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Quantum embedding theories are promising approaches to investigate strongly-correlated electronic states of active regions of large-scale molecular or condensed systems. Notable examples are spin defects in semiconductors and insulators. We present a detailed derivation of a quantum embedding theory recently introduced, which is based on the definition of effective Hamiltonians. The effect of the environment on a chosen active space is accounted for through screened Coulomb interactions evaluated using density functional theory. Importantly, the random phase approximation is not required and the evaluation of virtual electronic orbitals is circumvented with algorithms previously developed in the context of calculations based on many-body perturbation theory. In addition, we generalize the quantum embedding theory to active spaces composed of orbitals that are not eigenstates of Kohn-Sham Hamiltonians. Finally, we report results for spin defects in semiconductors.
Quantum computers hold promise to enable efficient simulations of the properties of molecules and materials; however, at present they only permit ab initio calculations of a few atoms, due to a limited number of qubits. In order to harness the power
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Site-occupation embedding theory (SOET) is an alternative formulation of density-functional theory (DFT) for model Hamiltonians where the fully-interacting Hubbard problem is mapped, in principle exactly, onto an impurity-interacting (rather than a n
Quantum embedding methods have become a powerful tool to overcome deficiencies of traditional quantum modelling in materials science. However while these can be accurate, they generally lack the ability to be rigorously improved and still often rely
We introduce an efficient method to construct optimal and system adaptive basis sets for use in electronic structure and quantum Monte Carlo calculations. The method is based on an embedding scheme in which a reference atom is singled out from its en