We present the first relativistic study of the electric-field-gradient induced birefringence (Buckingham birefringence), with application to the series of molecules CX2 (X = O, S, Se, Te). A recently developed atomicorbital-driven scheme for the calculation of time-dependent molecular properties using one-, two- and four-component relativistic wave functions (Bast et al. in Chem Phys 356:177, 2009) is extended to first-order frequencydependent magnetic-field perturbations, using London atomic orbitals to ensure gauge-origin independent results and to improve basis-set convergence. Calculations are presented at the Hartree–Fock and Kohn–Sham levels of theory and results for CO2 and CS2 are compared with previous high-level coupled-cluster calculations. Except for the heaviest member of the series, relativistic effects are small—in particular for the temperature-independent contribution to the birefringence. By contrast, the effects of electron correlation are significant. However, the reliability of standard exchange-correlation functionals in describing Buckingham birefringence remains unclear based on the comparison with high-level coupled-cluster singles-and doubles calculations.

Relativistic four-component calculations of Buckingham birefringence using London atomic orbitals

Rizzo A;
2011

Abstract

We present the first relativistic study of the electric-field-gradient induced birefringence (Buckingham birefringence), with application to the series of molecules CX2 (X = O, S, Se, Te). A recently developed atomicorbital-driven scheme for the calculation of time-dependent molecular properties using one-, two- and four-component relativistic wave functions (Bast et al. in Chem Phys 356:177, 2009) is extended to first-order frequencydependent magnetic-field perturbations, using London atomic orbitals to ensure gauge-origin independent results and to improve basis-set convergence. Calculations are presented at the Hartree–Fock and Kohn–Sham levels of theory and results for CO2 and CS2 are compared with previous high-level coupled-cluster calculations. Except for the heaviest member of the series, relativistic effects are small—in particular for the temperature-independent contribution to the birefringence. By contrast, the effects of electron correlation are significant. However, the reliability of standard exchange-correlation functionals in describing Buckingham birefringence remains unclear based on the comparison with high-level coupled-cluster singles-and doubles calculations.
2011
Istituto per i Processi Chimico-Fisici - IPCF
Relativistic effects
Buckingham Birefringence
Nonlinear properties
Response theory
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/39104
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