4.7 Article

Accurate and Efficient Prediction of Post-Hartree-Fock Polarizabilities of Condensed-Phase Systems

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 19, Issue 18, Pages 6461-6470

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.3c00646

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In this study, we demonstrate an efficient and accurate method for predicting the molecular response properties of condensed-phase systems under periodic boundary conditions. By combining the GEBF and ITA approaches, we establish linear relations between small subsystems and larger subsystems, allowing for the direct prediction of polarizabilities from the molecular wavefunction via ITA quantities. The proposed PBC-GEBF-ITA protocol shows good efficiency and transferability for periodic systems with hundreds of atoms in a unit cell.
To accurately and efficiently predict the molecular response properties (such as polarizability) at post-Hartree-Fock levels for condensed-phase systems under periodic boundary conditions (PBC) is still an unaccomplished and ongoing task. We demonstrate that static isotropic polarizabilities can be cost-effectively predicted at post-Hartree-Fock levels by combining the linear-scaling generalized energy-based fragmentation (GEBF) and information-theoretic approach (ITA) quantities. In PBC-GEBF, the total molecular polarizability of an extended system is obtained as a linear combination of the corresponding quantities of a series of small embedded subsystems of several monomers. Here, we show that in the PBC-GEBF-ITA framework, one can obtain the molecular polarizabilities and establish linear relations to ITA quantities. Once these relations are established for smaller subsystems, one can predict the polarizabilities of larger subsystems directly from the molecular wavefunction (or electron density) via ITA quantities. Alternatively, one can determine the total molecular polarizability via a linear combination equation in PBC-GEBF. We have corroborated that this newly proposed PBC-GEBF-ITA protocol is much more efficient than the original PBC-GEBF approach but is not much less accurate and that this conclusion holds for both many-body perturbation theory and the coupled cluster calculations. Good efficiency and transferability of the PBC-GEBF-ITA protocol are demonstrated for periodic systems with several hundred atoms in a unit cell.

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