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1.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 19(7): 2039-2047, 2023 Apr 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36917767

RESUMEN

While the domain-based local pair natural orbital coupled-cluster method with singles, doubles, and perturbative triples (DLPNO-CCSD(T)) has proven instrumental for computing energies and properties of large and complex systems accurately, calculations on first-row transition metals with a complex electronic structure remain challenging. In this work, we identify and address the two main error sources that influence the DLPNO-CCSD(T) accuracy in this context, namely, (i) correlation effects from the 3s and 3p semicore orbitals and (ii) dynamic correlation-induced orbital relaxation (DCIOR) effects that are not described by the local MP2 guess. We present a computational strategy that allows us to completely eliminate the DLPNO error associated with semicore correlation effects, while increasing, at the same time, the efficiency of the method. As regards the DCIOR effects, we introduce a diagnostic for estimating the deviation between DLPNO-CCSD(T) and canonical CCSD(T) for systems with significant orbital relaxation.

2.
J Comput Chem ; 44(3): 406-421, 2023 01 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35789492

RESUMEN

Quantum computers are special purpose machines that are expected to be particularly useful in simulating strongly correlated chemical systems. The quantum computer excels at treating a moderate number of orbitals within an active space in a fully quantum mechanical manner. We present a quantum phase estimation calculation on F2 in a (2,2) active space on Rigetti's Aspen-11 QPU. While this is a promising start, it also underlines the need for carefully selecting the orbital spaces treated by the quantum computer. In this work, a scheme for selecting such an active space automatically is described and simulated results obtained using both the quantum phase estimation (QPE) and variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) algorithms are presented and combined with a subtractive method to enable accurate description of the environment. The active occupied space is selected from orbitals localized on the chemically relevant fragment of the molecule, while the corresponding virtual space is chosen based on the magnitude of interactions with the occupied space calculated from perturbation theory. This protocol is then applied to two chemical systems of pharmaceutical relevance: the enzyme [Fe] hydrogenase and the photosenzitizer temoporfin. While the sizes of the active spaces currently amenable to a quantum computational treatment are not enough to demonstrate quantum advantage, the procedure outlined here is applicable to any active space size, including those that are outside the reach of classical computation.


Asunto(s)
Metodologías Computacionales , Teoría Cuántica , Algoritmos , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas
3.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 18(4): 2408-2417, 2022 Apr 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35353527

RESUMEN

In this work, we present a quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) approach for the computation of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (SS-NMR) shielding constants (SCs) for molecular crystals. Besides applying standard-DFT functionals like GGAs (PBE), meta-GGAs (TPSS), and hybrids (B3LYP), we apply a double-hybrid (DSD-PBEP86) functional as well as MP2, using the domain-based local pair natural orbital (DLPNO) formalism, to calculate the NMR SCs of six amino acid crystals. All the electronic structure methods used exhibit good correlation of the NMR shieldings with respect to experimental chemical shifts for both 1H and 13C. We also find that local electronic structure is much more important than the long-range electrostatic effects for these systems, implying that cluster approaches using all-electron/Gaussian basis set methods might offer great potential for predictive computations of solid-state NMR parameters for organic solids.


Asunto(s)
Aminoácidos , Electrónica , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Modelos Moleculares , Electricidad Estática
4.
J Phys Chem A ; 125(45): 9932-9939, 2021 Nov 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34730360

RESUMEN

Over the last two decades, the local approximation has been successfully used to extend the range of applicability of the "gold standard" singles and doubles coupled-cluster method with perturbative triples CCSD(T) to systems with hundreds of atoms. The local approximation error grows in absolute value with the increasing system size, i.e., by increasing the number of electron pairs in the system. In this study, we demonstrate that the recently introduced two-point extrapolation scheme for approaching the complete pair natural orbital (PNOs) space limit in domain-based pair natural orbital CCSD(T) calculations drastically reduces the dependence of the error on the system size, thus opening up unprecedented opportunities for the calculation of benchmark quality relative energies for large systems.

5.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 17(8): 4929-4945, 2021 Aug 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34275279

RESUMEN

The climbing image nudged elastic band method (CI-NEB) is used to identify reaction coordinates and to find saddle points representing transition states of reactions. It can make efficient use of parallel computing as the calculations of the discretization points, the so-called images, can be carried out simultaneously. In typical implementations, the images are distributed evenly along the path by connecting adjacent images with equally stiff springs. However, for systems with a high degree of flexibility, this can lead to poor resolution near the saddle point. By making the spring constants increase with energy, the resolution near the saddle point is improved. To assess the performance of this energy-weighted CI-NEB method, calculations are carried out for a benchmark set of 121 molecular reactions. The performance of the method is analyzed with respect to the input parameters. Energy-weighted springs are found to greatly improve performance and result in successful location of the saddle points in less than a thousand energy and force evaluations on average (about a hundred per image) using the same set of parameter values for all of the reactions. Even better performance is obtained by stopping the calculation before full convergence and complete the saddle point search using an eigenvector following method starting from the location of the climbing image. This combination of methods, referred to as NEB-TS, turns out to be robust and highly efficient as it reduces the average number of energy and force evaluations down to a third, to 305. An efficient and flexible implementation of these methods has been made available in the ORCA software.

6.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 17(1): 105-116, 2021 Jan 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33377775

RESUMEN

We present an explicit solvation protocol for the calculation of electron affinity values of the solvated nucleobases. The protocol uses a quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) approach based on the newly implemented domain-based pair natural orbital EOM-CCSD (equation-of-motion coupled-cluster single-double) method. The stability of the solvated nucleobase anion is sensitive to the local distribution of the water molecules around the nucleobase, and the calculated electron affinity values converge slowly with respect to the number of snapshots and the size of the water box. The use of nonpolarizable water molecules leads to an overestimation of the electron affinity and makes the result sensitive to the size of the QM region in the QM/MM calculation. The electron affinity values, although sensitive to the size of the basis set, lead to an almost constant blue shift of the electron affinity upon the increase in the basis set. The present protocol allows for a controllable description of the various parameters affecting the electron affinity value, and the calculated adiabatic electron affinity values are in excellent agreement with experimental results.


Asunto(s)
Electrones , Uracilo/química , Algoritmos , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Teoría Cuántica , Solventes/química , Termodinámica , Agua/química
7.
J Comput Chem ; 42(5): 293-302, 2021 02 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33232540

RESUMEN

Drug binding to a protein target is governed by a complex pattern of noncovalent interactions between the ligand and the residues in the protein's binding pocket. Here we introduce a generally applicable, parameter-free, computational method that allows for the identification, quantification, and analysis of the key ligand-residue interactions responsible for molecular recognition. Our strategy relies on Local Energy Decomposition analysis at the "gold-standard" coupled cluster DLPNO-CCSD(T) level. In the study case shown in this paper, nicotine and imidacloprid binding to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, our approach provides new insights into how individual amino acids in the active site determine sensitivity and selectivity of the ligands, extending and refining classical pharmacophore hypotheses. By inference, the method is applicable to any kind of host/guest interactions with potential applications in industrial biocatalysis and protein engineering.


Asunto(s)
Neonicotinoides/farmacología , Agonistas Nicotínicos/farmacología , Nitrocompuestos/farmacología , Teoría Cuántica , Receptores Nicotínicos/efectos de los fármacos , Ligandos , Neonicotinoides/metabolismo , Agonistas Nicotínicos/metabolismo , Nitrocompuestos/metabolismo , Unión Proteica , Receptores Nicotínicos/metabolismo , Termodinámica
8.
J Comput Aided Mol Des ; 35(4): 493-503, 2021 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32638183

RESUMEN

In order to assess safety and efficacy of small molecule drugs as well as agrochemicals, it is key to understanding the nature of protein-ligand interaction on an atomistic level. Prothioconazole (PTZ), although commonly considered to be an azole-like inhibitor of sterol 14-α demethylase (CYP51), differs from classical azoles with respect to how it binds its target. The available evidence is only indirect, as crystallographic elucidation of CYP51 complexed with PTZ have not yet been successful. We derive a binding mode hypothesis for PTZ binding its target, compare to DPZ, a triazole-type metabolite of PTZ, and set our findings into context of its biochemistry and spectroscopy. Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules (QTAIM) analysis of computed DFT electron densities is used to qualitatively understand the topology of binding, revealing significant differences of how R- and S-enantiomers are binding and, in particular, how the thiozolinthione head of PTZ binds to heme compared to DPZ's triazole head. The difference of binding enthalpy is calculated at coupled cluster (DLPNO-CCSD(T)) level of theory, and we find that DPZ binds stronger to CYP51 than PTZ by more than ΔH ~ 11 kcal/mol.


Asunto(s)
Inhibidores de 14 alfa Desmetilasa/farmacología , Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Fungicidas Industriales/farmacología , Esterol 14-Desmetilasa/metabolismo , Triazoles/farmacología , Inhibidores de 14 alfa Desmetilasa/química , Proteínas Fúngicas/antagonistas & inhibidores , Hongos/efectos de los fármacos , Hongos/enzimología , Fungicidas Industriales/química , Humanos , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Teoría Cuántica , Triazoles/química
9.
J Chem Phys ; 152(22): 224108, 2020 Jun 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32534543

RESUMEN

In this contribution to the special software-centered issue, the ORCA program package is described. We start with a short historical perspective of how the project began and go on to discuss its current feature set. ORCA has grown into a rather comprehensive general-purpose package for theoretical research in all areas of chemistry and many neighboring disciplines such as materials sciences and biochemistry. ORCA features density functional theory, a range of wavefunction based correlation methods, semi-empirical methods, and even force-field methods. A range of solvation and embedding models is featured as well as a complete intrinsic to ORCA quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics engine. A specialty of ORCA always has been a focus on transition metals and spectroscopy as well as a focus on applicability of the implemented methods to "real-life" chemical applications involving systems with a few hundred atoms. In addition to being efficient, user friendly, and, to the largest extent possible, platform independent, ORCA features a number of methods that are either unique to ORCA or have been first implemented in the course of the ORCA development. Next to a range of spectroscopic and magnetic properties, the linear- or low-order single- and multi-reference local correlation methods based on pair natural orbitals (domain based local pair natural orbital methods) should be mentioned here. Consequently, ORCA is a widely used program in various areas of chemistry and spectroscopy with a current user base of over 22 000 registered users in academic research and in industry.

10.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 16(4): 2224-2235, 2020 Apr 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32196337

RESUMEN

In this work, a detailed study of spin-state splittings in three spin crossover model compounds with DLPNO-CCSD(T) is presented. The performance in comparison to canonical CCSD(T) is assessed in detail. It was found that spin-state splittings with chemical accuracy, compared to the canonical results, are achieved when the full iterative triples (T1) scheme and TightPNO settings are applied and relativistic effects are taken into account. Having established the level of accuracy that can be reached relative to the canonical results, we have undertaken a detailed basis set study in the second part of the study. The slow convergence of the results of correlated calculations with respect to basis set extension is particularly acute for spin-state splittings for reasons discussed in detail in this Article. In fact, for some of the studied systems, 5Z basis sets are necessary in order to come close to the basis set limit that is estimated here by basis set extrapolation. Finally, the results of the present work are compared to available literature. In general, acceptable agreement with previous CCSD(T) results is found, although notable deviations stemming from differences in methodology and basis sets are noted. It is noted that the published CASPT2 numbers are far away from the extrapolated CCSD(T) numbers. In addition, dynamic quantum Monte Carlo results differ by several tens of kcal/mol from the CCSD(T) numbers. A comparison to DFT results produced with a range of popular density functionals shows the expected scattering of results and showcases the difficulty of applying DFT to spin-state energies.

11.
J Chem Phys ; 152(2): 024116, 2020 Jan 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31941297

RESUMEN

The coupled cluster method with single-, double-, and perturbative triple excitations [CCSD(T)] is considered to be one of the most reliable quantum chemistry theories. However, the steep scaling of CCSD(T) has limited its application to small or medium-sized systems for a long time. In our previous work, the linear scaling domain based local pair natural orbital CCSD variant (DLPNO-CCSD) has been developed for closed-shell and open-shell. However, it is known from extensive benchmark studies that triple-excitation contributions are important to reach chemical accuracy. In the present work, two linear scaling (T) approximations for open-shell DLPNO-CCSD are implemented and compared: (a) an algorithm based on the semicanonical approximation, in which off-diagonal Fock matrix elements in the occupied space are neglected [referred to as DLPNO-(T0)]; and (b) an improved algorithm in which the triples amplitudes are computed iteratively [referred to as DLPNO-(T)]. This work is based on the previous open-shell DLPNO-CCSD algorithm [M. Saitow et al., J. Chem. Phys. 146, 164105 (2017)] as well as the iterative (T) correction for closed-shell systems [Y. Guo et al., J. Chem. Phys. 148, 011101 (2018)]. Our results show that the new open-shell perturbative corrections, DLPNO-(T0/T), can predict accurate absolute and relative correlation energies relative to the canonical reference calculations with the same basis set. The absolute energies from DLPNO-(T) are significantly more accurate than those of DLPNO-(T0). The additional computational effort of DLPNO-(T) relative to DLPNO-(T0) is a factor of 4 on average. We report calculations on systems with more than 4000 basis functions.

12.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 15(4): 2265-2277, 2019 Apr 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30860835

RESUMEN

We present a multilayer implementation of the EOM-CCSD for the computation of ionization potentials of atoms and molecules in the presence of their environment. The method uses local orbitals to partition the system into a number of hypothetical fragments and treat different fragments of the system at different levels of theory. This approach significantly reduces the computational cost with a systematically controllable accuracy and is equally applicable to describe the environmental effect of both bonded and nonbonded nature. An accurate description of the interfragment interaction has been found to be crucial in determining the accuracy of the calculated IP values.

13.
J Chem Phys ; 148(24): 244101, 2018 Jun 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29960325

RESUMEN

In this work, a domain-based local pair natural orbital (DLPNO) version of the equation of motion coupled cluster theory with single and double excitations for ionization potentials (IP-EOM-CCSD) equations has been formulated and implemented. The method uses ground state localized occupied and pair natural virtual orbitals and applies the DLPNO machinery to arrive at a linear scaling implementation of the IP-EOM-CCSD method. The accuracy of the method is controllable using ground state truncation parameters. Using default thresholds, the method predicts ionization potential (IP) values with good accuracy (mean absolute error of 0.08 eV). We demonstrate that our code can be used to compute IP values for systems with more than 1000 atoms and 10 000 basis functions.

14.
Nat Methods ; 15(5): 351-354, 2018 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29578535

RESUMEN

Hybrid methods that combine quantum mechanics (QM) and molecular mechanics (MM) can be applied to studies of reaction mechanisms in locations ranging from active sites of small enzymes to multiple sites in large bioenergetic complexes. By combining the widely used molecular dynamics and visualization programs NAMD and VMD with the quantum chemistry packages ORCA and MOPAC, we created an integrated, comprehensive, customizable, and easy-to-use suite (http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/qmmm). Through the QwikMD interface, setup, execution, visualization, and analysis are streamlined for all levels of expertise.


Asunto(s)
Simulación por Computador , Modelos Biológicos , Modelos Químicos , Teoría Cuántica , Programas Informáticos , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Electricidad Estática
15.
J Chem Phys ; 148(1): 011101, 2018 Jan 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29306283

RESUMEN

In this communication, an improved perturbative triples correction (T) algorithm for domain based local pair-natural orbital singles and doubles coupled cluster (DLPNO-CCSD) theory is reported. In our previous implementation, the semi-canonical approximation was used and linear scaling was achieved for both the DLPNO-CCSD and (T) parts of the calculation. In this work, we refer to this previous method as DLPNO-CCSD(T0) to emphasize the semi-canonical approximation. It is well-established that the DLPNO-CCSD method can predict very accurate absolute and relative energies with respect to the parent canonical CCSD method. However, the (T0) approximation may introduce significant errors in absolute energies as the triples correction grows up in magnitude. In the majority of cases, the relative energies from (T0) are as accurate as the canonical (T) results of themselves. Unfortunately, in rare cases and in particular for small gap systems, the (T0) approximation breaks down and relative energies show large deviations from the parent canonical CCSD(T) results. To address this problem, an iterative (T) algorithm based on the previous DLPNO-CCSD(T0) algorithm has been implemented [abbreviated here as DLPNO-CCSD(T)]. Using triples natural orbitals to represent the virtual spaces for triples amplitudes, storage bottlenecks are avoided. Various carefully designed approximations ease the computational burden such that overall, the increase in the DLPNO-(T) calculation time over DLPNO-(T0) only amounts to a factor of about two (depending on the basis set). Benchmark calculations for the GMTKN30 database show that compared to DLPNO-CCSD(T0), the errors in absolute energies are greatly reduced and relative energies are moderately improved. The particularly problematic case of cumulene chains of increasing lengths is also successfully addressed by DLPNO-CCSD(T).

16.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 13(7): 3220-3227, 2017 Jul 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28605579

RESUMEN

The validity of the main approximations used in canonical and domain based pair natural orbital coupled cluster methods (CCSD(T) and DLPNO-CCSD(T), respectively) in standard chemical applications is discussed. In particular, we investigate the dependence of the results on the number of electrons included in the correlation treatment in frozen-core (FC) calculations and on the main threshold governing the accuracy of DLPNO all-electron (AE) calculations. Initially, scalar relativistic orbital energies for the ground state of the atoms from Li to Rn in the periodic table are calculated. An energy criterion is used for determining the orbitals that can be excluded from the correlation treatment in FC coupled cluster calculations without significant loss of accuracy. The heterolytic dissociation energy (HDE) of a series of metal compounds (LiF, NaF, AlF3, CaF2, CuF, GaF3, YF3, AgF, InF3, HfF4, and AuF) is calculated at the canonical CCSD(T) level, and the dependence of the results on the number of correlated electrons is investigated. Although for many of the studied reactions subvalence correlation effects contribute significantly to the HDE, the use of an energy criterion permits a conservative definition of the size of the core, allowing FC calculations to be performed in a black-box fashion while retaining chemical accuracy. A comparison of the CCSD and the DLPNO-CCSD methods in describing the core-core, core-valence, and valence-valence components of the correlation energy is given. It is found that more conservative thresholds must be used for electron pairs containing at least one core electron in order to achieve high accuracy in AE DLPNO-CCSD calculations relative to FC calculations. With the new settings, the DLPNO-CCSD method reproduces canonical CCSD results in both AE and FC calculations with the same accuracy.

17.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 13(7): 3198-3207, 2017 Jul 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28590754

RESUMEN

The linear-scaling local coupled cluster method DLPNO-CCSD(T) allows calculations on systems containing hundreds of atoms to be performed while reproducing canonical CCSD(T) energies typically with chemical accuracy (<1 kcal/mol). The accuracy of the method is determined by two main truncation thresholds that control the number of electron pairs included in the CCSD iterations and the size of the pair natural orbital virtual space for each electron pair, respectively. While the results of DLPNO-CCSD(T) calculations converge smoothly toward their canonical counterparts as the thresholds are tightened, the improved accuracy is accompanied by a fairly steep increase of the computational cost. Many applications study events that are confined to a relatively small region of the system of interest. Hence, it is viable to develop methods that allow the user to treat different parts of a large system at various levels of accuracy. In this work we present an extension to the native DLPNO method that fragments the system into preselected molecular parts and uses different thresholds or even different levels of theory for the interaction between individual fragments. Thereby chemical intuition can be used to focus computational resources on a more accurate evaluation of the properties at the center of interest, while permitting a less demanding description of the surrounding moieties. The strategy was implemented within the DLPNO-CCSD(T) framework. We tested the scheme for a series of realistic quantum chemical applications such as the calculation of the dimerization energies, potential energy surfaces, enantiomeric excess in organometallic catalysis, and the binding energy of the anticancer drug ellipticine to DNA. This work demonstrates the power of the approach and offers guidance to its setup.

18.
J Chem Phys ; 146(17): 174108, 2017 May 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28477585

RESUMEN

In this work, we present a linear scaling formulation of the coupled-cluster singles and doubles with perturbative inclusion of triples (CCSD(T)) and explicitly correlated geminals. The linear scaling implementation of all post-mean-field steps utilizes the SparseMaps formalism [P. Pinski et al., J. Chem. Phys. 143, 034108 (2015)]. Even for conservative truncation levels, the method rapidly reaches near-linear complexity in realistic basis sets, e.g., an effective scaling exponent of 1.49 was obtained for n-alkanes with up to 200 carbon atoms in a def2-TZVP basis set. The robustness of the method is benchmarked against the massively parallel implementation of the conventional explicitly correlated coupled-cluster for a 20-water cluster; the total dissociation energy of the cluster (∼186 kcal/mol) is affected by the reduced scaling approximations by only ∼0.4 kcal/mol. The reduced scaling explicitly correlated CCSD(T) method is used to examine the binding energies of several systems in the L7 benchmark data set of noncovalent interactions.

19.
J Chem Phys ; 146(16): 164105, 2017 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28456208

RESUMEN

The Coupled-Cluster expansion, truncated after single and double excitations (CCSD), provides accurate and reliable molecular electronic wave functions and energies for many molecular systems around their equilibrium geometries. However, the high computational cost, which is well-known to scale as O(N6) with system size N, has limited its practical application to small systems consisting of not more than approximately 20-30 atoms. To overcome these limitations, low-order scaling approximations to CCSD have been intensively investigated over the past few years. In our previous work, we have shown that by combining the pair natural orbital (PNO) approach and the concept of orbital domains it is possible to achieve fully linear scaling CC implementations (DLPNO-CCSD and DLPNO-CCSD(T)) that recover around 99.9% of the total correlation energy [C. Riplinger et al., J. Chem. Phys. 144, 024109 (2016)]. The production level implementations of the DLPNO-CCSD and DLPNO-CCSD(T) methods were shown to be applicable to realistic systems composed of a few hundred atoms in a routine, black-box fashion on relatively modest hardware. In 2011, a reduced-scaling CCSD approach for high-spin open-shell unrestricted Hartree-Fock reference wave functions was proposed (UHF-LPNO-CCSD) [A. Hansen et al., J. Chem. Phys. 135, 214102 (2011)]. After a few years of experience with this method, a few shortcomings of UHF-LPNO-CCSD were noticed that required a redesign of the method, which is the subject of this paper. To this end, we employ the high-spin open-shell variant of the N-electron valence perturbation theory formalism to define the initial guess wave function, and consequently also the open-shell PNOs. The new PNO ansatz properly converges to the closed-shell limit since all truncations and approximations have been made in strict analogy to the closed-shell case. Furthermore, given the fact that the formalism uses a single set of orbitals, only a single PNO integral transformation is necessary, which offers large computational savings. We show that, with the default PNO truncation parameters, approximately 99.9% of the total CCSD correlation energy is recovered for open-shell species, which is comparable to the performance of the method for closed-shells. UHF-DLPNO-CCSD shows a linear scaling behavior for closed-shell systems, while linear to quadratic scaling is obtained for open-shell systems. The largest systems we have considered contain more than 500 atoms and feature more than 10 000 basis functions with a triple-ζ quality basis set.

20.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(14): 9374-9391, 2017 Apr 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28327742

RESUMEN

In this work, we tested canonical and domain based pair natural orbital coupled cluster methods (CCSD(T) and DLPNO-CCSD(T), respectively) for a set of 32 ligand exchange and association/dissociation reaction enthalpies involving ionic complexes of Li, Be, Na, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba and Pb(ii). Two strategies were investigated: in the former, only valence electrons were included in the correlation treatment, giving rise to the computationally very efficient FC (frozen core) approach; in the latter, all non-ECP electrons were included in the correlation treatment, giving rise to the AE (all electron) approach. Apart from reactions involving Li and Be, the FC approach resulted in non-homogeneous performance. The FC approach leads to very small errors (<2 kcal mol-1) for some reactions of Na, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba and Pb, while for a few reactions of Ca and Ba deviations up to 40 kcal mol-1 have been obtained. Large errors are both due to artificial mixing of the core (sub-valence) orbitals of metals and the valence orbitals of oxygen and halogens in the molecular orbitals treated as core, and due to neglecting core-core and core-valence correlation effects. These large errors are reduced to a few kcal mol-1 if the AE approach is used or the sub-valence orbitals of metals are included in the correlation treatment. On the technical side, the CCSD(T) and DLPNO-CCSD(T) results differ by a fraction of kcal mol-1, indicating the latter method as the perfect choice when the CPU efficiency is essential. For completely black-box applications, as requested in catalysis or thermochemical calculations, we recommend the DLPNO-CCSD(T) method with all electrons that are not covered by effective core potentials included in the correlation treatment and correlation-consistent polarized core valence basis sets of cc-pwCVQZ(-PP) quality.

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