Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of energy gaps...

Associated organisational unit

Electronic data

  • gaps_paper

    Accepted author manuscript, 3.27 MB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

View graph of relations

Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of energy gaps from first principles

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of energy gaps from first principles. / Hunt, Ryan James; Szyniszewski, Marcin; Prayogo, Genki I et al.
In: Physical review B, Vol. 98, 075122, 13.08.2018.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Hunt, R. J., Szyniszewski, M., Prayogo, G. I., Maezono , R., & Drummond, N. D. (2018). Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of energy gaps from first principles. Physical review B, 98, Article 075122.

Vancouver

Author

Bibtex

@article{ab2ce42504a34d94a677c7dd0b3bb606,
title = "Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of energy gaps from first principles",
abstract = "We review the use of continuum quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods for the calculation of energy gaps from first principles, and present a broad set of excited-state calculations carried out with the variational and fixed-node diffusion QMC methods on atoms, molecules, and solids. We propose a finite-size-error correction scheme for bulk energy gaps calculated in finite cells subject to periodic boundary conditions. We show that finite-size effects are qualitatively different in two-dimensional materials, demonstrating the effect in a QMC calculation of the band gap and exciton binding energy of monolayer phosphorene. We investigate the fixed-node errors in diffusion Monte Carlo gaps evaluated with Slater-Jastrow trial wave functions by examining the effects of backflow transformations, and also by considering the formation of restricted multideterminant expansions for excited-state wave functions. For several molecules, we examine the importance of structural relaxation in the excited state in determining excited-state energies. We study the feasibility of using variational Monte Carlo with backflow correlations to obtain accurate excited-state energies at reduced computational cost, finding that this approach can be valid. We find that diffusion Monte Carlo gap calculations can be performed with much larger time steps than aretypically required to converge the total energy, at significantly diminished computational expense, but that in order to alleviate fixed-node errors in calculations on solids the inclusion of backflowcorrelations is sometimes necessary.",
author = "Hunt, {Ryan James} and Marcin Szyniszewski and Prayogo, {Genki I} and Ryo Maezono and Drummond, {Neil David}",
year = "2018",
month = aug,
day = "13",
language = "English",
volume = "98",
journal = "Physical review B",
issn = "1098-0121",
publisher = "AMER PHYSICAL SOC",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of energy gaps from first principles

AU - Hunt, Ryan James

AU - Szyniszewski, Marcin

AU - Prayogo, Genki I

AU - Maezono , Ryo

AU - Drummond, Neil David

PY - 2018/8/13

Y1 - 2018/8/13

N2 - We review the use of continuum quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods for the calculation of energy gaps from first principles, and present a broad set of excited-state calculations carried out with the variational and fixed-node diffusion QMC methods on atoms, molecules, and solids. We propose a finite-size-error correction scheme for bulk energy gaps calculated in finite cells subject to periodic boundary conditions. We show that finite-size effects are qualitatively different in two-dimensional materials, demonstrating the effect in a QMC calculation of the band gap and exciton binding energy of monolayer phosphorene. We investigate the fixed-node errors in diffusion Monte Carlo gaps evaluated with Slater-Jastrow trial wave functions by examining the effects of backflow transformations, and also by considering the formation of restricted multideterminant expansions for excited-state wave functions. For several molecules, we examine the importance of structural relaxation in the excited state in determining excited-state energies. We study the feasibility of using variational Monte Carlo with backflow correlations to obtain accurate excited-state energies at reduced computational cost, finding that this approach can be valid. We find that diffusion Monte Carlo gap calculations can be performed with much larger time steps than aretypically required to converge the total energy, at significantly diminished computational expense, but that in order to alleviate fixed-node errors in calculations on solids the inclusion of backflowcorrelations is sometimes necessary.

AB - We review the use of continuum quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods for the calculation of energy gaps from first principles, and present a broad set of excited-state calculations carried out with the variational and fixed-node diffusion QMC methods on atoms, molecules, and solids. We propose a finite-size-error correction scheme for bulk energy gaps calculated in finite cells subject to periodic boundary conditions. We show that finite-size effects are qualitatively different in two-dimensional materials, demonstrating the effect in a QMC calculation of the band gap and exciton binding energy of monolayer phosphorene. We investigate the fixed-node errors in diffusion Monte Carlo gaps evaluated with Slater-Jastrow trial wave functions by examining the effects of backflow transformations, and also by considering the formation of restricted multideterminant expansions for excited-state wave functions. For several molecules, we examine the importance of structural relaxation in the excited state in determining excited-state energies. We study the feasibility of using variational Monte Carlo with backflow correlations to obtain accurate excited-state energies at reduced computational cost, finding that this approach can be valid. We find that diffusion Monte Carlo gap calculations can be performed with much larger time steps than aretypically required to converge the total energy, at significantly diminished computational expense, but that in order to alleviate fixed-node errors in calculations on solids the inclusion of backflowcorrelations is sometimes necessary.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 98

JO - Physical review B

JF - Physical review B

SN - 1098-0121

M1 - 075122

ER -