scholarly journals Choosing a density functional for static molecular polarizabilities

2015 ◽  
Vol 635 ◽  
pp. 257-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taozhe Wu ◽  
Yulia N. Kalugina ◽  
Ajit J. Thakkar
2000 ◽  
Vol 321 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 151-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Hinchliffe ◽  
Humberto J. Soscún Machado

2006 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 743-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Hinchliffe ◽  
Ahmed Mkadmh ◽  
Beatrice Nikolaidi ◽  
Humberto Soscún ◽  
Fakhr Abu-Awwad

AbstractWe report Density Functional Theory (DFT) studies of the dipole polarizabilities of benzene, furan and thiophene together with a number of substituted and related systems. All geometries were optimized (and characterized) at the B3LYP/6-311g(2d,1p) level of theory and polarizabilities then calculated with B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,1p). For the R-ring systems we find group polarizabilities in the order R = NO2 ∼ OCH3 ∼ CN ∼ CHO > NH2 > OH > H = 0. For systems R-ring-R, 〈α〉 differs little from the additivity model, with small positive and negative increments. For systems D-ring-A (where D and A are deactivating and activating groups) we find a positive enhancement to 〈α〉 over and above the value expected on the basis of pure additivity for all pairs A and D studied. This enhancement can be increased greatly by extending the length of the conjugated chain to D-ring-CH=CH-ring-A and D-ring-N=N-ring-A systems. Empirical models of polarizability such as AM1 agree badly with the DFT calculations in an absolute sense but give excellent statistical correlation coefficients. Calculated 〈α〉’s also agree well in a statistical sense with the molecular volumes calculated from molecular mechanics force fieldsAnalysis of the results in terms of the π electrons alone is not satisfactory.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (9) ◽  
pp. 3401-3406 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Wilkins ◽  
Andrea Grisafi ◽  
Yang Yang ◽  
Ka Un Lao ◽  
Robert A. DiStasio ◽  
...  

The molecular dipole polarizability describes the tendency of a molecule to change its dipole moment in response to an applied electric field. This quantity governs key intra- and intermolecular interactions, such as induction and dispersion; plays a vital role in determining the spectroscopic signatures of molecules; and is an essential ingredient in polarizable force fields. Compared with other ground-state properties, an accurate prediction of the molecular polarizability is considerably more difficult, as this response quantity is quite sensitive to the underlying electronic structure description. In this work, we present highly accurate quantum mechanical calculations of the static dipole polarizability tensors of 7,211 small organic molecules computed using linear response coupled cluster singles and doubles theory (LR-CCSD). Using a symmetry-adapted machine-learning approach, we demonstrate that it is possible to predict the LR-CCSD molecular polarizabilities of these small molecules with an error that is an order of magnitude smaller than that of hybrid density functional theory (DFT) at a negligible computational cost. The resultant model is robust and transferable, yielding molecular polarizabilities for a diverse set of 52 larger molecules (including challenging conjugated systems, carbohydrates, small drugs, amino acids, nucleobases, and hydrocarbon isomers) at an accuracy that exceeds that of hybrid DFT. The atom-centered decomposition implicit in our machine-learning approach offers some insight into the shortcomings of DFT in the prediction of this fundamental quantity of interest.


Author(s):  
Sharmin Akter ◽  
Jorge Alberto Vargas Tellez ◽  
Kamal Sharkas ◽  
Juan Peralta ◽  
Koblar Jackson ◽  
...  

We examine the effect of removing self-interaction error (SIE) on the calculation of molecular polarizabilities in the local spin density (LSDA) and generalized gradient approximations (GGA). To this end, we...


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