4.7 Article

Time-Dependent Double-Hybrid Density Functionals with Spin-Component and Spin-Opposite Scaling

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 4307-4323

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.7b00386

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Group of Eight Australia Germany Joint Research Cooperation Scheme (Go8 Australia)
  2. Group of Eight Australia Germany Joint Research Cooperation Scheme (German Academic Exchange Service)
  3. Australian Research Council [DE140100550]
  4. University of Melbourne
  5. Melbourne Bioinformatics [RA0005]
  6. National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) National Facility within the National Computational Merit Allocation Scheme [fk5]
  7. Australian Research Council [DE140100550] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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For the first time, we combine time-dependent double-hybrid density functional approximations (TD-DHDFAs) for the calculation of electronic excitation energies with the concepts of spin-component and spin-opposite scaling (SCS/SOS) of electron-pair contributions to their nonlocal correlation components. Different flavors of this idea, ranging from standard SCS parameters to fully fitted parameter sets, are presented and tested on six different parent DHDFAs. For cross-validation, we assess those methods on three benchmark sets that cover small- to medium-sized chromophores (up to 78 atoms) and different excitation types. For this purpose, we also introduce new CC3 reference values for the popular Gordon benchmark set that we recommend using in future studies. Our results confirm that already the (unsealed) parent TD-DHDFAs are accurate and outperform some wave function methods. Further introduction of SCS/SOS eliminates extreme outliers, reduces deviation spans from reference values by up to 0:5 eV, aligns the performance of the Tamm-Dancoff approximation (TDA) to that of full TD calculations, and also enables a more balanced description of different excitation types. The best performing TD-based methods in our cross validation have mean absolute deviations as low as 0.14 eV compared to the time and resource-intensive CC3 approach. A very important finding is that we also obtained SOS variants with excellent performance, contrary to wave function based methods. This opens a future pathway to highly efficient methods for the optimization of excited-state geometries, particularly when paired with computing strategies such as the Laplace transform. We recommend our SCS- and SOS-based variants for further testing and subsequent applications.

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