In the free energy approach [53,54],
the excited states are populated according to
the Fermi-Dirac (finite-temperature equilibrium) distribution
which is based on the
assumption that the electrons ``equilibrate''
more rapidly than the timescale of the nuclear motion.
This means that the set of electronic states evolves
at a given temperature ``isothermally''
(rather than adiabatically)
under the inclusion of
incoherent electronic transitions
at the nuclei move.
Thus, instead of computing the force acting on the
nuclei from the electronic ground-state energy
it is obtained from the electronic free energy
as defined in the canonical ensemble.
By allowing such electronic transitions to occur the free energy approach
transcends the usual Born-Oppenheimer approximation.
However, the approximation of an instantaneous equilibration of the electronic
subsystem implies
that the electronic structure
at a given nuclear configuration
is completely independent from previous configurations
along a molecular dynamics trajectory.
Due to this assumption the notion
"free energy Born-Oppenheimer approximation"
was coined in Ref. [55] in a similar context.
Certain non-equilibrium situations can also be modelled within the free energy approach by starting off with an initial orbital occupation
pattern that does not correspond to any temperature in its thermodynamic meaning, see e.g. Refs. [56,57] for such applications.
The free energy functional as defined in Refs. [53,54] is introduced most elegantly by starting the discussion for the special case of non-interacting Fermions
According to thermodynamics the Helmholtz free energy
associated to Eq. (111)
can be obtained from a Legendre transformation
of the grand free energy
The interactions between the electrons can be ``switched on''
by resorting to Kohn-Sham density functional theory
and the concept of a non-interacting reference system.
Thus, instead of using the simple
one-particle Hamiltonian Eq. (109)
the effective Kohn-Sham Hamiltonian Eq. (25)
has to be utilized.
As a result, the grand free energy Eq. (110)
can be written as
In order to obtain the correct total electronic free energy
of the interacting electrons the
corresponding extra terms (properly generalized to
finite temperatures) have to be included in
.
This finally allows one to write down the generalization
of the Helmholtz free energy of the interacting many-electron case
By construction, the total free energy Eq. (118)
reduces to that of the non-interacting toy model Eq. (113)
once the electron-electron interaction is switched off.
Another useful limit is the ground-state limit
where the free energy
yields the
standard Kohn-Sham total energy expression
after invoking the appropriate limit
as
.
Most importantly,
stability analysis [53,54]
of Eq. (118) shows that this functional
shares the same stationary point as the exact
finite-temperature functional due to Mermin [58],
see e.g. the textbooks [34,35] for introductions
to density functional formalisms at finite temperatures.
This implies that the self-consistent density,
which defines the
stationary point of
,
is identical to the exact one.
This analysis reveals furthermore that, unfortunately,
this stationary point is not an extremum but a saddle point so that
no variational principle and, numerically speaking,
no direct minimization algorithms can be applied.
For the same reason a Car-Parrinello fictitious dynamics approach to
molecular dynamics is not a straightforward option,
whereas Born-Oppenheimer dynamics based on
diagonalization can be used directly.
The band-structure energy term can be evaluated
by diagonalizing
the Kohn-Sham Hamiltonian after a
suitable ``preconditioning'' [53,54].
Specifically, a second-order Trotter approximation is used
In practice a diagonalization / density-mixing scheme
is employed in order
to compute the self-consistent density
.
A suitably constructed trial input density
is used in order to compute the potential
.
Then the lowest-order approximant to the
Boltzmann operator Eq. (123) is diagonalized
using an iterative Lanczos-type method.
This yields an output density
and the corresponding free energy
.
Finally, the densities are mixed
and the former steps are iterated until a stationary solution
of
is achieved.
Of course the most time-consuming part
of the calculation is in the iterative
diagonalization.
In principle this is not
required, and it should be possible to compute the output density
directly from the Fermi-Dirac density matrix even
in a linear scaling scheme [60], thus
circumventing the explicit calculation of the Kohn-Sham eigenstates.
As a method, molecular dynamics with the free energy functional
is most appropriate to use when the excitation gap is
either small,
or in cases where the gap might close during a chemical transformation.
In the latter case no
instabilities are encountered with this approach,
which is not true for
ground-state ab initio molecular dynamics methods.
The price to pay is the quite demanding iterative computation of
well-converged forces.
Besides allowing such applications
with physically relevant excitations
this method can also be straightforwardly
combined with
-point sampling and applied to metals
at ``zero'' temperature.
In this case, the electronic ``temperature'' is only used as
a smearing parameter of the Fermi edge by
introducing fractional occupation numbers, which
is known to improve greatly the convergence of these ground-state
electronic structure calculations [60,61,62,,64,65,66].
Finite-temperature expressions for the exchange-correlation functional
are available in the literature.
However, for most temperatures of interest
the corrections to the ground-state expression are small and
it seems justified to use one of the various
well-established parameterizations of the
exchange-correlation energy
at zero temperature.