COMP-PHLGCHEM-PHMLSep 16, 2019

Deep neural network solution of the electronic Schrödinger equation

arXiv:1909.08423v5544 citations
Originality Highly original
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This addresses the problem of accurate electronic-structure calculations for medium-sized molecules, offering a potentially new leading method with favorable scaling.

The authors tackled the electronic Schrödinger equation, which is computationally expensive for molecules, by proposing PauliNet, a deep-learning wave function ansatz that achieves nearly exact solutions and outperforms state-of-the-art variational quantum Monte Carlo methods for various systems.

[New and updated results were published in Nature Chemistry, doi:10.1038/s41557-020-0544-y.] The electronic Schrödinger equation describes fundamental properties of molecules and materials, but can only be solved analytically for the hydrogen atom. The numerically exact full configuration-interaction method is exponentially expensive in the number of electrons. Quantum Monte Carlo is a possible way out: it scales well to large molecules, can be parallelized, and its accuracy has, as yet, only been limited by the flexibility of the used wave function ansatz. Here we propose PauliNet, a deep-learning wave function ansatz that achieves nearly exact solutions of the electronic Schrödinger equation. PauliNet has a multireference Hartree-Fock solution built in as a baseline, incorporates the physics of valid wave functions, and is trained using variational quantum Monte Carlo (VMC). PauliNet outperforms comparable state-of-the-art VMC ansatzes for atoms, diatomic molecules and a strongly-correlated hydrogen chain by a margin and is yet computationally efficient. We anticipate that thanks to the favourable scaling with system size, this method may become a new leading method for highly accurate electronic-strucutre calculations on medium-sized molecular systems.

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