27 research outputs found
Electron density errors and density-driven exchange-correlation energy errors in approximate density functional calculations
Since its formal introduction, density
functional theory has achieved
many successes in the fields of molecular and solid-state chemistry.
According to its central theorems, the ground state of a many-electron
system is fully described by its electron density, and the exact functional
minimizes the energy at the exact electron density. For many years
of density functional development, it was assumed that the improvements
in the energy are accompanied by the improvements in the density,
and the approximations approach the exact functional. In a recent
analysis (Medvedev et al. Science 2017, 355, 49−52.), it has been pointed
out for 14 first row (Be–Ne) atoms and cations with 2, 4, or
10 electrons that the nowadays popular flexible but physically less
rigorous approximate density functionals may provide large errors
in the calculated electron densities despite the accurate energies.
Although far-reaching conclusions have been drawn in this work, the
methodology used by the authors may need improvements. Most importantly,
their benchmark set was biased toward small atomic cations with compressed,
high electron densities. In our paper, we construct a molecular test
set with chemically relevant densities and analyze the performance
of several density functional approximations including the less-investigated
double hybrids. We apply an intensive error measure for the density,
its gradient, and its Laplacian and examine how the errors in the
density propagate into the semilocal exchange-correlation energy.
While we have confirmed the broad conclusions of Medvedev et al.,
our different way of analyzing the data has led to conclusions that
differ in detail. Finally, seeking for a rationale behind the global
hybrid or double hybrid methods from the density’s point of
view, we also analyze the role of the exact exchange and second-order
perturbative correlation mixing in PBE-based global hybrid and double
hybrid functional forms
Simple modifications of the SCAN meta-generalized gradient approximation functional
We analyzed various
possibilities to improve upon the SCAN meta-generalized
gradient approximation density functional obeying all known properties
of the exact functional that can be satisfied at this level of approximation.
We examined the necessity of locally satisfying a strongly tightened
lower bound for the exchange energy density in single-orbital regions,
the nature of the error cancellation between the exchange and correlation
parts in two-electron regions, and the effect of the fourth-order
term in the gradient expansion of the correlation energy density.
We have concluded that the functional can be modified to separately
reproduce the exchange and correlation energies of the helium atom
by locally releasing the strongly tightened lower bound for the exchange
energy density in single-orbital regions, but this leads to an unbalanced
improvement in the single-orbital electron densities. Therefore, we
decided to keep the <i>F</i><sub>X</sub> ≤ 1.174
exact condition for any single-orbital density, where <i>F</i><sub>X</sub> is the exchange enhancement factor. However, we observed
a general improvement in the single-orbital electron densities by
revising the correlation functional form to follow the second-order
gradient expansion in a wider range. Our new revSCAN functional provides
more-accurate atomization energies for the systems with multireference
character, compared to the SCAN functional. The nonlocal VV10 dispersion-corrected
revSCAN functional yields more-accurate noncovalent interaction energies
than the VV10-corrected SCAN functional. Furthermore, its global hybrid
version with 25% of exact exchange, called revSCAN0, generally performs
better than the similar SCAN0 for reaction barrier heights. Here,
we also analyzed the possibility of the construction of a local hybrid
from the SCAN exchange and a specific locally bounded nonconventional
exact exchange energy density. We predict compatibility problems since
this nonconventional exact exchange energy density does not really
obey the strongly tightened lower bound for the exchange energy density
in single-orbital regions
Exchange and Correlation in Open Systems of Fluctuating Electron Number
While the exact total energy of a separated open system varies linearly as a
function of average electron number between adjacent integers, the energy
predicted by semi-local density functional approximations curves upward and the
exact-exchange-only or Hartree-Fock energy downward. As a result, semi-local
density functionals fail for separated open systems of fluctuating electron
number, as in stretched molecular ions A and in solid transition metal
oxides. We develop an exact-exchange theory and an exchange-hole sum rule that
explain these failures and we propose a way to correct them via a local hybrid
functional.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Assessing the Performance of Recent Density Functionals for Bulk Solids
We assess the performance of recent density functionals for the
exchange-correlation energy of a nonmolecular solid, by applying accurate
calculations with the GAUSSIAN, BAND, and VASP codes to a test set of 24 solid
metals and non-metals. The functionals tested are the modified
Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof generalized gradient approximation (PBEsol GGA), the
second-order GGA (SOGGA), and the Armiento-Mattsson 2005 (AM05) GGA. For
completeness, we also test more-standard functionals: the local density
approximation, the original PBE GGA, and the Tao-Perdew-Staroverov-Scuseria
(TPSS) meta-GGA. We find that the recent density functionals for solids reach a
high accuracy for bulk properties (lattice constant and bulk modulus). For the
cohesive energy, PBE is better than PBEsol overall, as expected, but PBEsol is
actually better for the alkali metals and alkali halides. For fair comparison
of calculated and experimental results, we consider the zero-point phonon and
finite-temperature effects ignored by many workers. We show how Gaussian basis
sets and inaccurate experimental reference data may affect the rating of the
quality of the functionals. The results show that PBEsol and AM05 perform
somewhat differently from each other for alkali metal, alkaline earth metal and
alkali halide crystals (where the maximum value of the reduced density gradient
is about 2), but perform very similarly for most of the other solids (where it
is often about 1). Our explanation for this is consistent with the importance
of exchange-correlation nonlocality in regions of core-valence overlap.Comment: 32 pages, single pdf fil