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1.
A new method is presented for treating the effects of quadruple excitations in coupled-cluster theory. In the approach, quadruple excitation contributions are computed from a formula based on a non-Hermitian perturbation theory analogous to that used previously to justify the usual noniterative triples correction used in the coupled cluster singles and doubles method with a perturbative treatment of the triple excitations (CCSD(T)). The method discussed in this paper plays a parallel role in improving energies obtained with the full coupled-cluster singles, doubles, and triples method (CCSDT) by adding a perturbative treatment of the quadruple excitations (CCSDT(Q)). The method is tested for an extensive set of examples, and is shown to provide total energies that compare favorably with those obtained with the full singles, doubles, triples, and quadruples (CCSDTQ) method.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Here we review the basic formalism, implementation details, and performance of two newly developed coupled cluster (CC) methods based on the unrestricted Hartree-Fock (UHF) reference for treating molecules with multireference character. These two approaches can be considered to be approximations to the CC singles, doubles, and triples (CCSDT) method. The key concept of these two approaches is the corresponding orbitals, which are unitary transformations of canonical UHF molecular orbitals so that all spin orbitals are grouped into unique orbital pairs. In one approach called CCSDT(5P), a subset of triple excitations involving up to five-pair indices is included. In another approach called CCSD(T)-h, the contribution of connected triple excitations is treated in a hybrid way. With the concept of active corresponding orbitals, triple excitations can be automatically partitioned into two subsets, and the amplitudes of these two subsets are determined via solving different equations. Both CCSD(T)-h and CCSDT(5P) computationally scale as the seventh power of the system size. A survey of a number of applications demonstrates that CCSD(T)-h is an excellent approximation to the full CCSDT method, and CCSDT(5P) provides a good approximation to CCSDT for single-bond breaking processes. The overall performance of CCSDT(5P) is less accurate than that of CCSD(T)-h, but significantly better than that of the widely used CCSD(T).  相似文献   

4.
The adiabatic electron affinity (AEA) of SF(6) has been calculated near the relativistic CCSDT(Q) basis set limit. Our best theoretical value (1.0340 ±?0.03 eV) is in excellent agreement with the recently revised experimental value of 1.03?±?0.05 eV reported by Troe et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 136, 121102 (2012)]. While our best nonrelativistic, clamped-nuclei, valence CCSD(T) basis set limit value of 0.9058 eV is in good accord with the previously reported CCSD(T)/CBS values, to obtain an accurate AEA, several additional contributions need to be taken into account. The most important one is scalar-relativistic effects (0.0839 eV), followed by inner-shell correlation (0.0216 eV) and post-CCSD(T) correlation effects (0.0248 eV), the latter almost entirely due to connected quadruple excitations. The diagonal Born-Oppenheimer correction is an order of magnitude less important at -0.0022 eV.  相似文献   

5.
To approach the complete basis set limit of the "gold-standard" coupled-cluster singles and doubles plus perturbative triples [CCSD(T)] method, we extend the recently proposed perturbative explicitly correlated coupled-cluster singles and doubles method, CCSD(2)(R12) [E. F. Valeev, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 8, 106 (2008)], to account for the effect of connected three-electron correlations. The natural choice of the zeroth-order Hamiltonian produces a perturbation expansion with rigorously separable second-order energy corrections due to the explicitly correlated geminals and conventional triple and higher excitations. The resulting CCSD(T)(R12) energy is defined as a sum of the standard CCSD(T) energy and an amplitude-dependent geminal correction. The method is technically very simple: Its implementation requires no modification of the standard CCSD(T) program and the formal cost of the geminal correction is small. We investigate the performance of the open-shell version of the CCSD(T)(R12) method as a possible replacement of the standard complete-basis-set CCSD(T) energies in the high accuracy extrapolated ab initio thermochemistry model of Stanton et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 121, 11599 (2004)]. Correlation contributions to the heat of formation computed with the new method in an aug-cc-pCVXZ basis set have mean absolute basis set errors of 2.8 and 1.0 kJmol when X is T and Q, respectively. The corresponding errors of the standard CCSD(T) method are 9.1, 4.0, and 2.1 kJmol when X=T, Q, and 5. Simple two-point basis set extrapolations of standard CCSD(T) energies perform better than the explicitly correlated method for absolute correlation energies and atomization energies, but no such advantage found when computing heats of formation. A simple Schwenke-type two-point extrapolation of the CCSD(T)(R12)aug-cc-pCVXZ energies with X=T,Q yields the most accurate heats of formation found in this work, in error on average by 0.5 kJmol and at most by 1.7 kJmol.  相似文献   

6.
We propose a new computational protocol to obtain highly accurate theoretical reference data. This protocol employs the explicitly correlated coupled-cluster method with iterative single and double excitations as well as perturbative triple excitations, CCSD(T)(F12), using quadruple-z\zeta basis sets. Higher excitations are accounted for by conventional CCSDT(Q) calculations using double-z\zeta basis sets, while core/core-valence correlation effects are estimated by conventional CCSD(T) calculations using quadruple-z\zeta basis sets. Finally, scalar-relativistic effects are accounted for by conventional CCSD(T) calculations using triple-z\zeta basis sets. In the present article, this protocol is applied to the popular test sets AE6 and BH6. An error analysis shows that the new reference values obtained by our computational protocol have an uncertainty of less than 1 kcal/mol (chemical accuracy). Furthermore, concerning the atomization energies, a cancellation of the basis set incompleteness error in the CCSD(T)(F12) perturbative triples contribution with the corresponding error in the contribution from higher excitations is observed. This error cancellation is diminished by the CCSD(T*)(F12) method. Thus, we recommend the use of the CCSD(T*)(F12) method only for small- and medium-sized basis sets, while the CCSD(T)(F12) approach is preferred for high-accuracy calculations in large basis sets.  相似文献   

7.
Moller-Plesset second-order (MP2) perturbation theory breaks down at molecular geometries which are far away from equilibrium. We decompose the MP2 energy into contributions from different orbital subspaces and show that the divergent behavior of the MP2 energy comes from the excitations located within a small (or sometimes even the minimal) active space. The divergent behavior of the MP2 energy at large interfragment distances may be corrected by replacing a small number of terms by their more robust counterparts from coupled-cluster (CCSD) theory. We investigated several schemes of such a substitution, and we find that a coupling between the active-space CCSD and the remaining MP2 amplitudes is necessary to obtain the best results. This naturally leads us to an approach which has previously been examined in the context of cost-saving approximations to CCSD for equilibrium properties by Nooijen [J. Chem. Phys. 111, 10815 (1999)]. The hybrid MP2-CCSD approach, which has the same formal scaling as conventional MP2 theory, provides potential curves with a correct shape for bond-breaking reactions of BH, CH(4), and HF. The error of the MP2-CCSD method (measured against full configuration-interaction data) is smaller than that of MP2 at all interfragment separations and is qualitatively similar to that of full CCSD.  相似文献   

8.
Nonrelativistic clamped-nuclei pair interaction energy for ground-state helium atoms has been computed for 12 interatomic separations ranging from 3.0 to 9.0 bohr. The calculations applied the supermolecular approach. The major part of the interaction energy was obtained using the Gaussian geminal implementation of the coupled-cluster theory with double excitations (CCD). Relatively small contributions from single, triple, and quadruple excitations were subsequently included employing the conventional orbital coupled-cluster method with single, double, and noniterative triple excitations [CCSD(T)] and the full configuration interaction (FCI) method. For three distances, the single-excitation contribution was taken from literature Gaussian-geminal calculations at the CCSD level. The orbital CCSD(T) and FCI calculations used very large basis sets, up to doubly augmented septuple- and sextuple-zeta size, respectively, and were followed by extrapolations to the complete basis set limits. The accuracy of the total interaction energies has been estimated to be about 3 mK or 0.03% at the minimum of the potential well. For the attractive part of the well, the relative errors remain consistently smaller than 0.03%. In the repulsive part, the accuracy is even better, except, of course, for the region where the potential goes through zero. For interatomic separations smaller than 4.0 bohr, the relative errors do not exceed 0.01%. Such uncertainties are significantly smaller than the expected values of the relativistic and diagonal Born-Oppenheimer contributions to the potential.  相似文献   

9.
The Beryllium tetramer: profiling an elusive molecule   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The structure and energetics of Be(4) are investigated using state-of-the-art coupled-cluster methods. We compute the optimized bond length, dissociation energy, and anharmonic vibrational frequencies. A composite approach is employed, starting from coupled-cluster theory with single, double, and perturbative triple excitations extrapolated to the complete basis set (CBS) limit using Dunning's correlation consistent cc-pCVQZ and cc-pCV5Z basis sets. A correction for full triple and connected quadruple excitations in the smaller cc-pCVDZ basis set is then added, yielding an approximation to CCSDT(Q)/CBS denoted c~CCSDT(Q). Corrections are included for relativistic and non-Born-Oppenheimer effects. We obtain D(e) = 89.7 kcal mol(-1), D(0) = 84.9 kcal mol(-1), and r(e) = 2.043 A?. Second-order vibrational perturbation theory (VPT2) is applied to a full quartic force field computed at the c~CCSDT(Q) level of theory, yielding B(e) = 0.448 cm(-1) and fundamental frequencies of 666 (a(1)), 468 (e), and 571 (t(2)) cm(-1). Computations on the spectroscopically characterized Be(2) molecule are reported for the purpose of benchmarking our methods. Perturbative estimates of the effect of quadruple excitations are found to be essential to computing accurate parameters for Be(2); however, they seem to exert a much smaller influence on the structure and energetics of Be(4). Our extensive characterization of the Be(4) bonding potential energy surface should aid in the experimental identification of this thermodynamically viable but elusive molecule.  相似文献   

10.
In this work, we provide highly accurate theoretical estimates for spectroscopic constants of the ground-state alkaline-earth dimers (Ca2, Sr2, and Ba2). Electron correlation energies are calculated with coupled-cluster method at the single, double, and noniterative triple excitations [CCSD(T)] level, and the effects of full triples as well as quadruple excitations are also taken into account at the CCSDT and the CCSDT(Q) level. Our results demonstrate that high-order electron correlation is important to achieve results with high accuracy. We also find that results for Ca2 with counterpoise corrections, which are designed to eliminate the basis set superposition error, deviate further away from those at the complete basis set limit than the uncorrected ones. The calculated binding energies and equilibrium bond lengths for Ca2 and Sr2 are in excellent agreement with recent experimental data. On the other hand, our results for Ba2 are quite different from previous theoretical data, and there is no available experimental equilibrium bond length and binding energy for calibration. Based on the performance of the adopted approach for Ca2 and Sr2, our results should be more reliable and could be helpful for future investigations.  相似文献   

11.
The C(3)H(5) potential energy surface (PES) encompasses molecules of great significance to hydrocarbon combustion, including the resonantly stabilized free radicals propargyl (plus H(2)) and allyl. In this work, we investigate the interconversions that take place on this PES using high level coupled cluster methodology. Accurate geometries are obtained using coupled cluster theory with single, double, and perturbative triple excitations [CCSD(T)] combined with Dunning's correlation consistent quadruple-ζ basis set cc-pVQZ. The energies for these stationary points are then refined by a systematic series of computations, within the focal point scheme, using the cc-pVXZ (X = D, T, Q, 5, 6) basis sets and correlation treatments as extensive as coupled cluster with full single, double, and triple excitation and perturbative quadruple excitations [CCSDT(Q)]. Our benchmarks provide a zero-point vibrational energy (ZPVE) corrected barrier of 10.0 kcal mol(-1) for conversion of allene + H to propargyl + H(2). We also find that the barrier for H addition to a terminal carbon atom in allene leading to propenyl is 1.8 kcal mol(-1) lower than that for the addition to a central atom to form the allyl radical.  相似文献   

12.
We present a variational formulation of the recently-proposed CCSD(2)(R12) method [Valeev, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2008, 10, 106]. The centerpiece of this approach is the CCSD(2)(R12) Lagrangian obtained via L?wdin partitioning of the coupled-cluster singles and doubles (CCSD) Hamiltonian. Extremization of the Lagrangian yields the second-order basis set incompleteness correction for the CCSD energy. We also developed a simpler Hylleraas-type functional that only depends on one set of geminal amplitudes by applying screening approximations. This functional is used to develop a diagonal orbital-invariant version of the method in which the geminal amplitudes are fixed at the values determined by the first-order cusp conditions. Extension of the variational method to include perturbatively the effect of connected triples produces the method that approximates the complete basis-set limit of the standard CCSD plus perturbative triples [CCSD(T)] method. For a set of 20 small closed-shell molecules, the method recovered at least 94.5/97.3% of the CBS CCSD(T) correlation energy with the aug-cc-pVDZ/aug-cc-pVTZ orbital basis set. For 12 isogyric reactions involving these molecules, combining the aug-cc-pVTZ correlation energies with the aug-cc-pVQZ Hartree-Fock energies produces the electronic reaction energies with a mean absolute deviation of 1.4 kJ mol(-1) from the experimental values. The method has the same number of optimized parameters as the corresponding CCSD(T) model, does not require any modification of the coupled-cluster computer program, and only needs a small triple-zeta basis to match the precision of the considerably more expensive standard quintuple-zeta CCSD(T) computation.  相似文献   

13.
Explicitly correlated coupled-cluster theory has developed into a valuable computational tool for the calculation of electronic energies close to the limit of a complete basis set of atomic orbitals. In particular at the level of coupled-cluster theory with single and double excitations (CCSD), the space of double excitations is quickly extended towards a complete basis when Slater-type geminals are added to the wave function expansion. The purpose of the present article is to demonstrate the accuracy and efficiency that can be obtained in computational thermochemistry by a CCSD model that uses such Slater-type geminals. This model is denoted as CCSD(F12), where the acronym F12 highlights the fact that the Slater-type geminals are functions f(r 12) of the interelectronic distances r 12 in the system. The performance of explicitly correlated CCSD(F12) coupled-cluster theory is demonstrated by computing the atomization energies of 73 molecules (containing H, C, N, O, and F) with an estimated root-mean-square deviation from the values compiled in the Active Thermochemical Tables of σ = 0.10 kJ/mol per valence electron. To reach this accuracy, not only the frozen-core CCSD basis-set limit but also high-order excitations (connected triple and quadruple excitations), core–valence correlation effects, anharmonic vibrational zero-point energies, and scalar and spin–orbit relativistic effects must be taken into account.  相似文献   

14.
Five CH2N2 isomers, namely cyanamide, carbodiimide, diazomethane, isocyanamide and nitrilimine, have been investigated at a high level of accuracy. The singles and doubles coupled-cluster method including a perturbational correction for connected triple excitations, CCSD(T), in conjunction with correlation-consistent basis sets ranging in size from triple to quintuple zeta have been employed. Extrapolation to the complete basis set limit has been used with treatments of core-valence correlation effects in order to accurately predict structures, relative energies as well as N–H and C–H bond dissociation energies. The latter required to also investigate the HNNC radical with the same methodology used for CH2N2 isomers, while HCNN and HNCN data are available in the literature by the same authors (Puzzarini and Gambi in J Chem Phys 122:064316, 2005). For all the species studied, harmonic vibrational frequencies have also been evaluated at the CCSD(T) level in order to obtain zero-point corrections to total energies.  相似文献   

15.
A method for calculating the various components of the magnetically induced current-density tensor using gauge-including atomic orbitals is described. The method is formulated in the framework of analytical derivative theory, thus enabling implementation at the Hartree-Fock self-consistent-field (HF-SCF) as well as at electron-correlated levels. First-order induced current densities have been computed up to the coupled-cluster singles and doubles level (CCSD) augmented by a perturbative treatment of triple excitations [CCSD(T)] for carbon dioxide and benzene and up to the full coupled-cluster singles, doubles, and triples (CCSDT) level in the case of ozone. The applicability of the gauge including magnetically induced current method to larger molecules is demonstrated by computing first-order current densities for porphin and hexabenzocoronene at the HF-SCF and density-functional theory level. Furthermore, a scheme for obtaining quantitative values for the induced currents in a molecule via numerical integration over the current flow is presented. For benzene, a perpendicular magnetic field induces a (field dependent) ring current of 12.8 nA T(-1) at the HF-SCF level using a triple-zeta basis set augmented with polarization functions (TZP). At the CCSD(T)/TZP level the induced current was found to be 11.4 nA T(-1). Gauge invariance and its relation to charge-current conservation is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Dynamic polarizabilities for open- and closed-shell molecules were obtained by using coupled-cluster (CC) linear response theory with full treatment of singles, doubles, and triples (CCSDT-LR) with large basis sets utilizing the NWChem software suite. By using four approximate CC methods in conjunction with augmented cc-pVNZ basis sets, we are able to evaluate the convergence in both many-electron and one-electron spaces. For systems with primarily dynamic correlation, the results for CC3 and CCSDT are almost indistinguishable. For systems with significant static correlation, the CC3 tends to overestimate the triples contribution, while the PS(T) approximation [J. Chem. Phys. 127, 164105 (2007)] produces mixed results that are heavily dependent on the accuracies provided by noniterative approaches used to correct the equation-of-motion CCSD excitation energies. Our results for open-shell systems show that the choice of reference (restricted open-shell Hartree-Fock versus unrestricted Hartree-Fock) can have a significant impact on the accuracy of polarizabilities. A simple extrapolation based on pentuple-zeta CCSD calculations and triple-zeta CCSDT calculations reproduces experimental results with good precision in most cases.  相似文献   

17.
The reactions of CH(3)OH with the HO(2) and CH(3) radicals are important in the combustion of methanol and are prototypes for reactions of heavier alcohols in biofuels. The reaction energies and barrier heights for these reaction systems are computed with CCSD(T) theory extrapolated to the complete basis set limit using correlation-consistent basis sets, both augmented and unaugmented, and further refined by including a fully coupled treatment of the connected triple excitations, a second-order perturbative treatment of quadruple excitations (by CCSDT(2)(Q)), core-valence corrections, and scalar relativistic effects. It is shown that the M08-HX and M08-SO hybrid meta-GGA density functionals can achieve sub-kcal mol(-1) agreement with the high-level ab initio results, identifying these functionals as important potential candidates for direct dynamics studies on the rates of these and homologous reaction systems.  相似文献   

18.
The coupled-cluster singles and doubles method augmented with single Slater-type correlation factors (CCSD-F12) determined by the cusp conditions (also denoted as SP ansatz) yields results close to the basis set limit with only small overhead compared to conventional CCSD. Quantitative calculations on many-electron systems, however, require to include the effect of connected triple excitations at least. In this contribution, the recently proposed [A. Ko?hn, J. Chem. Phys. 130, 131101 (2009)] extended SP ansatz and its application to the noniterative triples correction CCSD(T) is reviewed. The approach allows to include explicit correlation into connected triple excitations without introducing additional unknown parameters. The explicit expressions are presented and analyzed, and possible simplifications to arrive at a computationally efficient scheme are suggested. Numerical tests based on an implementation obtained by an automated approach are presented. Using a partial wave expansion for the neon atom, we can show that the proposed ansatz indeed leads to the expected (L(max)+1)(-7) convergence of the noniterative triples correction, where L(max) is the maximum angular momentum in the orbital expansion. Further results are reported for a test set of 29 molecules, employing Peterson's F12-optimized basis sets. We find that the customary approach of using the conventional noniterative triples correction on top of a CCSD-F12 calculation leads to significant basis set errors. This, however, is not always directly visible for total CCSD(T) energies due to fortuitous error compensation. The new approach offers a thoroughly explicitly correlated CCSD(T)-F12 method with improved basis set convergence of the triples contributions to both total and relative energies.  相似文献   

19.
《Chemical physics》2005,308(3):277-284
The ground state potential energy surface for He–F2 has been generated using the coupled-cluster singles and doubles excitation approach with perturbative treatment of triple excitations [CCSD(T)] and multi-reference configuration interaction (MRCI) methodologies, with augmented correlation consistent quadruple zeta basis set and diffused functions. Both the CCSD(T) and MRCI surfaces are compared and the results analyzed. The CCSD(T) surface exhibits van der Waals minima at different distances for different orientations of He approaching F2 and is adequate to describe accurately only in the region around the equilibrium bond distance of F2. The MRCI surface, on the other hand, yields reliable results for a wider range of F–F bond distances leading to the correct asymptote. Davidson correction to the MRCI surface makes it purely repulsive over the regions investigated.  相似文献   

20.
The conformational behavior of oxalyl chloride has been investigated using ab initio Hartree-Fock (HF) and second-order Moller-Plesset (MP2) perturbation theories, and the coupled-cluster singles and doubles method appended with a perturbative inclusion of connected triple excitations [CCSD(T)]. Correlation consistent polarized valence quadruple-zeta (cc-pVQZ) and quintuple-zeta (cc-pV5Z) basis sets were used in this research. At the cc-pVQZ and cc-pV5Z HF levels, there is no stationary point corresponding to a stable gauche conformer. On the other hand, at the cc-pVQZ and cc-pV5Z MP2 levels and with the cc-pVQZ CCSD(T) method, the gauche conformer of oxalyl chloride was found at O[Double Bond]C-C[Double Bond]O dihedral angles of 81.9 degrees , 79.4 degrees , and 83.4 degrees , respectively. At the cc-pV5Z MP2 level, the energy barrier from trans to gauche was predicted to be 0.74 kcal mol(-1) and that from gauche to trans to be 0.09 kcal mol(-1). Thus, the potential-energy surface along the O[Double Bond]C-C[Double Bond]O torsional mode is exceedingly flat. The existence of the gauche conformation is mainly due to the minimization of steric repulsion.  相似文献   

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