Abstract

In recent years, neural-network quantum states have emerged as powerful tools for the study of quantum many-body systems. Electronic structure calculations are one such canonical many-body problem that have attracted sustained research efforts spanning multiple decades, whilst only recently being attempted with neural-network quantum states. However, the complex non-local interactions and high sample complexity are substantial challenges that call for bespoke solutions. Here, we parameterize the electronic wavefunction with an autoregressive neural network that permits highly efficient and scalable sampling, whilst also embedding physical priors reflecting the structure of molecular systems without sacrificing expressibility. This allows us to perform electronic structure calculations on molecules with up to 30 spin orbitals—at least an order of magnitude more Slater determinants than previous applications of conventional neural-network quantum states—and we find that our ansatz can outperform the de facto gold-standard coupled-cluster methods even in the presence of strong quantum correlations. With a highly expressive neural network for which sampling is no longer a computational bottleneck, we conclude that the barriers to further scaling are not associated with the wavefunction ansatz itself, but rather are inherent to any variational Monte Carlo approach. To perform electronic structure calculations in quantum chemistry systems, methods are needed that are both accurate and scalable as the size of the molecule of interest increases. Barrett and colleagues employ an autoregressive neural-network ansatz that allows them to study larger molecules than previously attempted with neural-network quantum state approaches.

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