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Hamann-Schlüter-Chiang Conditions

Norm-conserving pseudopotentials are derived from atomic reference states, calculated from the atomic Schrödinger equation

$\displaystyle \left( T + V_{\rm AE} \right) \vert \Psi_l \rangle = \epsilon_l \vert \Psi_l \rangle \enspace ,
$

where $ T$ is the kinetic energy operator and $ V_{\rm AE}$ the all-electron potential derived from Kohn-Sham theory. This equation is replaced by a valence electron only equation of the same form

$\displaystyle \left( T + V_{\rm val} \right) \vert \Phi_l \rangle = \hat \epsilon_l \vert \Phi_l \rangle \enspace .
$

Hamann, Schlüter, and Chiang [93] proposed a set of requirements for the pseudo wavefunction and pseudopotential.

The pseudopotential should have the following properties

  1. Real and pseudo valence eigenvalues agree for a chosen prototype atomic configuration. $ \epsilon_l = \hat \epsilon_l $
  2. Real and pseudo atomic wave functions agree beyond a chosen core radius r$ _c$ .

    $\displaystyle \Psi_l(r) = \Phi_l(r)  $   for$\displaystyle  r \geq r_c $

  3. The integrals from 0 to R of the real and pseudo charge densities agree for R $ \geq$ r$ _c$ for each valence state (norm conservation).

    $\displaystyle \langle \Phi_l \vert \Phi_l \rangle_R = \langle \Psi_l \vert \Psi_l \rangle_R
   $   for$\displaystyle  R \geq r_c $

    where

    $\displaystyle \langle \Phi \vert \Phi \rangle_R = \int_0^R r^2 \vert \phi(r) \vert^2 dr
$

  4. The logarithmic derivatives of the real and pseudo wave function and their first energy derivatives agree for r $ \geq$ r$ _c$ .

Property 3) and 4) are related through the identity

$\displaystyle -{1 \over 2} \left[ (r \Phi)^2 {d \over d\epsilon} {d \over dr} ln \Phi
\right]_R = \int_0^R r^2 \vert \Phi \vert^2 dr
$

They also gave a recipe that allows to generate pseudopotentials with the above properties.

  1. $\displaystyle V_l^{(1)}(r) = V_{AE}(r) [ 1 - f_1 \left( {r \over r_{cl}} \right) ]
$

    r$ _{cl}$ : core radius $ \approx$ 0.4 - 0.6 R$ _{max}$ , where R$ _{max}$ is the outermost maximum of the real wave function.
  2. $\displaystyle V_l^{(2)}(r) = V_l^{(1)}(r) + c_l f_2 \left( {r \over r_{cl}} \right) $

    determine c$ _l$ so that $ \hat \epsilon_l = \epsilon_l$ in

    $\displaystyle ( T + V_l^{(2)}(r) ) w_l^{(2)}(r) = \hat \epsilon_l w_l^{(2)}(r)
$

  3. $\displaystyle \Phi_l(r) = \gamma_l \left[ w_l^{(2)}(r) + \delta_l r^{l+1}
f_3 \left( {r \over r_{cl}} \right) \right]
$

    where $ \gamma_l$ and $ \delta_l$ are chosen such that

    $\displaystyle \Phi_l(r) \rightarrow \Psi_l(r)  $   for$\displaystyle  r \geq r_{cl}
$

    and

    $\displaystyle \gamma_l^2 \int \vert w_l^{(2)}(r) + \delta_l r^{l+1}
f_3 \left( {r \over r_{cl}}\right) \vert^2 dr = 1
$

  4. Invert the Schrödinger equation for $ \hat \epsilon_l$ and $ \Phi_l(r) $ to get V$ ^l_{val}$ (r).
  5. Unscreen V$ ^l_{val}$ (r) to get V$ ^l_{ps}$ (r).

    $\displaystyle V^l_{ps}(r) = V^l_{val}(r) - V_H(n_v) - V_{xc}(n_v)
$

    where V $ _H(\rho_v)$ and V $ _{xc}(\rho_v)$ are the Hartree and exchange and correlation potentials of the pseudo valence density.
Hamann, Schlüter and Chiang chose the following cutoff functions $ f_1(x) = f_2(x) = f_3(x) = \exp(-x^4)$ .

These pseudopotentials are angular momentum dependent. Each angular momentum state has its own potential that can be determined independently from the other potentials. It is therefore possible to have a different reference configuration for each angular momentum. This allows it for example to use excited or ionic states to construct the pseudopotential for $ l$ states that are not occupied in the atomic ground state.

The total pseudopotential in a solid state calculation then takes the form

$\displaystyle V_{ps}(r) = \sum_L V^L_{ps}(r) {\bf P}_L
$

where $ L$ is a combined index {l,m} and $ {\bf P}_L$ is the projector on the angular momentum state {l,m}.


next up previous contents index
Next: Bachelet-Hamann-Schlüter (BHS) form Up: Norm-Conserving Pseudopotentials Previous: Norm-Conserving Pseudopotentials   Contents   Index
Costas Bekas 2008-09-04