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A theoretical study of the relation between the relativistic formulation of the nuclear magnetic shielding and spin-rotation tensors is presented. To this end a theoretical expression of the relativistic spin-rotation tensor is formulated, considering a molecular Hamiltonian of relativistic electrons and non-relativistic nuclei. Molecular rotation effects are introduced considering the terms of the Born-Oppenheimer decomposition, which couple the electrons and nuclei dynamics. The loss of the simple relation linking both spectral parameters in the non-relativistic formulation is further analyzed carrying out a perturbative expansion of relativistic effects by means of the linear response within the elimination of the small component approach. It is concluded that relativistic effects on the spin-rotation tensor are less important than those of the nuclear magnetic shielding tensor.
Accurate calculations of some response properties, like the NMR spectroscopic parameters, are quite exigent for the theoretical quantum chemistry models together with the computational codes that are written from them. They need to include a very good description of the electronic density in regions close to the nuclei. When heavy-atom containing systems are studied, those requirements become even higher. Given that relativistic effects must be included in one way or another on the calculation of response properties of heavy-atoms and heavy-atom containing molecules, different schemes were developed during the past decades to include them in as good as possible way. There are some four-component models, which include relativistic effects in a very compact way, although calculations have large time-consumption; one also needs to deal with new and unusual four-component operators. There are also two-component models, which in general may be less accurate, although their application to property calculations on medium-size and large-size molecules are feasible, and they maintain the application of usual operators. In this review, we give the fundamentals of the two-component linear response elimination of small component formalism, LRESC, together with some applications to few selected response properties.New physical insights do appear when the LRESC model is used to analyze the effect of the environment on magnetic shieldings, and when one search for the relativistic extension of well-known nonrelativistic relationships like Flygare's relation among the NMR magnetic shielding and the nuclear spin-rotation constant. A similar relationship is found for the g-tensor and the susceptibility tensor. K E Y W O R D Sg-tensor, NMR, response properties, spin-rotation tensor, two-component methods | I N TR ODU C TI ONThe strong influence of relativistic effects on atomic and molecular response properties of heavy-atom containing molecules was first shown few decades ago.[1] Pyykk€ o included relativistic effects in the calculations of NMR spectroscopic parameters by applying a relativistic model that resemble Ramsey's theory [2] and use relativistic molecular wave function of the relativistically parameterized extended H€ uckel method, REX.[3] Other more elaborated semi-empirical methods and codes were later on used to improve those first results. [4][5][6] The importance of including relativistic effects on the calculation of response properties compelled the theoretical chemists to develop new specific relativistic theories and models. Several formalisms and models appeared in the literature from that time, whose implementations gave more accurate results than that obtained using previous schemes. [7][8][9][10][11][12] We can split them into two broad groups: four-component methods and two-component methods. [12][13][14][15] Even though accurate calculations of response properties of medium-size molecules, meaning molecules containing more than 10 heavy atoms (belonging to the fourth row or below of the Periodic Ta...
In the present work, numerical results of the nuclear spin-rotation (SR) tensor in the series of compounds HX (X=H,F,Cl,Br,I) within relativistic 4-component expressions obtained by Aucar et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 136, 204119 (2012)] are presented. The SR tensors of both the H and X nuclei are discussed. Calculations were carried out within the relativistic Linear Response formalism at the Random Phase Approximation with the DIRAC program. For the halogen nucleus X, correlation effects on the non-relativistic values are shown to be of similar magnitude and opposite sign to relativistic effects. For the light H nucleus, by means of the linear response within the elimination of the small component approach it is shown that the whole relativistic effect is given by the spin-orbit operator combined with the Fermi contact operator. Comparison of "best estimate" calculated values with experimental results yield differences smaller than 2%-3% in all cases. The validity of "Flygare's relation" linking the SR tensor and the NMR nuclear magnetic shielding tensor in the present series of compounds is analyzed.
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