Full Correlation in a Multiconfigurational Study of Bimetallic Clusters: Restricted Active Space Pair-Density Functional Theory Study of [2Fe–2S] Systems

2019 ◽  
Vol 123 (18) ◽  
pp. 11899-11907 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davide Presti ◽  
Samuel J. Stoneburner ◽  
Donald G. Truhlar ◽  
Laura Gagliardi
Author(s):  
Riddhish Pandharkar ◽  
Matthew R. Hermes ◽  
Christopher J. Cramer ◽  
Donald G. Truhlar ◽  
Laura Gagliardi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandr Lykhin ◽  
Donald Truhlar ◽  
Laura Gagliardi

The dipole moment is the molecular property that most directly indicates molecular polarity. The accuracy of computed dipole moments depends strongly on the quality of the calculated electron density, and the breakdown of single-reference methods for strongly correlated systems can lead to poor predictions of the dipole moments in those cases. Here, we derive the analytical expression for obtaining the electric dipole moment by multiconfiguration pair density functional theory (MC-PDFT), and we assess the accuracy of MC-PDFT for predicting dipole moments at equilibrium and nonequilibrium geometries. We show that MC-PDFT dipole moment curves have reasonable behavior even for stretched geometries, and they significantly improve upon the CASSCF results by capturing more electron correlation. The analysis of a dataset consisting of 18 first-row transition metal diatomics and 6 main-group polyatomic molecules with multireference character suggests that MC-PDFT and its hybrid extension (HMC-PDFT) perform comparably to CASPT2 and MRCISD+Q methods and have a mean unsigned deviation of 0.2–0.3 D with respect to the best available dipole moment reference values. We explored the dependence of the predicted dipole moments upon the choice of the on-top density functional and active space, and we recommend the tPBE and hybrid tPBE0 on-top choices for the functionals combined with the moderate correlated participating orbital scheme for selecting the active space. With these choices, the mean unsigned deviations (in debyes) of the calculated equilibrium dipole moments from the best estimates are 0.77 for CASSCF, 0.29 for MC-PDFT, 0.24 for HMC-PDFT, 0.28 for CASPT2, and 0.25 for MRCISD+Q. These results are encouraging because the computational cost of MC-PDFT or HMC-PDFT is largely reduced compared to the CASPT2 and MRCISD+Q methods.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riddhish Pandharkar ◽  
Matthew R. Hermes ◽  
Christopher J. Cramer ◽  
Donald G. Truhlar ◽  
Laura Gagliardi

Accurate quantum chemical methods for the prediction of spin-state energy gaps for strongly correlated systems are computationally expensive and scale poorly with the size of the system. This makes calculations for many experimentally interesting molecules impractical even with abundant computational resources. In previous work, we have shown that the localized active space (LAS) self-consistent field (SCF) method is an efficient way to obtain multi-configuration SCF wave functions of comparable quality to the corresponding complete active space (CAS) ones. To obtain quantitative results, a post-SCF method is needed to estimate the complete correlation energy. One such method is multiconfiguration pair-density functional theory (PDFT), which calculates the energy based on the density and on-top pair density obtained from a multiconfiguration wave function. In this work we introduce localized-active-space pair-density functional theory, which uses a LAS wave function for subsequent PDFT calculations. The method is tested for computing spin-state energy gaps in conjugated organic molecules and bimetallic compounds and is shown to give results within 0.05 eV of the corresponding CAS-PDFT results at a significantly lower cost.


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