Establishing the Ground State of the Disjoint Diradical
Tetramethyleneethane with Quantum Monte Carlo
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Abstract
The nature of the electronic ground
state of the tetramethyleneethane
(TME) diradical has proven to be a challenge for both experiment and
theory. Through the use of quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods and multireference
perturbation theory, we demonstrate that the lowest singlet state
of TME is energetically lower than the lowest triplet state at all
values of the torsional angle between the allyl subunits. Moreover,
we find that the maximum in the potential energy curve for the singlet
state occurs at a torsional angle near 45°, in contrast to previous
calculations that placed the planar structure of the singlet state
as the highest in energy. We also show that the CASPT2 method when
used with a sufficiently large reference space and a sufficiently
flexible basis set gives potential energy curves very close to those
from the QMC calculations. Our calculations have converged the singlet–triplet
gap of TME as a function of methodology and basis set. These results
provide insight into the level of theory required to properly model
diradicals, in particular disjoint diradicals, and provide guidelines
for future studies on more complicated diradical systems