Density-functional based tight-binding is a powerful method to describe large
molecules and materials. Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs), materials with
interesting catalytic properties and with very large surface areas have been
developed and have become commercially available. Unit cells of MOFs typically
include hundreds of atoms, which make the application of standard
Density-Functional methods computationally very expensive, sometimes even
unfeasible. The aim of this paper is to prepare and to validate the
Self-Consistent Charge Density-Functional based Tight Binding (SCC-DFTB) method
for MOFs containing Cu, Zn and Al metal centers. The method has been validated
against full hybrid density-functional calculations for model clusters, against
gradient corrected density-functional calculations for supercells, and against
experiment. Moreover, the modular concept of MOF chemistry has been discussed
on the basis of their electronic properties. We concentrate on MOFs comprising
three common connector units: copper paddlewheels (HKUST-1), zinc oxide Zn4O
tetrahedron (MOF-5, MOF-177, DUT-6 (MOF-205)) and aluminium oxide AlO4(OH)2
octahedron (MIL-53). We show that SCC-DFTB predicts structural parameters with
a very good accuracy (with less than 5% deviation, even for adsorbed CO and H2O
on HKUST-1), while adsorption energies differ by 12 kJ mol-1 or less for CO and
water compared to DFT benchmark calculations.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Status Solidi