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Compact effective potentials, which replace the atomic core electrons in molecular calculations, are presented for atoms in the first and second rows of the periodic table. The angular-dependent components of these potentials are represented by compact one- and two-term Gaussian expansions obtained directly from the appropriate eigenvalue equation. Energy-optimized Gaussian basis set expansions of the atomic pseudo-orbitals, which have a common set of exponents (shared exponents) for the s and p orbitals, are also presented. The potentials and basis sets have been used to calculate the equilibrium structures and spectroscopic properties of several molecules. The results compare extremely favorably with corresponding all-electron calculations.
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Walter J. Stevens
University of New Brunswick
Harold Basch
Bar-Ilan University
Morris Krauss
National Institute of Standards and Technology
The Journal of Chemical Physics
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Stevens et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0336bacab5b316e39e2914 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.447604
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