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Breaking the curse of dimensionality in electronic structure methods: towards optimal utilization of the canonical polyadic decomposition

Despite the fact that higher-order tensors (HOTs) plague electronic structure methods and severely limits the modeling of interesting chemistry problems, introduction and application of higher-order tensor (HOT) decompositions, specifically the canonical polyadic (CP) decomposition, is fairly limited. The CP decomposition is an incredibly useful sparse tensor factorization that has the ability to disentangle all correlated modes of a tensor. However the complexities associated with CP decomposition have made its application in electronic structure methods difficult.

Some of the major issues related to CP decomposition are a product of the mathematics of computing the decomposition: determining the exact CP rank is a non-polynomially hard problem, finding stationary points for rank-R approximations require non-linear optimization techniques, and inexact CP approximations can introduce a large degree of error into tensor networks. While other issues are a result of the construction of computer architectures. For example, computer processing units (CPUs) are organized in a way to maximize the efficiency of dense linear algebra and, thus, the performance of routine tensor algebra kernels, like the Khatri-Rao product, is limited. In this work, we seek to reduce the complexities associated with the CP decomposition and create a route for others to develop reduced-scaling electronic structure theory methods using the CP decomposition.

In Chapter 2, we introduce the robust tensor network approximation. This approximation is a way to, in general, eliminate the leading-order error associated with approximated tensors in a network. We utilize the robust network approximation to significantly increase the accuracy of approximating density fitting (DF) integral tensors using rank-deficient CP decompositions in the particle-particle ladder (PPL) diagram of the coupled cluster method with single and double substitutions (CCSD). We show that one can produce results with negligible error in chemically relevant energy differences using a CP rank roughly the same size as the DF fitting basis; which is a significantly smaller rank requirement than found using either a nonrobust approximation or similar grid initialized CP approximations (the pseudospectral (PS) and tensor hypercontraction (THC) approximations). Introduction of the CP approximation, formally, reduces the complexity of the PPL diagram from š“ž(Nā¶) to š“ž(Nāµ) and, using the robust approximation, we are able to observe a cost reduction in CCSD calculations for systems as small as a single water molecule.

In Chapter 3, we further demonstrate the utility of the robust network approximation and, in addition, we construct a scheme to optimize a grid-free CP decomposition of the order-four Coulomb integral tensor in š“ž(Nā“) time. Using these ideas, we reduce the complexity of ten bottleneck contractions from š“ž(Nā¶) to š“ž(Nāµ) in the Laplace transform (LT) formulation of the perturbative triple, (T), correction to CCSD. We show that introducing CP into the LT (T) method with a CP rank roughly the size of the DF fitting basis reduces the cost of computing medium size molecules by a factor of about 2.5 and introduces negligible error into chemically relevant energy differences. Furthermore, we implement these low-cost algorithms using newly developed, optimized tensor algebra kernels in the massively-parallel, block-sparse TiledArray [Calvin, et. al Chemical Reviews 2021 121 (3), 1203-1231] tensor framework. / Doctor of Philosophy / Electronic structure methods and accurate modeling of quantum chemistry have developed alongside the advancements in computer infrastructures. Increasingly large and efficient computers have allowed researchers to model remarkably large chemical systems. Sadly, for as fast as computer infrastructures grow (Moores law predicts that the number of transistors in a computer will double every 18 months) the cost of electronic structure methods grows more quickly. One of the least expensive electronic structure methods, Hartree Fock (HF), grows quartically with molecular size; this means that doubling the size of a molecule increase the number of computer operations by a factor of 16. However, it is known that when chemical systems become sufficiently large, the amount of physical information added to the system grows linearly with system size.[Goedecker, et. al. Comput. Sci. Eng., 2003, 5, (4), 14-21] Unfortunately, standard implementations of electronic structure methods will never achieve linear scaling; the disparity between actual cost and physical scaling of molecules is a result of storing and manipulating data using dense tensors and is known as the curse of dimensionality.[Bellman, Adaptive Control Processes, 1961, 2045, 276]

Electronic structure theorists, in their desire to apply accurate methods to increasingly large systems, have known for some time that the cost of conventional algorithms is unreasonably high. These theorists have found that one can reveal sparsity and develop reduced-complexity algorithms using matrix decomposition techniques. However, higher-order tensors (HOTs), tensors with more than two modes, are routinely necessary in algorithm formulations. Matrix decompositions applied to HOTs are not necessarily straight-forward and can have no effect on the limiting behavior of an algorithm. For example, because of the positive definiteness of the Coulomb integral tensor, it is possible to perform a Cholesky decomposition (CD) to reduce the complexity of tensor from an order-4 tensor to a product of order-3 tensors.[Beebe, et. al. Int. J. Quantum Chem., 1977, 12, 683-705] However, using the CD approximated Coulomb integral tensors it is not possible to reduce the complexity of popular methods such as Hartree-Fock or coupled cluster theory.

We believe that the next step to reducing the complexity of electronic structure methods is through the accurate application of HOT decompositions. In this work, we only consider a single HOT decomposition: the canonical polyadic (CP) decomposition which represents a tensor as a polyadic sum of products. The CP decomposition disentangles all modes of a tensor by representing an order-N tensor as N order-2 tensors. In this work, we construct the CP decomposition of tensors using algebraic optimization. Our goal, here, is to tackle one of the biggest issues associated with the CP decomposition: accurately approximating tensors and tensor networks. In Chapter 2, we develop a robust formulation to approximate tensor networks, a formulation which removes the leading-order error associated with tensor approximations in a network.[Pierce, et. al. J. Chem. Theory Comput., 2021 17 (4), 2217- 2230] We apply a robust CP approximation to the coupled cluster method with single and double substitutions (CCSD) to reduce the overall cost of the approach. Using this robust CP approximation we can compute CCSD, on average, 2.5-3 times faster and introduce negligibly small error in chemically relevant energy values. Furthermore in Chapter 3, we again use the robust CP network approximation in conjunction with a novel, low cost approach to compute order-four CP decompositions, to reduce the cost of 10 high cost computations in the the perturbative triple, (T), correction to CCSD. By removing these computations, we are able to reduce the cost of (T) by a factor of about 2.5 while introducing significantly small error.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/107964
Date27 January 2022
CreatorsPierce, Karl Martin
ContributorsChemistry, Valeyev, Eduard Faritovich, Crawford, Daniel, Mayhall, Nicholas, Troya, Diego
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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