- Roothaan equations
The Roothaan equations are a representation of the
Hartree-Fock equation in a non orthonormal basis set which can be of Gaussian-type or Slater-type. It applies to closed-shell molecules or atoms where allmolecular orbital s oratomic orbital s, respectively, are doubly occupied. This is generally called Restricted Hartree-Fock theory.The method was developed independently by
Clemens C. J. Roothaan andGeorge G. Hall in 1951, and is thus sometimes called the "Roothaan-Hall equations". [ Frank Jensen, Introduction to Computational Chemistry, John Wiley and Sons, 1999, pg 65 - 69, ISBN 0 471 98055 ] [ C. C. J. Roothaan,Reviews of Modern Physics , 23, 69, (1951) ] [ G. G. Hall,Proceedings of the Royal Society , London, A205, 541, (1951) ] The Roothaan equations can be written in a form resemblinggeneralized eigenvalue problem , although they are not a standard eigenvalue problem because they are nonlinear::
Where F is the so-called
Fock matrix (which depends on the coefficients C due to electron-electron interactions), C is a matrix of coefficients, S is theoverlap matrix of the basis functions, and is the (diagonal, by convention) matrix of orbital energies. In the case of an orthonormalised basis set the overlap matrix, S, reduces to the identity matrix. These equations are essentially a special case of aGalerkin method applied to the Hartree-Fock equation using a particular basis set.External links
* http://www.cachesoftware.com/mopac/Mopac2002manual/node443.html
* http://www.physik.unizh.ch/~sam/diss/node8.htmlee also
*
Hartree-Fock References
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