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Density-functional theory-symmetry-adapted intermolecular perturbation theory with density fitting: A new efficient method to study intermolecular interaction energies
604
Citations
48
References
2004
Year
EngineeringPhysicsEthyne DimerNatural SciencesMolecule-based MaterialSpectra-structure CorrelationPhysical ChemistryDensity FittingAb-initio MethodComputational ChemistryDft-sapt ApproachQuantum ChemistryChemistryIntermolecular Interaction EnergiesBenzene DimerMolecular MechanicBiophysicsNew Efficient Method
The previously developed DFT-SAPT approach, which combines symmetry-adapted intermolecular perturbation theory (SAPT) with a density-functional theory (DFT) representation of the monomers, has been implemented by using density fitting of two-electron objects. This approach, termed DF-DFT-SAPT, scales with the fifth power of the molecular size and with the third power upon increase of the basis set size for a given dimer, thus drastically reducing the cost of the conventional DFT-SAPT method. The accuracy of the density fitting approximation has been tested for the ethyne dimer. It has been found that the errors in the interaction energies due to density fitting are below 10(-3) kcal/mol with suitable auxiliary basis sets and thus one or two orders of magnitude smaller than the errors due to the use of a limited atomic orbital basis set. An investigation of three prominent structures of the benzene dimer, namely, the T shaped, parallel displaced, and sandwich geometries, employing basis sets of up to augmented quadruple-zeta quality shows that DF-DFT-SAPT outperforms second-order Moller-Plesset theory (MP2) and gives total interaction energies which are close to the best estimates inferred from combining the results of MP2 and coupled-cluster theory with single, double, and perturbative triple excitations.
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