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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Kohn–Sham energy decomposition for molecules in a magnetic field

Stella StopkowiczStella StopkowiczAndrew M. TealeAndrew M. TealeAndrew M. TealeAlex BorgooSarah ReimannJon AustadErik I. TellgrenTrygve HelgakerTrygve Helgaker

subject

PhysicsWork (thermodynamics)010304 chemical physicsComponent (thermodynamics)BiophysicsKohn–Sham equationsCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesMagnetic fieldParamagnetismQuantum mechanics0103 physical sciencesPhysics::Atomic and Molecular ClustersDiamagnetismMoleculeDensity functional theoryPhysics::Chemical PhysicsPhysical and Theoretical Chemistry010306 general physicsMolecular Biology

description

We study the total molecular electronic energy and its Kohn–Sham components within the framework of magnetic-field density-functional theory (BDFT), an alternative to current-dependent density-functional theory (CDFT) for molecules in the presence of magnetic fields. For a selection of closed-shell dia- and paramagnetic molecules, we investigate the dependence of the total electronic energy and its Kohn–Sham components on the magnetic field. Results obtained from commonly used density-functional approximations are compared with those obtained from Lieb optimizations based on magnetic-field dependent relaxed coupled-cluster singles-and-doubles (CCSD) and second-order Moller–Plesset (MP2) densities. We show that popular approximate exchange–correlation functionals at the generalized-gradient-approximation (GGA), meta-GGA, and hybrid levels of theory provide a good qualitative description of the electronic energy and its Kohn–Sham components in a magnetic field—in particular, for the diamagnetic molecules. The performance of Hartree–Fock theory, MP2 theory, CCSD theory and BDFT with different exchange–correlation functionals is compared with coupled-cluster singles-doubles-perturbative-triples (CCSD(T)) theory for the perpendicular component of the magnetizability. Generalizations of the TPSS meta-GGA functional to systems in a magnetic field work well—the cTPSS functional, in particular, with a current-corrected kinetic-energy density, performs excellently, providing an accurate and balanced treatment of dia- and paramagnetic systems and outperforming MP2 theory.

https://doi.org/10.1080/00268976.2018.1495849