The GW approximation has recently gained
increasing
attention as a viable method for the computation of deep core-level
binding energies as measured by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
We present a comprehensive benchmark study of different GW methodologies (starting point optimized, partial and full eigenvalue-self-consistent,
Hedin shift, and renormalized singles) for molecular inner-shell excitations.
We demonstrate that all methods yield a unique solution and apply
them to the CORE65 benchmark set and ethyl trifluoroacetate. Three GW schemes clearly outperform the other methods for absolute
core-level energies with a mean absolute error of 0.3 eV with respect
to experiment. These are partial eigenvalue self-consistency, in which
the eigenvalues are only updated in the Green’s function, single-shot GW calculations based on an optimized hybrid functional
starting point, and a Hedin shift in the Green’s function.
While all methods reproduce the experimental relative binding energies
well, the eigenvalue self-consistent schemes and the Hedin shift yield
with mean absolute errors <0.2 eV the best results