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Chemical Bonding Analysis of Solids in Position SpaceBaranov, Alexey 02 October 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Modern solid state chemistry is inconceivable without theoretical treatment of solids thanks to the availability of efficient and accurate computational methods. Being developed mainly by physicist's community and deeply rooted in the formalism of reciprocal space, they often lack connections to familiar chemical concepts, indispensable for the chemical understanding of matter.
Quantum chemical topology approach is a powerful theory able to efficiently recover chemical entities from the abstract description of a system given by its density matrices. It can be used to partition any many-electron system into the atoms, using the topology of electron density or for instance into atomic shells, using the topology of ELI-D field. Various characteristics of interactions between these chemical building blocks can be obtained applying bonding indicators, e.g. from the analysis of domain-averaged properties.
Quantum chemical topology methods have been extended in the current work for the applications on the diversity of theoretical methods widely used for the description of solids nowadays – from the mean field Kohn-Sham density functional theory to the reduced one-electron density matrices functional theory or from the scalar-relativistic methods to the many-component formalisms employing spinor wavefunctions. It has been shown, that they provide chemically meaningful description of the bonding which is universally applicable to any class of extended systems, be it ionic insulator, covalent solid or metal. It has been shown, that the relativistic effects on the chemical bonding can be easily revealed using extensions of bonding indicators developed in the current work. Classical chemical concepts like Zintl-Klemm concept can be easily recovered with these descriptions. Intimate connection between the class of the material and the degree of chemical bonding delocalization has been also established.
All these methods have been successfully applied to the various classes of solids and delivered novel insights on their crystal structure, properties, solid state transitions and reactivity.
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Chemical Bonding Analysis of Solids in Position SpaceBaranov, Alexey 21 August 2015 (has links)
Modern solid state chemistry is inconceivable without theoretical treatment of solids thanks to the availability of efficient and accurate computational methods. Being developed mainly by physicist's community and deeply rooted in the formalism of reciprocal space, they often lack connections to familiar chemical concepts, indispensable for the chemical understanding of matter.
Quantum chemical topology approach is a powerful theory able to efficiently recover chemical entities from the abstract description of a system given by its density matrices. It can be used to partition any many-electron system into the atoms, using the topology of electron density or for instance into atomic shells, using the topology of ELI-D field. Various characteristics of interactions between these chemical building blocks can be obtained applying bonding indicators, e.g. from the analysis of domain-averaged properties.
Quantum chemical topology methods have been extended in the current work for the applications on the diversity of theoretical methods widely used for the description of solids nowadays – from the mean field Kohn-Sham density functional theory to the reduced one-electron density matrices functional theory or from the scalar-relativistic methods to the many-component formalisms employing spinor wavefunctions. It has been shown, that they provide chemically meaningful description of the bonding which is universally applicable to any class of extended systems, be it ionic insulator, covalent solid or metal. It has been shown, that the relativistic effects on the chemical bonding can be easily revealed using extensions of bonding indicators developed in the current work. Classical chemical concepts like Zintl-Klemm concept can be easily recovered with these descriptions. Intimate connection between the class of the material and the degree of chemical bonding delocalization has been also established.
All these methods have been successfully applied to the various classes of solids and delivered novel insights on their crystal structure, properties, solid state transitions and reactivity.
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