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Dive into the research topics where Ulf Ekström is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulf Ekström.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Computational Molecular Science | 2014

The Dalton quantum chemistry program system

Kestutis Aidas; Celestino Angeli; Keld L. Bak; Vebjørn Bakken; Radovan Bast; Linus Boman; Ove Christiansen; Renzo Cimiraglia; Sonja Coriani; Pål Dahle; Erik K. Dalskov; Ulf Ekström; Thomas Enevoldsen; Janus Juul Eriksen; Patrick Ettenhuber; Berta Fernández; Lara Ferrighi; Heike Fliegl; Luca Frediani; Kasper Hald; Asger Halkier; Christof Hättig; Hanne Heiberg; Trygve Helgaker; Alf C. Hennum; Hinne Hettema; Eirik Hjertenæs; Stine Høst; Ida Marie Høyvik; Maria Francesca Iozzi

Dalton is a powerful general‐purpose program system for the study of molecular electronic structure at the Hartree–Fock, Kohn–Sham, multiconfigurational self‐consistent‐field, Møller–Plesset, configuration‐interaction, and coupled‐cluster levels of theory. Apart from the total energy, a wide variety of molecular properties may be calculated using these electronic‐structure models. Molecular gradients and Hessians are available for geometry optimizations, molecular dynamics, and vibrational studies, whereas magnetic resonance and optical activity can be studied in a gauge‐origin‐invariant manner. Frequency‐dependent molecular properties can be calculated using linear, quadratic, and cubic response theory. A large number of singlet and triplet perturbation operators are available for the study of one‐, two‐, and three‐photon processes. Environmental effects may be included using various dielectric‐medium and quantum‐mechanics/molecular‐mechanics models. Large molecules may be studied using linear‐scaling and massively parallel algorithms. Dalton is distributed at no cost from http://www.daltonprogram.org for a number of UNIX platforms.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2010

Arbitrary-Order Density Functional Response Theory from Automatic Differentiation

Ulf Ekström; Lucas Visscher; Radovan Bast; Andreas J. Thorvaldsen; Kenneth Ruud

We demonstrate how the functional derivatives appearing in perturbative time-dependent density functional theory can be calculated using automatic differentiation. The approach starts from a computer implementation of the exchange-correlation energy functional, from which arbitrary-order derivatives are generated automatically. Automatic differentiation is shown to provide an accurate, general, and efficient implementation of higher-order exchange-correlation functional derivatives that is easy to maintain. When used in combination with an arbitrary-order response solver, the methodology allows us to generate arbitrary-order response functions from time-dependent density functional theory.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Core-shell photoabsorption and photoelectron spectra of gas-phase pentacene: experiment and theory.

Michele Alagia; Chiara Baldacchini; Maria Grazia Betti; Fabio Bussolotti; Vincenzo Carravetta; Ulf Ekström; Carlo Mariani; Stefano Stranges

The C K-edge photoabsorption and 1s core-level photoemission of pentacene (C22H14) free molecules are experimentally measured, and calculated by self-consistent-field and static-exchange approximation ab initio methods. Six nonequivalent C atoms present in the molecule contribute to the C 1s photoemission spectrum. The complex near-edge structures of the carbon K-edge absorption spectrum present two main groups of discrete transitions between 283 and 288 eV photon energy, due to absorption to pi* virtual orbitals, and broader structures at higher energy, involving sigma* virtual orbitals. The sharp absorption structures to the pi* empty orbitals lay well below the thresholds for the C 1s ionizations, caused by strong excitonic and localization effects. We can definitely explain the C K-edge absorption spectrum as due to both final (virtual) and initial (core) orbital effects, mainly involving excitations to the two lowest-unoccupied molecular orbitals of pi* symmetry, from the six chemically shifted C 1s core orbitals.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Electronic spectroscopy of UO22+, NUO+ and NUN: an evaluation of time-dependent density functional theory for actinides

Paweł Tecmer; André Severo Pereira Gomes; Ulf Ekström; Lucas Visscher

The performance of the time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) approach has been evaluated for the electronic spectrum of the UO(2)(2+), NUO(+) and NUN molecules. Different exchange-correlation functionals (LDA, PBE, BLYP, B3LYP, PBE0, M06, M06-L, M06-2X, CAM-B3LYP) and the SAOP model potential have been investigated, as has the relative importance of the adiabatic local density approximation (ALDA) to the exchange-correlation kernel. The vertical excitation energies have been compared with reference data obtained using accurate wave-function theory (WFT) methods.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Near-edge x-ray absorption and natural circular dichroism spectra of L-alanine: A theoretical study based on the complex polarization propagator approach

Auayporn Jiemchooroj; Ulf Ekström; Patrick Norman

The complex polarization propagator method [J. Chem. Phys. 123, 194103 (2005)] has been employed in conjunction with density functional theory and gauge-including atomic orbitals in order to determine the near-edge x-ray absorption and natural circular dichroism spectra of L-alanine in its neutral and zwitterionic forms. Results are presented for the K-edges of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. In contrast to traditional methods, the proposed approach enables a direct determination of the spectra at an arbitrary frequency instead of focusing on the rotatory strengths for individual electronic transitions. The propagator includes a complete set of nonredundant electron-transfer operators and allows for full core-hole relaxation. The theoretical spectrum at the nitrogen K-edge of the zwitterion compares well with the experimental spectrum.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Analytic cubic and quartic force fields using density-functional theory

Magnus Ringholm; Dan Jonsson; Radovan Bast; Bin Gao; Andreas J. Thorvaldsen; Ulf Ekström; Trygve Helgaker; Kenneth Ruud

We present the first analytic implementation of cubic and quartic force constants at the level of Kohn-Sham density-functional theory. The implementation is based on an open-ended formalism for the evaluation of energy derivatives in an atomic-orbital basis. The implementation relies on the availability of open-ended codes for evaluation of one- and two-electron integrals differentiated with respect to nuclear displacements as well as automatic differentiation of the exchange-correlation kernels. We use generalized second-order vibrational perturbation theory to calculate the fundamental frequencies of methane, ethane, benzene, and aniline, comparing B3LYP, BLYP, and Hartree-Fock results. The Hartree-Fock anharmonic corrections agree well with the B3LYP corrections when calculated at the B3LYP geometry and from B3LYP normal coordinates, suggesting that the inclusion of electron correlation is not essential for the reliable calculation of cubic and quartic force constants.


Physical Review A | 2012

Choice of basic variables in current-density-functional theory

Erik I. Tellgren; Simen Kvaal; Espen Sagvolden; Ulf Ekström; Andrew M. Teale; Trygve Helgaker

The selection of basic variables in current-density-functional theory and formal properties of the resulting formulations are critically examined. Focus is placed on the extent to which the Hohenberg-Kohn theorem, constrained-search approach, and Lieb’s formulation (in terms of convex and concave conjugation) of standard density-functional theory can be generalized to provide foundations for current-density-functional theory. For the well-known case with the gauge-dependent paramagnetic current density as a basic variable, we find that the resulting total energy functional is not concave. It is shown that a simple redefinition of the scalar potential restores concavity and enables the application of convex analysis and convex (or concave) conjugation. As a result, the solution sets arising in potential-optimization problems can be given a simple characterization. We also review attempts to establish theories with the physical current density as a basic variable. Despite the appealing physical motivation behind this choice of basic variables, we find that the mathematical foundations of the theories proposed to date are unsatisfactory. Moreover, the analogy to standard density-functional theory is substantially weaker as neither the constrained-search approach nor the convex analysis framework carry over to a theory making use of the physical current density.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Non-perturbative calculation of molecular magnetic properties within current-density functional theory.

Erik I. Tellgren; Andrew M. Teale; James W. Furness; Kai K. Lange; Ulf Ekström; Trygve Helgaker

We present a novel implementation of Kohn-Sham density-functional theory utilizing London atomic orbitals as basis functions. External magnetic fields are treated non-perturbatively, which enable the study of both magnetic response properties and the effects of strong fields, using either standard density functionals or current-density functionals-the implementation is the first fully self-consistent implementation of the latter for molecules. Pilot applications are presented for the finite-field calculation of molecular magnetizabilities, hypermagnetizabilities, and nuclear magnetic resonance shielding constants, focusing on the impact of current-density functionals on the accuracy of the results. Existing current-density functionals based on the gauge-invariant vorticity are tested and found to be sensitive to numerical details of their implementation. Furthermore, when appropriately regularized, the resulting magnetic properties show no improvement over standard density-functional results. An advantage of the present implementation is the ability to apply density-functional theory to molecules in very strong magnetic fields, where the perturbative approach breaks down. Comparison with high accuracy full-configuration-interaction results show that the inadequacies of current-density approximations are exacerbated with increasing magnetic field strength. Standard density-functionals remain well behaved but fail to deliver high accuracy. The need for improved current-dependent density-functionals, and how they may be tested using the presented implementation, is discussed in light of our findings.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Differentiable but exact formulation of density-functional theory

Simen Kvaal; Ulf Ekström; Andrew M. Teale; Trygve Helgaker

The universal density functional F of density-functional theory is a complicated and ill-behaved function of the density-in particular, F is not differentiable, making many formal manipulations more complicated. While F has been well characterized in terms of convex analysis as forming a conjugate pair (E, F) with the ground-state energy E via the Hohenberg-Kohn and Lieb variation principles, F is nondifferentiable and subdifferentiable only on a small (but dense) subset of its domain. In this article, we apply a tool from convex analysis, Moreau-Yosida regularization, to construct, for any ε > 0, pairs of conjugate functionals ((ε)E, (ε)F) that converge to (E, F) pointwise everywhere as ε → 0(+), and such that (ε)F is (Fréchet) differentiable. For technical reasons, we limit our attention to molecular electronic systems in a finite but large box. It is noteworthy that no information is lost in the Moreau-Yosida regularization: the physical ground-state energy E(v) is exactly recoverable from the regularized ground-state energy (ε)E(v) in a simple way. All concepts and results pertaining to the original (E, F) pair have direct counterparts in results for ((ε)E, (ε)F). The Moreau-Yosida regularization therefore allows for an exact, differentiable formulation of density-functional theory. In particular, taking advantage of the differentiability of (ε)F, a rigorous formulation of Kohn-Sham theory is presented that does not suffer from the noninteracting representability problem in standard Kohn-Sham theory.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2015

Current Density Functional Theory Using Meta-Generalized Gradient Exchange-Correlation Functionals.

James W. Furness; Joachim Verbeke; Erik I. Tellgren; Stella Stopkowicz; Ulf Ekström; Trygve Helgaker; Andrew M. Teale

We present the self-consistent implementation of current-dependent (hybrid) meta-generalized gradient approximation (mGGA) density functionals using London atomic orbitals. A previously proposed generalized kinetic energy density is utilized to implement mGGAs in the framework of Kohn-Sham current density functional theory (KS-CDFT). A unique feature of the nonperturbative implementation of these functionals is the ability to seamlessly explore a wide range of magnetic fields up to 1 au (∼235 kT) in strength. CDFT functionals based on the TPSS and B98 forms are investigated, and their performance is assessed by comparison with accurate coupled-cluster singles, doubles, and perturbative triples (CCSD(T)) data. In the weak field regime, magnetic properties such as magnetizabilities and nuclear magnetic resonance shielding constants show modest but systematic improvements over generalized gradient approximations (GGA). However, in the strong field regime, the mGGA-based forms lead to a significantly improved description of the recently proposed perpendicular paramagnetic bonding mechanism, comparing well with CCSD(T) data. In contrast to functionals based on the vorticity, these forms are found to be numerically stable, and their accuracy at high field suggests that the extension of mGGAs to CDFT via the generalized kinetic energy density should provide a useful starting point for further development of CDFT approximations.

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Bin Gao

University of Tromsø

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