentially an
extension of GDM that converges to the closest state (i.e., stationary point in
orbital space) to the initial guess, as opposed to the closest energy minimum.
SGM consequently can be used for reliable excited state optimization within a
direct minimization framework, similar to how the MOM algorithm of
Section 4.5.13 can be used in conjunction with iterative
diagonalization methods like DIIS. Further details about SGM applying for
excited-state orbital optimization can be found in Section 7.9.4.
Full details of the SGM algorithm are provided in Ref.
451
J. Chem. Theory Comput.
(2020),
16,
pp. 1699.
Link
.
The use of SGM is controlled by the SCF_ALGORITHM variable in the $rem section:
SCF_ALGORITHM
SCF_ALGORITHM
Algorithm used for converging the SCF.
TYPE:
STRING
DEFAULT:
None
OPTIONS:
SGM
SGM_LS
SGM_QLS
for R and U orbitals only
RECOMMENDATION:
SGM should be used for RO and or OS_RO orbitals only.
SGM_LS is recommended for R or U orbitals, though it can also be used for RO and OS_RO orbitals.
SGM_QLS is a slower, but more robust option for R and U calculations.
DELTA_GRADIENT_SCALE
DELTA_GRADIENT_SCALE
Scales the gradient of by /100, which can be useful for cases with troublesome convergence by reducing step size.
TYPE:
INTEGER
DEFAULT:
100
OPTIONS:
RECOMMENDATION:
Use default. For problematic cases 50, 25, 10 or even 1 could be useful.