posted on 2021-08-05, 16:12authored byOliver
J. Backhouse, Alejandro Santana-Bonilla, George H. Booth
A reliable and efficient computation
of the entire single-particle
spectrum of correlated molecules is an outstanding challenge in the
field of quantum chemistry, with standard density functional theory
approaches often giving an inadequate description of excitation energies
and gaps. In this work, we expand upon a recently introduced approach
that relies on a fully self-consistent many-body perturbation theory
coupled to a nonperturbative truncation of the
effective dynamics at each step. We show that this yields a low-scaling
and accurate method across a diverse benchmark test set that is capable
of treating moderate levels of strong correlation effects, and we
detail an efficient implementation for applications involving up to
∼1000 orbitals on parallel resources. We then use this method
to characterize the spectral properties of the antimalarial drug molecule
artemisinin, resolving discrepancies in previous works concerning
the active sites of the lowest-energy fundamental excitations of the
system.