High-Level Quantum
Chemistry Reference Heats of Formation
for a Large Set of C, H, N, and O Species in the NIST Chemistry Webbook
and the Identification and Validation of Reliable Protocols for Their
Rapid Computation
A recent study has examined the accuracy of NIST heats
of formation
for a set of C, H, and O-containing species with a proposed low-cost
quantum chemistry approach. In the present study, we have used high-level
methods such as W1X-2 to obtain these data more rigorously, which
we have then used to assess the NIST and the previously computed values.
We find that many of these NIST data that are as suggested to be unreliable
by the previous study are indeed inconsistent with our high-level
reference values. However, we also find substantial deviations for
the previously computed values from our benchmark. Thus, we have assessed
the performance of alternative low-cost methods. In our assessment,
we have additionally examined C, H, N, and O-containing species for
which heats of formation are available from the NIST database. We
find the ωB97M-V/ma-def2-TZVP, DSD-PBEP86/ma-def2-TZVP, and
CCSD(T)-F12b/aug′-cc-pVDZ methods to be adequate for obtaining
heats of formation with the atomization approach, once their atomic
energies are optimized with our benchmark. Notably, the low-cost ωB97M-V
method yields values that agree to be within 10 kJ mol–1 for more than 90% of the (∼1500) species. A higher 20 kJ
mol–1 threshold captures 98% of the data. The outlier
species typically contain many electron-withdrawing (nitro) groups.
In these cases, the use of isodesmic-type reactions rather than the
atomization approach is more reliable. Our assessment has also identified
significant outliers from the NIST database, for which experimental
re-determination of the heats of formation would be desirable.