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Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods

[Image: see text] Time-dependent density functional theory has become state-of-the-art for describing photophysical and photochemical processes in extended materials because of its affordable cost. The inclusion of exact exchange was shown to be essential for the correct description of the long-rang...

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Autores principales: Hehn, Anna-Sophia, Sertcan, Beliz, Belleflamme, Fabian, Chulkov, Sergey K., Watkins, Matthew B., Hutter, Jürg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9281608/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35759470
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00144
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author Hehn, Anna-Sophia
Sertcan, Beliz
Belleflamme, Fabian
Chulkov, Sergey K.
Watkins, Matthew B.
Hutter, Jürg
author_facet Hehn, Anna-Sophia
Sertcan, Beliz
Belleflamme, Fabian
Chulkov, Sergey K.
Watkins, Matthew B.
Hutter, Jürg
author_sort Hehn, Anna-Sophia
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Time-dependent density functional theory has become state-of-the-art for describing photophysical and photochemical processes in extended materials because of its affordable cost. The inclusion of exact exchange was shown to be essential for the correct description of the long-range asymptotics of electronic interactions and thus a well-balanced description of valence, Rydberg, and charge-transfer excitations. Several approaches for an efficient treatment of exact exchange have been established for the ground state, while implementations for excited-state properties are rare. Furthermore, the high computational costs required for excited-state properties in comparison to ground-state computations often hinder large-scale applications on periodic systems with hybrid functional accuracy. We therefore propose two approximate schemes for improving computational efficiency for the treatment of exact exchange. Within the auxiliary density matrix method (ADMM), exact exchange is estimated using a relatively small auxiliary basis and the introduced basis set incompleteness error is compensated by an exchange density functional correction term. Benchmark results for a test set of 35 molecules demonstrate that the mean absolute error introduced by ADMM is smaller than 0.3 pm for excited-state bond lengths and in the range of 0.02–0.04 eV for vertical excitation, adiabatic excitation, and fluorescence energies. Computational timings for a series of covalent-organic frameworks demonstrate that a speed-up of at least 1 order of magnitude can be achieved for excited-state geometry optimizations in comparison to conventional hybrid functionals. The second method is to use a semiempirical tight binding approximation for both Coulomb and exchange contributions to the excited-state kernel. This simplified Tamm–Dancoff approximation (sTDA) achieves an accuracy comparable to approximated hybrid density functional theory when referring to highly accurate coupled-cluster reference data. We find that excited-state bond lengths deviate by 1.1 pm on average and mean absolute errors in vertical excitation, adiabatic excitation, and fluorescence energies are in the range of 0.2–0.5 eV. In comparison to ADMM-approximated hybrid functional theory, sTDA accelerates the computation of broad-band excitation spectra by 1 order of magnitude, suggesting its potential use for large-scale screening purposes.
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spelling pubmed-92816082023-06-27 Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods Hehn, Anna-Sophia Sertcan, Beliz Belleflamme, Fabian Chulkov, Sergey K. Watkins, Matthew B. Hutter, Jürg J Chem Theory Comput [Image: see text] Time-dependent density functional theory has become state-of-the-art for describing photophysical and photochemical processes in extended materials because of its affordable cost. The inclusion of exact exchange was shown to be essential for the correct description of the long-range asymptotics of electronic interactions and thus a well-balanced description of valence, Rydberg, and charge-transfer excitations. Several approaches for an efficient treatment of exact exchange have been established for the ground state, while implementations for excited-state properties are rare. Furthermore, the high computational costs required for excited-state properties in comparison to ground-state computations often hinder large-scale applications on periodic systems with hybrid functional accuracy. We therefore propose two approximate schemes for improving computational efficiency for the treatment of exact exchange. Within the auxiliary density matrix method (ADMM), exact exchange is estimated using a relatively small auxiliary basis and the introduced basis set incompleteness error is compensated by an exchange density functional correction term. Benchmark results for a test set of 35 molecules demonstrate that the mean absolute error introduced by ADMM is smaller than 0.3 pm for excited-state bond lengths and in the range of 0.02–0.04 eV for vertical excitation, adiabatic excitation, and fluorescence energies. Computational timings for a series of covalent-organic frameworks demonstrate that a speed-up of at least 1 order of magnitude can be achieved for excited-state geometry optimizations in comparison to conventional hybrid functionals. The second method is to use a semiempirical tight binding approximation for both Coulomb and exchange contributions to the excited-state kernel. This simplified Tamm–Dancoff approximation (sTDA) achieves an accuracy comparable to approximated hybrid density functional theory when referring to highly accurate coupled-cluster reference data. We find that excited-state bond lengths deviate by 1.1 pm on average and mean absolute errors in vertical excitation, adiabatic excitation, and fluorescence energies are in the range of 0.2–0.5 eV. In comparison to ADMM-approximated hybrid functional theory, sTDA accelerates the computation of broad-band excitation spectra by 1 order of magnitude, suggesting its potential use for large-scale screening purposes. American Chemical Society 2022-06-27 2022-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9281608/ /pubmed/35759470 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00144 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Hehn, Anna-Sophia
Sertcan, Beliz
Belleflamme, Fabian
Chulkov, Sergey K.
Watkins, Matthew B.
Hutter, Jürg
Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods
title Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods
title_full Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods
title_fullStr Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods
title_full_unstemmed Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods
title_short Excited-State Properties for Extended Systems: Efficient Hybrid Density Functional Methods
title_sort excited-state properties for extended systems: efficient hybrid density functional methods
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9281608/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35759470
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00144
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