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Variational Information-Theoretic Atoms-in-Molecules

dc.contributor.advisorAyers, Paul Woodson
dc.contributor.advisorBultinck, Patrick
dc.contributor.advisorVerstraelen, Toon
dc.contributor.authorHeidar-Zadeh, Farnaz
dc.contributor.departmentChemistryen_US
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-03T19:42:29Z
dc.date.available2017-10-03T19:42:29Z
dc.date.issued2017-11
dc.description.abstractIt is common to use the electron density to partition a molecular system into atomic regions. The necessity for such a partitioning scheme is rooted in the unquestionable role of atoms in chemistry. Nevertheless, atomic properties are not well- defined concepts within the domain of quantum mechanics, as they are not observable. This has resulted in a proliferation of different approaches to retrieve the concept of atoms in molecules (AIM) within the domain of quantum mechanics and in silico experiments based on various flavors of model theories. One of the most popular families of models is the Hirshfeld, or stockholder, partitioning methods. Hirshfeld methods do not produce sharp atomic boundaries, but instead distribute the molecular electron density at each point between all the nuclear centers constituting the molecule. The various flavors of the Hirshfeld scheme differ mainly in how the atomic shares are computed from a reference promolecular density and how the reference promolecular density is defined. We first establish the pervasiveness of the Hirshfeld portioning by extending its information-theoretic framework. This characterizes the family of f-divergence measures as necessary and sufficient for deriving Hirshfeld scheme. Then, we developed a variational version of Hirshfeld partitioning method, called Additive Variational Hirshfeld (AVH). The key idea is finding the promolecular density, expanded as a linear combination of charged and neutral spherically-averaged isolated atomic densities in their ground and/or excited states, that resembles the molecular density as much as possible. Using Kullback-Liebler divergence measure, this automatically guarantees that each atom and proatom have the same number of electrons, and that the partitioning is size consistent. The robustness of this method is confirmed by testing it on various datasets. Considering the mathematical properties and our numerical results, we believe that AVH has the potential to supplant other Hirshfeld partitioning schemes in future.en_US
dc.description.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)en_US
dc.description.degreetypeThesisen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/22016
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectAtoms in Moleculesen_US
dc.subjectStockholder Partitioningen_US
dc.subjectAdditive Variational Hirshfelden_US
dc.subjectInformation-theory measuresen_US
dc.subjectKullback-Liebler divergenceen_US
dc.titleVariational Information-Theoretic Atoms-in-Moleculesen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US

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Additive Variational Hirshfeld Partitioning Approach

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