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Comparison of Density-Functional Theory Dispersion Corrections for the DES15K Database.

Authors :
Nickerson CJ
Bryenton KR
Price AJA
Johnson ER
Source :
The journal of physical chemistry. A [J Phys Chem A] 2023 Oct 19; Vol. 127 (41), pp. 8712-8722. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Oct 04.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

While density-functional theory (DFT) remains one of the most widely used tools in computational chemistry, most functionals fail to properly account for the effects of London dispersion. Hence, there are many popular post-self-consistent methods to add a dispersion correction to the DFT energy. Until now, the most popular methods have never been compared on equal footing due to not being implemented in the same electronic structure packages. In this work, we performed a large-scale benchmarking study, directly comparing the accuracy of the exchange-hole dipole moment (XDM), D3BJ, D4, TS, MBD, and MBD-NL dispersion models when applied to the recent DES15K database of nearly 15,000 molecular complexes at both expanded and compressed geometries. Our study showed similarly good performance for all dispersion methods (except TS) when applied to neutral complexes. However, they all performed worse for ionic complexes, particularly those involving dications of alkaline earth metals, due to systematic overbinding by the base PBE0 density functional. Investigation of the largest outliers also revealed that only the MBD and MBD-NL methods demonstrate surprising errors for complexes involving alkali metal cations at compressed geometries where they tended to significantly overbind. As we would expect minimal dispersion binding for such complexes, we further investigated the origins of these errors for the potential energy curve of a model cation-π complex. Overall, there is little choice between the XDM, D3BJ, D4, MBD, and MBD-NL dispersion methods for most systems. However, the MBD-based methods are not recommended for complexes involving organic species and alkali or alkaline earth metal cations, for example when modeling Li <superscript>+</superscript> intercalation into graphite.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-5215
Volume :
127
Issue :
41
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The journal of physical chemistry. A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37793049
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.3c04332