Quantum System Partitioning at the Single-Particle Level
Adrian H. M\"uhlbach, Markus Reiher

TL;DR
This paper introduces a general framework for partitioning quantum systems at the single-particle level using unitary block-diagonalization, unifying various approaches and enhancing computational efficiency in quantum chemistry.
Contribution
It presents a versatile, general SSUB framework that unifies existing partitioning methods and simplifies projector-based embedding, applicable to diverse quantum system separations.
Findings
Unified SSUB framework encompasses recent and older partitioning methods.
Simplifies and accelerates projector-based embedding techniques.
Connects to relativistic decoupling approaches like X2C.
Abstract
We discuss the partitioning of a quantum system by subsystem separation through unitary block-diagonalization (SSUB) applied to a Fock operator. Our separation can be formulated in a very general way. It can be applied to very different partitionings ranging from those driven by features in the molecular structure (such as a solute surrounded by solvent molecules) to those that aim at an orbital separation (such as core-valence separation). Our framework embraces recent developments of Manby and Miller as well as older ones of Huzinaga and Cantu. Projector-based embedding is simplified and accelerated by SSUB. Moreover, it directly relates to decoupling approaches for relativistic four-component many-electron theory. For a Fock operator based on the Dirac one-electron Hamiltonian, one would like to separate the so-called positronic (negative-energy) states from the electronic bound and…
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