Nuclear cusps and singularities in the non-additive kinetic potential bi-functional from analytical inversion
Mojdeh Banafsheh, Tomasz A. Wesolowski, Tim Gould, Leeor Kronik, David, A. Strubbe

TL;DR
This paper analytically investigates the presence of singularities in the non-additive kinetic potential within density-functional theory, demonstrating that smooth densities do not produce singularities and providing insights for functional development.
Contribution
It analytically proves the absence of singularities in the non-additive kinetic potential for smooth densities, supported by numerical tests on diatomic molecules.
Findings
No singularities from smoothly partitioned densities
Numerical confirmation using analytical inversion
Insights for developing better kinetic-energy functionals
Abstract
The non-additive kinetic potential is a key quantity in density-functional theory (DFT) embedding methods, such as frozen density embedding theory and partition DFT. is a bi-functional of electron densities and . It can be evaluated using approximate kinetic-energy functionals, but accurate approximations are challenging. The behavior of in the vicinity of the nuclei has long been questioned, and singularities were seen in some approximate calculations. In this article, the existence of singularities in is analyzed analytically for various choices of and , using the nuclear cusp conditions for the density and Kohn-Sham potential. It is shown that no singularities arise from smoothly partitioned ground-state Kohn-Sham densities.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Chemical Physics Studies · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Inorganic Fluorides and Related Compounds
