4.7 Article

Comprehensive Basis-Set Testing of Extended Symmetry-Adapted Perturbation Theory and Assessment of Mixed-Basis Combinations to Reduce Cost

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 2308-2330

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.1c01302

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences [DE-SC0008550, 116]

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This study systematically investigates the convergence of XSAPT interaction energies and energy components with respect to the choice of Gaussian basis sets. Errors can be reduced using correlation-consistent basis sets and new versions with limited augmentation. The use of Pople-style basis sets may afford good results if a large number of polarization functions are included.
Hybrid orextendedsymmetry-adapted perturbation theory(XSAPT) replaces traditional SAPT's treatment of dispersion with better performingalternatives while at the same time extending two-body (dimer) SAPT to a many-body treatment of polarization using a self-consistent charge embedding procedure.The present work presents a systematic study of how XSAPT interaction energiesand energy components converge with respect to the choice of Gaussian basis set.Errors can be reduced in a systematic way using correlation-consistent basis sets,with aug-cc-pVTZ results converged within <0.1 kcal/mol. Similar (if slightly lesssystematic) behavior is obtained using Karlsruhe basis sets at much lower cost, andwe introduce new versions with limited augmentation that are even more efficient.Pople-style basis sets, which are more efficient still, often afford good results if a largenumber of polarization functions are included. The dispersion models used inXSAPT afford much faster basis-set convergence as compared to the perturbativedescription of dispersion in conventional SAPT, meaning thatcompromisebasis sets (such as jun-cc-pVDZ) are no longerrequired and benchmark-quality results can be obtained using triple-zeta basis sets. The use of diffuse functions proves to be essential,especially for the description of hydrogen bonds. Thedelta(Hartree-Fock)correction for high-order induction can be performed indouble-zeta basis sets without significant loss of accuracy, leading to a mixed-basis approach that offers 4xspeedup over the existing(cubic scaling) XSAPT approach.

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