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Fragments
Except in Create mode, where a basic atom is constructed, the system is built up from
fragments and the corresponding fragment files are attached to the run. The program
reads from the files the fragment MOs
and these are used as (compound) basis functions for the molecular calculation. The fragment MOs are called Fragment Orbitals (FO).
FOs belong of
course to one of the symmetry representations of the fragment, but not
necessarily to a symmetry representation of the new molecule. The FOs are therefore combined into symmetry-adapted
combinations, SFOs, to serve as a
symmetry-adapted basis in the molecule. These combinations may involve one or
more FOs from the same fragment
and/or from different fragments. In the latter case the fragments must be symmetry
related by one of the operators of the molecule. Symmetry related
fragments must of course be identical, apart from their spatial location: they
must be of the same fragment type.
FOs are
naturally orthogonal to the Core Orbitals of their own fragment, but not necessarily
to COs of other fragments. By a
suitable combination of the SFOs
with all CFs in the molecule we
obtain the core-orthogonalized symmetry-adapted CSFOs.
The CSFOs can
be transformed to an orthonormal basis by a Lowdin transformation. The
resulting basis is called low, as
above.
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