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Re^8: excited state geometry opt and intersystem crossing

sanya
sanya@photonics.ru


>I disabled SOSCF and with DIIS it went through. I was wondering if there is any way to tell if it converged to the state I requested, e.g. if state tracking feature did its job
>By the same token, how did you find out that the system was nearly degenerate from the output?

SCF that converges or fails to converge is for the ground state. CIS procedure generates the excited states. Their energies should be no less than the ground state energy (variational principle). In your output, the energy of the first excited state decreased, while the ground state energy increased. In the step before SCF failed to converge, the energies of the ground and first excited states became close, so you might expect problems. Sooner or later, they would appear.

As for root tracking in CIS, this can be necessary for the excited states, which can easily flip. The manual says: The state-tracking feature of the PC GAMESS' CIS code can be activated by selecting negative value of istate in the $cis group. It is intended for geometry optimization of the excited states in the case of root flipping. This is not necessary for assumed flipping of the ground and excited state, because they never flip, they can only become degenerate, and this means that you should use MCSCF for your system.


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