Comparison of vibrational and electronic contributions to van der Waals interactions

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Date

2006-05

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Publisher

American Physical Society

Abstract

The van der Waals interaction can be caused by either ionic vibrations or instantaneous electronic motion relative to the atomic center. In this study, the vibrational contribution to the van der Waals interaction is formulated by considering the interaction between induced dipoles caused by the infrared-active normal modes of a neutral molecule. Using the derived formula, the contribution is quantified, within the density-functional theory formalism, using a screened, i.e., self-consistent, vibrational polarizability. Applications for several neutral nonpolar dimers are presented. It is found that the vibrational contributions for the dimers are substantially smaller than their electronic contributions. The ratio of the vibrational to electronic contributions depends strongly on the ratio of the screened vibrational to electronic polarizabilities and on the ratio of the frequency of the strongest infrared-active mode to an ionization energy.

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Keywords

density-functional theory, atomic dipole polarizabilities, dispersion, energy coefficients, consistent-field method, intermolecular forces, oscillator-strengths, diatomic-molecules, lower bounds, noble-gases, approximation, physics, condensed matter

Citation

Park, K.; Pederson, M. R.; Liu, A. Y.,Comparison of vibrational and electronic contributions to van der Waals interactions," Phys. Rev. B 73, 205116 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.73.205116