posted on 2024-09-10, 21:05authored byDu Luu, Clemence Corminboeuf, Konrad Patkowski
Symmetry-adapted perturbation theory
(SAPT) is a popular and versatile
tool to compute and decompose noncovalent interaction energies between
molecules. The intramolecular SAPT (ISAPT) variant provides a similar
energy decomposition between two nonbonded fragments of the same molecule,
covalently connected by a third fragment. In this work, we explore
an alternative approach where the noncovalent interaction is singled
out by a range separation of the Coulomb potential. We investigate
two common splittings of the 1/r potential into long-range and short-range
parts based on the Gaussian and error functions, and approximate either
the entire intermolecular/interfragment interaction or only its attractive
terms by the long-range contribution. These range separation schemes
are tested for a number of intermolecular and intramolecular complexes.
We find that the energy corrections from range-separated SAPT or ISAPT
are in reasonable agreement with complete SAPT/ISAPT data. This result
should be contrasted with the inability of the long-range multipole
expansion to describe crucial short-range charge penetration and exchange
effects; it shows that the long-range interaction potential does not
just recover the asymptotic interaction energy but also provides a
useful account of short-range terms. The best consistency is attained
for the error-function separation applied to all interaction terms,
both attractive and repulsive. This study is the first step toward
a fragmentation-free decomposition of intramolecular nonbonded energy.