|
|
Shape of the geometrically active atomic states of carbon |
Xiong Zhuang(熊庄)a)† and Bacalis N.~C. b) |
a AMS Research Center, Southeast University, Nanjing 210096, China; b Theoretical and Physical Chemistry Institute, National Hellenic Research Foundation, Vasileos Constantinou 48, Athens, Greece 11635 |
|
|
Abstract We have developed a computer code for ab initio the variational configuration interaction calculation of the electronic structure of atoms via variationally optimized Lagurre type orbitals, treating the orbital effective charges as variational parameters. Excited states of the same symmetry, in order to avoid the inherent restrictions of the standard method of Hylleraas--Unheim and MacDonald, are computed variationally by minimizing the recently developed minimization functionals for excited states. By computing, at the minimum, the one-electron density and the probability distribution of the two-electron angle, and the most probable two-electron angle, we investigate the atomic states of the carbon atom. We show that, without resorting to the (admittedly unproven) concept of hybridization, as an intrinsic property of the atomic wave function, the most probable value of the two-electron angle is around the known angles of carbon bonding, i.e. either 109$^\circ$ or 120$^\circ$ or 180$^\circ$, depending on each low-lying state of the bare carbon atom.
|
Received: 12 June 2009
Revised: 05 August 2009
Accepted manuscript online:
|
PACS:
|
31.15.A-
|
(Ab initio calculations)
|
|
31.15.xt
|
(Variational techniques)
|
|
31.15.vj
|
(Electron correlation calculations for atoms and ions: excited states)
|
|
Fund: Project partially supported by the
National High Technology Research and Development Program of China
(Grant No.~2004AA306H10) and the operational program
``Competitiveness'' of the Greek General Secretariat of Research and
Technology (Grant No.~04EP111/ENTEP-2004). |
Cite this article:
Xiong Zhuang(熊庄) and Bacalis N.~C. Shape of the geometrically active atomic states of carbon 2010 Chin. Phys. B 19 023601
|
[1] |
Mulliken R S 1965 J. Chem. Phys. 4 3 S2
|
[2] |
Nicolaides C A and Komninos Y 1998 Int. J. Quantum Chem. 67 321
|
[3] |
Xiong Z, Velgakis M I and Bacalis N C 2005 Int. J. Quantum Chem. 104 418
|
[4] |
Xiong Z and Bacalis N C 2006 Chin. Phys. 15 992
|
[5] |
Fischer F C 1997 Computational Atomic Structure} (Bristol: Institute of PhysicsPublishing)
|
[6] |
Bacalis N C, Xiong Z and Karaoulanis D 2008 J. Comput. Meth. Sci. Eng. 8 277
|
|
[Bacalis N C 2008 arXiv:0801.3673
|
[7] |
Press W H, Teukolsky S A, Vetterling W T and Flannery B P 1992 NumericalRecipes in FORTRAN} 2nd ed. (London: Cambridge University Press)
|
[8] |
McWeeny R 1989 Methods of Molecular Quantum Mechanics2nd ed. (SanDiego: Academic)
|
[9] |
Schaefer H F and Harris F E 1968 J. Comput. Phys. 3 217
|
[10] |
Archbold J W 1961 Algebra} (London: Pitman Publishing)
|
[11] |
Tinkham M 1964 Group Theory and Quantum Mechanics(New York: McGraw-HillBook Company)
|
[12] |
Ralchenko Y, Kramida A E, Reader J and NIST ASD Team 2008 NIST Atomic Spectra Database}(version 3.1.5), (online). Available:http://physics.nist.gov/asd3, National Institute of Standards andTechnology, Gaithersburg, MD (USA).
|
[13] |
Luo Y R 2003 Handbook of BondDissociation Energies in Organic Compounds(Boca Raton: CRC Press)
|
No Suggested Reading articles found! |
|
|
Viewed |
|
|
|
Full text
|
|
|
|
|
Abstract
|
|
|
|
|
Cited |
|
|
|
|
Altmetric
|
blogs
Facebook pages
Wikipedia page
Google+ users
|
Online attention
Altmetric calculates a score based on the online attention an article receives. Each coloured thread in the circle represents a different type of online attention. The number in the centre is the Altmetric score. Social media and mainstream news media are the main sources that calculate the score. Reference managers such as Mendeley are also tracked but do not contribute to the score. Older articles often score higher because they have had more time to get noticed. To account for this, Altmetric has included the context data for other articles of a similar age.
View more on Altmetrics
|
|
|