In order to resolve an outstanding discrepancy between experiment and theory
regarding the ground-state structure of Mg(BH4)2, we examine the importance of
long-range dispersive interactions on the compound's thermodynamic stability.
Careful treatment of the correlation effects within a recently developed
nonlocal van der Waals density functional (vdW-DF) leads to a good agreement
with experiment, favoring the {\alpha}-Mg(BH4)2 phase (P6122) and a closely
related Mn(BH4)2-prototype phase (P3112) over a large set of polymorphs at low
temperatures. Our study demonstrates the need to go beyond (semi)local density
functional approximations for a reliable description of crystalline high-valent
metal borohydrides.Comment: Phys. Rev. B, accepted, 7 pages, 4 figure