Dalton is a powerful general-purpose program system for the study of molecular electronic structure at the Hartree–Fock, Kohn–Sham, multiconfigurational self-consistent-field, Møller–Plesset, configuration-interaction, and coupled-cluster levels of theory. Apart from the total energy, a wide variety of molecular properties may be calculated using these electronic-structure models. Molecular gradients and Hessians are available for geometry optimizations, molecular dynamics, and vibrational studies, whereas magnetic resonance and optical activity can be studied in a gauge-origin-invariant manner. Frequency-dependent molecular properties can be calculated using linear, quadratic, and cubic response theory. A large number of singlet and triplet perturbation operators are available for the study of one-, two-, and three-photon processes. Environmental effects may be included using various dielectric-medium and quantum-mechanics/molecular-mechanics models. Large molecules may be studied using linear-scaling and massively parallel algorithms. Dalton is distributed at no cost from http://www.daltonprogram.org for a number of UNIX platforms.
Modern density-functional methods for the calculation of electronic g-tensors have been implemented
within the framework of the deMon code. All relevant perturbation operators are included. Particular emphasis
has been placed on accurate yet efficient treatment of the two-electron spin−orbit terms. At an all-electron
level, the computationally inexpensive atomic mean-field approximation is shown to provide spin−orbit
contributions in excellent agreement with the results obtained using explicit one- and two-electron spin−orbit
integrals. Spin−other−orbit contributions account for up to 25−30% of the two-electron terms and may thus
be non-negligible. For systems containing heavy atoms we use a pseudopotential treatment, where
quasirelativistic pseudopotentials are included in the Kohn−Sham calculation whereas appropriate spin−orbit
pseudopotentials are used in the perturbational treatment of the g-tensors. This approach is shown to provide
results in good agreement with the all-electron treatment, at moderate computational cost. Due to the atomic
nature of both mean-field all-electron and pseudopotential spin−orbit operators used, the two approaches may
even be combined in one calculation. The atomic character of the spin−orbit operators may also be used to
analyze the contributions of certain atoms to the paramagnetic terms of the g-tensors. The new methods have
been applied to a wide variety of species, including small main group systems, aromatic radicals, as well as
transition metal complexes.
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