Phys. Rev. B 52, 11793–11804 (1995)Chemical hardness, linear response, and pseudopotential transferabilityReceived 25 July 1995; published in the issue dated 15 October 1995 We propose a systematic method of analyzing pseudopotential transferability based on linear-response properties of the free atom, including self-consistent chemical hardness and polarizability. Our calculation of hardness extends the approach of Teter not only by including self-consistency, but also by generalizing to nondiagonal hardness matrices, thereby allowing us to test for transferability to nonspherically symmetric environments. We apply the method to study the transferability of norm-conserving pseudopotentials for a variety of elements in the Periodic Table. We find that the self-consistent corrections are frequently significant, and should not be neglected. We prove that the partial-core correction improves the pseudopotential hardness of alkaline metals considerably. We propose a quantity to represent the average hardness error and calculate this quantity for many representative elements as a function of pseudopotential cutoff radii. We find that the atomic polarizabilities are usually well reproduced by the norm-conserving pseudopotentials. Our results provide useful guidelines for making optimal choices in the pseudopotential generation procedure. © 1995 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.52.11793
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.52.11793
PACS:
77.80.Bh, 61.50.Lt, 64.60.Cn, 64.70.-p
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