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Algebraic-diagrammatic construction

The algebraic-diagrammatic construction (ADC) scheme for the polarization propagator provides a series of ab initio methods to describe excited electronic states and related properties based on the Møller--Plesset perturbation theory partition of the Hamiltonian Dreuw & Wormit (2015). Due to their size consistency, ADC methods are suited for the calculation of large molecules and their Hermitian structure and the availability of the intermediate state representation (ISR) allow for straightforward computation of excited-state and state-to-state properties.

ADC is a general procedure and not restricted to the polarization propagator, but to all propagators such as the electron propagator for the calculation of ionization potentials and electron affinities or the two-particle propagator for the calculation of double ionization potentials Dreuw & Wormit (2015). On the following pages, an outline of the underlying theory for ADC is given, including

  • The classical approach based on the polarization propagator

  • A derivation via the ISR, including explicit ADC(2) equations, a comparison to related methods, and the calculation of excited-state properties

  • The core-valence separation (CVS) for the calculation of core-excited states

  • Some aspects for the implementation of ADC on HPC clusters

Examples on how to perform ADC calculations and simulate electronic spectra can be found here.

References
  1. Dreuw, A., & Wormit, M. (2015). The algebraic diagrammatic construction scheme for the polarization propagator for the calculation of excited states. WIREs Comput. Mol. Sci., 5, 82–95. 10.1002/wcms.1206