1 research outputs found
Improved DFT Potential Energy Surfaces via Improved Densities
Density-corrected DFT is a method
that cures several failures of
self-consistent semilocal DFT calculations by using a more accurate
density instead. A novel procedure employs the Hartree–Fock
density to bonds that are more severely stretched than ever before.
This substantially increases the range of accurate potential energy
surfaces obtainable from semilocal DFT for many heteronuclear molecules.
We show that this works for both neutral and charged molecules. We
explain why and explore more difficult cases, for example, CH<sup>+</sup>, where density-corrected DFT results are even better than
sophisticated methods like CCSD. We give a simple criterion for when
DC-DFT should be more accurate than self-consistent DFT that can be
applied for most cases