posted on 2021-01-07, 21:29authored bySuhwan Song, Stefan Vuckovic, Eunji Sim, Kieron Burke
Empirical
fitting of parameters in approximate density functionals
is common. Such fits conflate errors in the self-consistent density
with errors in the energy functional, but density-corrected DFT (DC-DFT)
separates these two. We illustrate with catastrophic failures of a
toy functional applied to H2+ at varying bond lengths, where the standard
fitting procedure misses the exact functional; Grimme’s D3
fit to noncovalent interactions, which can be contaminated by large
density errors such as in the WATER27 and B30 data sets; and double-hybrids
trained on self-consistent densities, which can perform poorly on
systems with density-driven errors. In these cases, more accurate
results are found at no additional cost by using Hartree–Fock
(HF) densities instead of self-consistent densities. For binding energies
of small water clusters, errors are greatly reduced. Range-separated
hybrids with 100% HF at large distances suffer much less from this
effect.