Abstract

A Monte Carlo method for evaluating multicenter two-electron-repulsion integrals over any types of orbitals (Slater, Sturmian, finite-range, numerical, etc.) is presented. The approach is based on a simple and universal (orbital-independent) gaussian sampling of the two-electron configuration space and on the use of efficient zero-variance Monte Carlo estimators. Quite remarkably, it is shown that the high level of accuracy required on two-electron integrals to make Hartree-Fock (HF) and configuration interaction (CI) calculations feasible can be achieved. A first zero-variance estimator is built by introducing a gaussian approximation of the orbitals and by evaluating the two-electron integrals using a correlated sampling scheme for the difference between exact and approximate orbitals. A second one is based on the introduction of a general coordinate transformation. The price to pay for this simple and general Monte Carlo scheme is the high computational cost required. However, we argue that the great simplicity of the algorithm, its embarrassingly parallel nature, its ideal adaptation to modern computational platforms and, most importantly, the possibility of using more compact and physically meaningful basis sets nevertheless make the method attractive. HF and near full CI (FCI) calculations using Slater-type orbitals (STOs) are reported for Be, CH4, and [H2N(CH)NH2]+ (a simple model of cyanine). To the best of our knowledge, our largest FCI calculation involving 18 active electrons distributed among 90 orbitals for the cyanine molecule is the most extensive molecular calculation performed so far using pure STOs (no gaussian approximation, even for the challenging four-center two-electron integrals).

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