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Are dispersion corrections accurate outside equilibrium? A case study on benzene

Version 3 2024-06-19, 03:27
Version 2 2024-06-05, 11:58
Version 1 2023-10-24, 00:25
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 03:27 authored by T Gould, ER Johnson, Sherif AbbasSherif Abbas
Modern approaches to modelling dispersion forces are becoming increasingly accurate, and can predict accurate binding distances and energies. However, it is possible that these successes reflect a fortuitous cancellation of errors at equilibrium. Thus, in this work we investigate whether a selection of modern dispersion methods agree with benchmark calculations across several potential-energy curves of the benzene dimer to determine if they are capable of describing forces and energies outside equilibrium. We find the exchange-hole dipole moment (XDM) model describes most cases with the highest overall agreement with reference data for energies and forces, with many-body dispersion (MBD) and its fractionally ionic (FI) variant performing essentially as well. Popular approaches, such as Grimme-D and van der Waals density functional approximations (vdW-DFAs) underperform on our tests. The meta-GGA M06-L is surprisingly good for a method without explicit dispersion corrections. Some problems with SCAN+rVV10 are uncovered and briefly discussed.

History

Journal

Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry

Volume

14

Pagination

1181-1191

Location

Germany

ISSN

1860-5397

eISSN

1860-5397

Language

English

Notes

Cannot find a Deakin Author

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

BEILSTEIN-INSTITUT