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Oxford Reference
oxfordreference.com › display › 10.1093 › oi › authority.20110803095344143
Ab-initio calculation - Oxford Reference
Ab-initio calculations require a large amount of numerical computation; the amount of computing time required increases rapidly as the size of the atom or molecule increases. The development of computing power has enabled the properties of both ...
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ScienceDirect
sciencedirect.com › topics › chemistry › ab-initio-calculation
Ab Initio Calculation - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Ab initio chemical shift calculations on model systems that simulate Hx in solution and bound to PNP are used to interpret the NMR data (see Fig. 5.9 for model systems). Ab initio 1H and 15N chemical shielding tensor calculations were made on model systems using the GIAO method as implemented in the Gaussian computational package.
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Chemistry LibreTexts
chem.libretexts.org › campus bookshelves › university of california davis › chem 110a: physical chemistry i › ucd chem 110a: physical chemistry i (koski) › assignments
Homework 6B: ab initio Calculations - Chemistry LibreTexts
November 4, 2024 - Homework 6B introduces modern ab initio calculations via the ChemCompute website. Students will use predict the potential energy curve for the dissociation of H_2 which can be used to predict the …
category of computational quantum chemistry technique
Ab initio quantum chemistry methods are a class of computational chemistry techniques based on quantum chemistry that aim to solve the electronic Schrödinger equation. Ab initio means "from first principles" or "from … Wikipedia
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ab_initio_quantum_chemistry_methods
Ab initio quantum chemistry methods - Wikipedia
December 4, 2025 - By solving this fundamental equation, ab initio methods seek to accurately predict various chemical properties, including electron densities, energies, and molecular structures. The ability to run these calculations has enabled theoretical chemists to solve a range of problems and their importance ...
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Chemistry LibreTexts
chem.libretexts.org › campus bookshelves › university of arkansas little rock › chem 3572: physical chemistry for life sciences (siraj) › homework
#6B Homework: ab initio Calculations - Chemistry LibreTexts
December 26, 2021 - Homework 6B introduces modern ab initio calculations via the ChemCompute website. Students will use predict the potential energy curve for the dissociation of H_2 which can be used to predict the …
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PubMed Central
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › articles › PMC4834608
Ab Initio Calculation of Rate Constants for Molecule–Surface Reactions with Chemical Accuracy - PMC
The experimental values for the enthalpy barriers, ΔH 623 ≠, in Figure 2 are the Arrhenius activation energies minus RT (see the Supporting Information).9 Table S2 shows the different contributions to ΔH 623 ≠. As expected,24 PBE+D2 underestimates the energy barriers by about 20 kJ mol−1, which corresponds to a factor of about 50 in the rate constant at 623 K. For the hybrid MP2:PBE+D2 results, including anharmonicity lowers the barrier by a small, but significant amount (7, 4, and 3 kJ mol−1 for ethene, propene and trans‐2‐butene, respectively), and brings them into agreement with experiment within chemical accuracy limits (±4 kJ mol−1, indicated by vertical bars in Figure 2). Figure 3 shows the ratios between the observed and calculated rate constants and pre‐exponentials (see the Supporting Information for working equations) obtained with the different methods.
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Chemistry LibreTexts
chem.libretexts.org › campus bookshelves › university of california davis › chem 110a: physical chemistry i › ucd chem 110a: physical chemistry i (koski) › assignments
Homework 6B: ab initio Calculations (Optional) - Chemistry LibreTexts
November 7, 2025 - Homework 6B introduces modern ab initio calculations via the ChemCompute website. Students will use predict the potential energy curve for the dissociation of H_2 which can be used to predict the …
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University of York
york.ac.uk › chemistry › people › dwann › wanngroup › ab-initiocalculations
Ab-initio calculations - People, University of York
Ab-initio calculations · To refine time-averaged GED data, experimentalists need a good guess for the gas-phase molecular structure of the species under investigation.
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Montana
chemistry.montana.edu › callis › courses › chmy374 › 374Computation17.pdf pdf
Introduction to Ab Initio Quantum Chemical Computation
Recall that chemical accuracy is about 1 kcal/mol (a change of 1.4 kcal/mol = 5.7 kJ/mol = 0.0022 a.u. in Gibbs free energy means a 10-fold change in equilibrium constant, or a 10-fold · change in calculated rate, if we are calculating an activation energy).
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Springer
link.springer.com › home › textbook
Ab initio Calculation Tutorial: For Materials Analysis, Informatics and Design | Springer Nature Link
Ab initio Calculation Tutorial (eBook)
Since completing his postdoc in Cambridge, he has worked on diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) electronic structure calculations using massive parallel computations. Accessibility information for this book is coming soon. We're working to make it available as quickly as possible. Thank you for your patience. Book Title: Ab initio Calculation Tutorial ·
Price   €12.99
Author   Ryo Maezono
Pages   17
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ResearchGate
researchgate.net › publication › 308464584_Ab_initio_Calculations
Ab initio Calculations
September 21, 2016 - Download Citation | Ab initio Calculations | Ab initio calculations rest on solving the Schrödinger equation; the nature of the necessary approximations determines the level of the... | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate
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Springer
link.springer.com › home › encyclopedia of membranes › reference work entry
Ab Initio Calculation | SpringerLink
As mentioned, in general, the term ab initio is used when the calculations are performed by using the Schrödinger equation or rather an eigenvalue equation for the quantum system. However, attention must be paid to the quantities or potential operators that define the eigenvalue equations.
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Chemistry LibreTexts
chem.libretexts.org › bookshelves › physical & theoretical chemistry › quantum mechanics in chemistry (simons and nichols) › 20: response theory
20.2: Ab Initio, Semi-Empirical, and Empirical Force Field Methods - Chemistry LibreTexts
December 23, 2016 - This page reviews computational methods for analyzing electronic states and physical properties of molecules, detailing ab initio, semi-empirical, and fully empirical approaches. Ab initio methods …
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Wiley Online Library
onlinelibrary.wiley.com › doi › full › 10.1002 › anie.201601534
Ab Initio Calculation of Rate Constants for Molecule–Surface Reactions with Chemical Accuracy - Piccini - 2016 - Angewandte Chemie International Edition - Wiley Online Library
March 23, 2016 - The experimental values for the enthalpy barriers, ΔH623≠, in Figure 2 are the Arrhenius activation energies minus RT (see the Supporting Information).9 Table S2 shows the different contributions to ΔH623≠. As expected,24 PBE+D2 underestimates the energy barriers by about 20 kJ mol−1, which corresponds to a factor of about 50 in the rate constant at 623 K. For the hybrid MP2:PBE+D2 results, including anharmonicity lowers the barrier by a small, but significant amount (7, 4, and 3 kJ mol−1 for ethene, propene and trans-2-butene, respectively), and brings them into agreement with experiment within chemical accuracy limits (±4 kJ mol−1, indicated by vertical bars in Figure 2). Figure 3 shows the ratios between the observed and calculated rate constants and pre-exponentials (see the Supporting Information for working equations) obtained with the different methods.
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NIST
tsapps.nist.gov › publication › get_pdf.cfm pdf
Ab initio calculation of e2„v… including the electron-hole interaction:
FIG. 2. Calculated e2(v) for E perpendicular to c for wurtzite · GaN. The solid line includes the electron-hole interaction, while the ... Ab initio CALCULATION OF e2(v) INCLUDING .
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Springer
link.springer.com › home › computational chemistry › chapter
Ab Initio Calculations | Springer Nature Link
Ab initio calculations rest on solving the Schrödinger equation; the nature of the necessary approximations determines the level of the calculation. In the simplest approach, the Hartree-Fock method, the total molecular wavefunction Ψ is ...
Top answer
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It basically comes down to scaling with the size of the system, which will correspond to the number of electrons (that is, occupied valence orbitals) and the size of the basis set (which must have a sufficient quality, that is, size to yield meaningful results).

Edit: I should note that not all quantum chemists consider DFT to be ab-initio. Given the prevalence of such calculations, I have included it in my answer.

Let's consider density-functional theory (DFT) and Hartree-Fock (HF) theory first. These are a ground-state methods that describe a system with a single "wave function" called a Kohn-Sham or Slater determinant, respectively. This is valid for many, but not all systems - especially when there are several d-block metals closely interacting, this can be a bad approximation. For DFT, the cheapest useful specific methods (called functionals) in the most common implementations (i.e. programs) will scale as $\mathcal{O}(N^3)$ (where $N$ is some measure of the system size) due to the calculation of the electron-electron interaction.$^1$ At some point, a matrix diagonalization is performed, which has the same scaling. For HF, the scaling is worse, because of the calculation of a term called exchange (that arises from the specific form of the wave function ansatz), which scales as $\mathcal{O}(N^4)$.

At this point, I should mention that efforts to lower the prefactor of the computational cost function of these workhorses of quantum chemistry are ongoing and some have reached maturity. For "small" systems, the cost is then often dominated by terms other than the highest scaling ones. However, you will eventually hit the scaling wall. There are also efforts to lower the scaling behavior by introducing more approximations, smarter discarding of near-zero terms etc. Again, you may find out the hard way, that in the system you wish to calculate, the approximations do not hold or are not effective.

For excited states, one can assume a $+1$ scaling behavior and a worse prefactor. When considering the ground state with more accuracy, one then turns to post-DFT methods such as double-hybrid density functionals or post-HF methods such as Configuration Interaction, Møller–Plesset perturbation theory, Coupled-Cluster theory (e.g. CISD, MP$n$, CCSD(T)). In the standard implementations, they scale at least as $\mathcal{O}(N^5)$, but can go up to 6 and 7. Again, smart selection of the involved terms can lead to significant speed-ups, leading to an empirical linear or near-linear scaling at the expense of increased prefactors and less certainty.

The comments to the question mention classical dynamics of proteins. The scaling wall even for a single-point energy is hit well before approaching 100 $\ce{CNO}$ atoms (in my personal experience, which is a bit dated. Make it 200, then). The necessary derivatives with respect to the nuclear coordinates also tend to add to the prefactor or the scaling in a significant fashion.


$^1$ This scaling applies if a particular additional approximation called density fitting is made, which is usually a very good one. Note that better DFT methods will have worse scaling.

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@TAR86 already described whats makes DFT and HF are computationally expensive. Here I would just like to add, that classical molecular dynamics simulations no explicit treatment of quantum mechanics is considered. This means the fundamental theory (Newton's equations of motion) are much simpler, and therefore easier to calculate. But of course this sacrifices accuracy. As a side note, those two approaches are actually simulating different things: DFT and HF are only about the electrons, while molecular dynamics is about where the atoms are (and move).

Also I want to try to answer the question from a more abstract perspective:

The problem about the equations we need to solve (in both, classical molecular dynamics and quantum mechanics) is that they aredifferential equations. In general, differential equations have no analytic solutions. There are some special cases which have (e.g. particle-in-a-box, harmonic-oscillator, Hydrogen atom), but when it comes to multiple electrons and nuclei, we have a $N$-particle system and their pairwise interactions (be that the Coulomb force in chemistry/physics or gravity in astrophysics), it results in a type of differential equations which have no general analytical solution.

The only remaining option to solve this anyway is using numerical techniques. This essentially means splitting the whole problem in many tiny small steps. The more steps, the higher the accuracy and the higher the computational cost. A simple example would the integrate a 1D function, by splitting its area into many small rectangle or triangle (the above mentioned "steps"), for which we can use an analytic formula, and then add everything up. In HF and DFT the "steps" would be the basis set of orbitals, and in molecular dynamics small steps in time are considered, which yield small steps in the movement of the atoms.

Computers happen to be an excellent tool for numerical approaches, because for each step the same algorithm has to be repeated. So we can easily scale up the number of steps. However if the scaling for the method is higher then linear (which is usually the case), then the we are limited in the size of the problem. Faster or more computers can shift that limit a bit up, but fundamentally the limit remains. This means we cannot just wait for better computers to tackle larger problems, we really need methods with a better scaling behavior.

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Chemistry LibreTexts
chem.libretexts.org › learning objects › laboratory experiments › dry lab experiments
4: ab initio Calculations - Electron-Electron Repulsion (Dry Lab) - Chemistry LibreTexts
August 16, 2021 - We will use the cool web base ab initio site by Perri at Sonoma State U. Download the following paper and review the concept (http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ed5004228). Follow the directions on this tutorial (you will not need to install Avogadro for this HW). You can complete the online tutorial if you are confused. ... We are going to calculate the binding energy of the first two rows of atoms with the ChemCompute software.