Research at the CCCThe Center for Computational Chemistry at the University of Georgia seeks to develop theoretical and computational methods through mathematical models for describing and understanding the electronic structure of molecules. The members of the CCC utilize the tools of quantum chemistry to gain a greater understanding of the underlying processes of chemistry. This endeavor is supported by a number of key research areas and facilities. Applications of Quantum ChemistryThe majority of active research at the CCC involves the application of ab initio quantum chemistry to molecular systems. Application of quantum chemical calculations to real chemical systems represents the essence of computational chemistry. Modeling chemistry through quantum mechanics can provide important properties such as the structure of a molecule, vibrational frequencies, and charge distributions. Properties such as the electronic structure and excited state information cannot be determined from molecular mechanics simulations, and ab initio theory provides the only means by which chemists can obtain this information from a theoretical perspective. A wide variety of theoretical methods, including density functional theory (DFT), coupled-cluster (CC), and configuration interaction (CI) theories are employed in our studies. Our research encompasses a wide range of chemical problems including:
The CCC is at the forefront of method development in quantum chemistry with the programming package PSI. PSI is the center's own computational quantum chemistry program suite that includes capabilities such as self-consistent field, configuration interaction, multi-reference CI (MRCI), coupled-cluster, and explicitly-correlated computations. PSI provides group members an environment in which to build quantum chemical code with a suite of packages already available to them for development. Current development projects include:
Science is not performed in a vacuum and collaboration is an essential aspect of research. The CCC has correspondence with many well-known chemical research groups, both experimental and theoretical, from around the world. A few of the group's collaborators include:
The CCC has a wide variety of computing power available for research use. Much of the work is carried out on our cluster of Linux based PC’s connected via fast Ethernet. The cluster currently consists of 60 Pentium 4 machines, with clock speeds ranging from 2.5 to 3.2 GHz and equipped with 1 to 3 GB of RAM. We have a rack-mounted cluster of 21 dual Opteron (2.2 GHz) nodes featuring 6 GB of RAM per node and 14 dual 2.6 GHz dual-core Opteron nodes with 16 GB of RAM per node and 500 GB scratch space. Each node is connected via Gigabit interconnect and equipped with high-speed SCSI hard drives. We recently acquired 13 new dual 3.0 GHz dual-core Opteron nodes with 16 GB each of RAM with 500 GB of scratch space. These nodes are connected together via Infiniband. Recently, the CCC has also moved to a strategy in which each group member is issued a ‘dream machine,’ which is a high-end workstation, configured and maintained by each individual. These machines serve as terminals to access our ever-expanding cluster resources, provide a development platform, and run computations. A typical configuration for one of these workstations includes dual 3.0 GHz dual-core Opteron processors, 32 GB of RAM, a 500 GB hard drive, and a dual-screen display with 19-inch flat-panel monitors. Along with PSI, the CCC uses a number of other computational chemistry software packages, including Gaussian 94, Q-Chem 3.1, ACES II, MPQC, MOLPRO, and NWChem.
The scope and caliber of the CCC's applications of electron structure theory to chemistry are unusual. Since its inception, the research undertaken has been timely and of broad chemical interest. Thoroughness is a valuable quality in group members, for applications work requires both an understanding of the theoretical methods used as well as a healthy familiarity with the corresponding experiments. The most visible result of this approach has been the reversal of the conclusions of a number of distinguished experimentalists. Subsequent experimental studies have verified controversial predictions concerning the structure and singlet-triplet separation of methylene, the quadruple moment of ozone, the activation energy for D + HF exchange, and the vibrational spectrum of benzyne, to cite just a few. Equally important has been the manner in which the work in the Schaefer group has guided experimentalists into new directions. A recognized early example [Nature, 278, 507 (1979)] was the identification of the spectrum of triplet acetylene. The tradition of serious methods development combined with thoughtful applications research continues at the Center for Computational Chemistry.
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