Abstract

The recent Hartree-Fock (HF) difference approach to the chemical valence indices (ionic and covalent), formulated in the framework of the pair-density matrix, is implemented within the Kohn-Sham (KS) density functional theory (DFT). The valence numbers are quadratic in terms of displacements of the molecular spin-resolved charge-and-bond-order (CBO) matrix elements, relative to values in the separated atoms limit (SAL). It is shown that the global valence represents a generalized “distance” quantity measuring a degree of similarity between the two CBO matrices: the molecular and SAL. Numerical values for typical molecules exhibiting single and multiple bonds demonstrate that the KS orbitals give rise to these new bond valences in good agreement with both chemical and HF predictions. This KS bond multiplicity analysis is applied to the chemisorption system including the allyl radical and a model surface cluster of molybdenum oxide. It is concluded that the quadratic valence analysis represents a valuable procedure for extracting useful chemical information from standard DFT calculations. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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