Journal
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 17, Issue 9, Pages 5530-5537Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.1c00294
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Funding
- state of BadenWurttemberg through bwHPC
- German Research Foundation (DFG) [INST 40/575-1 FUGG]
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The study reveals that mean-field approaches may lead to significant errors in calculating spin-orbital coupling matrix elements, with the one-center approximation being a more accurate choice for the examples in the test set.
We present an extensive study of the performance of mean-field approximations to the spin-orbit operators on realistic molecular systems, as widely used in applications like single-molecule magnets, molecular quantum bits, and molecular spintronic devices. The test systems feature a 3d transition-metal center ion (V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, and Ni) in various coordinations and a multitude of energetically close-lying open-shell configurations that can couple via the spin-orbit operator. We performed complete active space spin-orbit configuration interaction calculations and compared the full two-electron Breit-Pauli spin-orbit operator to different approximations: the one-center approximation, the spin-orbit mean-field approach with electron densities from different state-averaging procedures, and the atomic mean-field integral approximation. We show that the mean- field approaches can lead to significant errors in the spin-orbital coupling matrix elements, which becomes particularly visible for the computed zero-field splittings. The one-center approximation, keeping all relevant two-electron terms, seems to be a significantly more accurate choice for the examples from our test set.
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