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Quantitative Electron Delocalization in Solids from Maximally Localized Wannier Functions.

Alberto Otero-de-la-RozaAngel Martin PendásErin R Johnson
Published in: Journal of chemical theory and computation (2018)
Electron delocalization is the quantum-mechanical principle behind chemical concepts such as aromaticity, resonance, and bonding. A common way to measure electron delocalization in the solid state is through the visualization of maximally localized Wannier functions, a method similar to using localized orbitals in molecular quantum chemistry. Although informative, this method can only provide qualitative information and is essentially limited by the arbitrariness in the choice of orbital rotation. Quantitative orbital-independent interatomic delocalization indices can be calculated by integration inside of atomic regions of probability densities obtained from the system's wave function. In particular, Bader's delocalization indices are very informative, but typically expensive to calculate. In this article, we present a fast method to obtain the localization and delocalization indices in a periodic solid under the plane-wave/pseudopotential approximation. The efficiency of the proposed method hinges on the use of grid-based atomic integration techniques and maximally localized Wannier functions. The former enables the rapid calculation of all atomic overlap integrals required in the construction of the delocalization indices. The latter allows discarding the overlaps between maximally localized Wannier functions whose centers are far enough apart. Using the new method, all localization and delocalization indices in solids with dozens of atoms can be calculated in hours on a desktop computer. Illustrative examples are presented and studied: some simple and molecular solids, polymeric nitrogen, intermolecular delocalization in 10 phases of ice, and the self-ionization of ammonia under pressure. This work is an important step toward the quantitative description of chemical bonding in solids under pressure.
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