numbernof pairs of electrons in the molecule, although only thenoccupied spatial
orbitals are used to construct the Slater determinant which represents the HF
wavefunction (Section 5.2.3.1). This point, and basis sets, are discussed further in
Section 5.3.
To continue with the Roothaan–Hall approach, we substitute the expansion
(5.52) for thec’s into the Hartree–Fock equations5.47, getting (we will work
withm, notn, HF equations since there is one such equation for each MO, and ourm
basis functions will generatemMO’s):
Xms¼ 1cs 1 F^fsj¼e 1Xmsj¼ 1cs 1 fsXms¼ 1cs 2 F^fs¼e 2Xms¼ 1cs 2 fs...
Xms¼ 1csmF^fs¼emXms¼ 1csmF^fsð 5 : 54 Þ(F^operates on the functionsf, not on thec’s, which have no variablesx,y,z).
Multiplying each of thesemequations byf 1 ,f 2 ,...,fm, (orf 1 * etc. if thef’s are
complex functions, as is occasionally the case) and integrating, we getmsets of
equations (one for each of the basis functionsf).
Basis functionf 1 gives
Xms¼ 1cs 1 F 1 s¼e 1Xms¼ 1cs 1 S 1 sXmsj¼ 1cs 2 F 1 s¼e 2Xms¼ 1cs 2 S 1 s...
Xms¼ 1csmF 1 s¼emXms¼ 1csmS 1 sð 5 : 54 ‐ 1 Þwhere
Frs¼Z
frF^fsdv and Srs¼Z
frfsdv ð 5 : 55 Þ5.2 The Basic Principles of the ab initio Method 199