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Featured researches published by Robert J. Hinde.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011
Vesa Hänninen; Markus Korpinen; Qinghua Ren; Robert J. Hinde; Lauri Halonen
We employ ab initio calculations of van der Waals complexes to study the potential energy parameters (C(6) coefficients) of van der Waals interactions for modeling of the adsorption of silver clusters on the graphite surface. Electronic structure calculations of the (Ag(2))(2), Ag(2)-H(2), and Ag(2)-C(6)H(6) complexes are performed using a coupled-cluster approach that includes single, double, and perturbative triple excitations (CCSD(T)), Møller-Plesset second-order perturbation theory (MP2), and spin-component-scaled MP2 (SCS-MP2) methods. Using the atom pair approximation, the C(6) coefficients for silver-silver, silver-hydrogen, and silver-carbon atom systems are obtained after subtracting the energies of quadrupole-quadrupole interactions from the total electronic energy.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2009
M. Ben-Nun; J. D. Mills; Robert J. Hinde; C. L. Winstead; Jerry A. Boatz; Gordon A. Gallup; Peter W. Langhoff
Recent progress is reported in development of ab initio computational methods for the electronic structures of molecules employing the many-electron eigenstates of constituent atoms in spectral-product forms. The approach provides a universal atomic-product description of the electronic structure of matter as an alternative to more commonly employed valence-bond- or molecular-orbital-based representations. The Hamiltonian matrix in this representation is seen to comprise a sum over atomic energies and a pairwise sum over Coulombic interaction terms that depend only on the separations of the individual atomic pairs. Overall electron antisymmetry can be enforced by unitary transformation when appropriate, rather than as a possibly encumbering or unnecessary global constraint. The matrix representative of the antisymmetrizer in the spectral-product basis, which is equivalent to the metric matrix of the corresponding explicitly antisymmetric basis, provides the required transformation to antisymmetric or linearly independent states after Hamiltonian evaluation. Particular attention is focused in the present report on properties of the metric matrix and on the atomic-product compositions of molecular eigenstates as described in the spectral-product representations. Illustrative calculations are reported for simple but prototypically important diatomic (H(2), CH) and triatomic (H(3), CH(2)) molecules employing algorithms and computer codes devised recently for this purpose. This particular implementation of the approach combines Slater-orbital-based one- and two-electron integral evaluations, valence-bond constructions of standard tableau functions and matrices, and transformations to atomic eigenstate-product representations. The calculated metric matrices and corresponding potential energy surfaces obtained in this way elucidate a number of aspects of the spectral-product development, including the nature of closure in the representation, the general redundancy or linear dependence of its explicitly antisymmetrized form, the convergence of the apparently disparate atomic-product and explicitly antisymmetrized atomic-product forms to a common invariant subspace, and the nature of a chemical bonding descriptor provided by the atomic-product compositions of molecular eigenstates. Concluding remarks indicate additional studies in progress and the prognosis for performing atomic spectral-product calculations more generally and efficiently.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011
Britta Johnson; Robert J. Hinde
We develop a model, based on pairwise additive He-Mg and He-O interactions, for the potential energy of He adsorbates above a rigid MgO(100) surface. The attractive long-range He-Mg and He-O interactions are assumed to have the form C(6)/r(6), with the C(6) coefficients determined from atomic data within the context of the Slater-Kirkwood approximation. The repulsive short-range He-Mg and He-O interactions are assumed to have the form C(p)/r(p), with the exponent p and the C(p) coefficients taken as adjustable parameters. We find that for p = 9, the C(p) coefficients can be chosen so that the laterally averaged He-MgO(100) pairwise additive interaction supports low-lying selective adsorption states, some of whose energies agree very well with the states apparent energies inferred from experimental measurements. However, for realistic values of the adjustable parameters that define our model, the lateral corrugation of the model pairwise additive He-MgO(100) potential energy surface far exceeds the corrugation that has been inferred both from experimental measurements and from density functional calculations of the short-range He-MgO(100) interaction.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2000
Robert J. Hinde
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2003
J. M. Sports; Chi-Kin Wong; Matthew S. Johnson; Mitchio Okumura; Jerry A. Boatz; Robert J. Hinde; Jeffrey A. Sheehy; Peter W. Langhoff
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2007
Raji Viswanathan; Michelle R. Dolgos; Robert J. Hinde
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2003
James M. Spotts; C.-Y. Wong; Michael S. Johnson; Mitchio Okumura; Jerry A. Boatz; Robert J. Hinde; Jeffrey A. Sheehy; Peter W. Langhoff
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013
Peter W. Langhoff; Michal Ben-Nun; Kyle Rollin; Jeffrey Mills; Jerry A. Boatz; Robert J. Hinde; Gordon A. Gallup
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2008
Robert J. Hinde
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2007
Peter W. Langhoff; Robert J. Hinde; Jeffrey Mills; Jerry A. Boatz