Singlet biradicals are an important special case, whose description within a single-determinant SCF formalism is typical
characterized by significant spin contamination, (in atomic units), indicating an approximately
equal mixture of singlet () and triplet () wave functions. This is a result
of the fact that a proper description of two electrons in two half-filled orbitals requires a minimum of two determinants.
A simple means to correct for this is to use the approximate spin-purification
formula
1460
Theor. Chem. Acc.
(1977),
43,
pp. 261.
Link
,
287
Int. J. Quantum Chem.
(1994),
52,
pp. 867.
Link
,
179
J. Chem. Theory Comput.
(2020),
16,
pp. 5067.
Link
(7.59) |
which expresses the open-shell singlet energy () in terms of the energy of the broken-symmetry solution (, meaning the state with ) and the triplet energy (). Evaluation of Eq. (7.59) requires two separate SCF calculations but these can be performed together automatically by specifying OPSING = TRUE in the $rem section; see Example 7.6.1. Analytic gradients have been implemented for this approximate spin-purification approach, which again requires two separate SCF gradient computations. For the specific case of open-shell singlets, the ROKS method that is discussed below can be understood as a fully self-consistent or orbital-optimized version of the formula in Eq. (7.59), using a consistent set of orbitals for both terms in the formula, whereas the method that is requested using OPSING = TRUE performs two independent SCF calculations with different orbitals in each.
OPSING
OPSING
Controls whether approximate spin purification will be performed according to Eq. (7.59).
TYPE:
LOGICAL
DEFAULT:
FALSE
OPTIONS:
FALSE
Spin purification is not performed.
TRUE
Spin purification will be performed.
RECOMMENDATION:
Set to TRUE if spin purification calculation is desired. Make sure that
UNRESTRICTED is set to TRUE Gradients are available.