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Zero differential overlap is an approximation in computational
molecular orbital In chemistry, a molecular orbital is a mathematical function describing the location and wave-like behavior of an electron in a molecule. This function can be used to calculate chemical and physical properties such as the probability of findi ...
theory that is the central technique of semi-empirical methods in
quantum chemistry Quantum chemistry, also called molecular quantum mechanics, is a branch of physical chemistry focused on the application of quantum mechanics to chemical systems, particularly towards the quantum-mechanical calculation of electronic contribution ...
. When computers were first used to calculate bonding in molecules, it was only possible to calculate diatomic molecules. As computers advanced, it became possible to study larger molecules, but the use of this approximation has always allowed the study of even larger molecules. Currently semi-empirical methods can be applied to molecules as large as whole proteins. The approximation involves ignoring certain integrals, usually two-electron repulsion integrals. If the number of orbitals used in the calculation is N, the number of two-electron repulsion integrals scales as N4. After the approximation is applied the number of such integrals scales as N2, a much smaller number, simplifying the calculation.


Details of approximation

If the molecular orbitals \mathbf_i \ are expanded in terms of ''N'' basis functions, \mathbf_\mu^A \ as: :\mathbf_i \ = \sum_^N \mathbf_ \ \mathbf_\mu^A \, where ''A'' is the atom the basis function is centred on, and \mathbf_ \ are coefficients, the two-electron repulsion integrals are then defined as: : \langle\mu\nu, \lambda\sigma\rangle = \iint \left(\mathbf_\mu^A (1)\right)^* \left(\mathbf_\nu^C (2)\right)^* \frac \mathbf_\lambda^B (1) \mathbf_\sigma^D (2) d\tau_1\,d\tau_2 \ The zero differential overlap approximation ignores integrals that contain the product \mathbf_\mu^A (1) \mathbf_\nu^B (1) where ''μ'' is not equal to ''ν''. This leads to: : \langle\mu\nu, \lambda\sigma\rangle = \delta_ \delta_ \langle\mu\nu, \mu\nu\rangle where \delta_ = \begin0 & i \ne j \\ 1 & i = j \ \end The total number of such integrals is reduced to ''N''(''N'' + 1) / 2 (approximately ''N''2 / 2) from 'N''(''N'' + 1) / 2''N''(''N'' + 1) / 2 + 1] / 2 (approximately ''N''4 / 8), all of which are included in Ab initio quantum chemistry methods, ab initio Hartree–Fock and post-Hartree–Fock calculations.


Scope of approximation in semi-empirical methods

Methods such as the
Pariser–Parr–Pople method In molecular physics, the Pariser–Parr–Pople method applies semi-empirical quantum mechanical methods to the quantitative prediction of electronic structures and spectra, in molecules of interest in the field of organic chemistry. Previous m ...
(PPP) and
CNDO/2 CNDO is the abbreviation for Complete Neglect of Differential Overlap, one of the first semi empirical methods in quantum chemistry. It uses two approximations: *core approximation - only the outer valence electrons are explicitly included. * zero ...
use the zero differential overlap approximation completely. Methods based on the intermediate neglect of differential overlap, such as INDO, MINDO, ZINDO and SINDO do not apply it when ''A'' = ''B'' = ''C'' = ''D'', i.e. when all four basis functions are on the same atom. Methods that use the neglect of diatomic differential overlap, such as MNDO, PM3 and AM1, also do not apply it when ''A'' = ''B'' and ''C'' = ''D'', i.e. when the basis functions for the first electron are on the same atom and the basis functions for the second electron are the same atom. It is possible to partly justify this approximation, but generally it is used because it works reasonably well when the integrals that remain – \langle\mu\mu, \lambda\lambda\rangle – are parameterised.


References

*{{cite book , last = Jensen , first = Frank , authorlink = , title = Introduction to Computational Chemistry , url = https://archive.org/details/introductiontoco00fran_509 , url-access = limited , publisher = John Wiley and Sons , year = 1999 , location = Chichester , pages
81
��82 , hdl = 2027/uc1.31822026137414 , isbn = 978-0-471-98085-8 , oclc = 466189317 Computational chemistry