Benchmarking Correlated Methods for Frequency-Dependent
Polarizabilities: Aromatic Molecules with the CC3, CCSD, CC2, SOPPA,
SOPPA(CC2), and SOPPA(CCSD) Methods
posted on 2020-04-30, 15:05authored byMaria
W. Jørgensen, Rasmus Faber, Andrea Ligabue, Stephan P. A. Sauer
A benchmark study of several correlated
second-order methods for
frequency-dependent polarizabilities has been carried out. For the
benchmark, a set of 14 (hetero)aromatic medium-sized molecules has
been chosen. For the first time, CC3 polarizabilities are reported
for these molecules using Sadlej’s polarized triple-ζ
basis set, and for a subset of these molecules the polarizabilities
were obtained at the CC3 level also with the larger aug-cc-pVTZ basis
set. These CC3 values are used as the reference values for benchmarking
the second-order methods: SOPPA, SOPPA(CC2), SOPPA(CCSD), CC2, as
well as CCSD. The influence of different basis sets, aug-cc-pVDZ,
aug-cc-pVTZ, aug-cc-pVQZ, d-aug-cc-pVTZ, and Sadlej’s polarized
triple-ζ basis set, on static and frequency-dependent polarizabilities
was investigated for the full set of molecules at the SOPPA level.
It was found that the choice of basis set had a somewhat greater influence
on the frequency-dependent polarizabilities than on the static polarizabilities,
but all effects were small. The aug-cc-pVTZ basis set performed adequately
for both static and frequency-dependent polarizabilities, having an
insignificant offset from the values obtained with the larger d-aug-cc-pVTZ
and aug-cc-pVQZ basis sets. Comparing the second-order methods, SOPPA,
SOPPA(CC2), SOPPA(CCSD), CC2, as well as CCSD, to the CC3 reference
values, it was found that the best performing method was CCSD, as
expected. The SOPPA method, on the contrary, outperformed the CC2
method, suggesting the use of SOPPA rather than CC2 for polarizabilities,
at least for these kinds of molecules. The SOPPA results were found
to improve further when the Møller–Plesset correlation
coefficients in the wave function were replaced by coupled-cluster
amplitudes in the SOPPA(CC2) and SOPPA(CCSD) methods. Finally, a comparison
was made for a small subset of the molecules between experimental
data and calculated polarizabilities. It shows that, for this set
of molecules, the trend in the performance of the different second-order
methods does not depend on whether the reference values are calculated
CC3 values or experimental values.