posted on 2023-04-11, 15:36authored byBenjamin
W. Kaufold, Nithin Chintala, Pratima Pandeya, Sijia S. Dong
Multireference calculations can provide accurate information
of
systems with strong correlation, which have increasing importance
in the development of new molecules and materials. However, selecting
a suitable active space for multireference calculations is nontrivial,
and the selection of an unsuitable active space can sometimes lead
to results that are not physically meaningful. Active space selection
often requires significant human input, and the selection that leads
to reasonable results often goes beyond chemical intuition. In this
work, we have developed and evaluated two protocols for automated
selection of the active space for multireference calculations based
on a simple physical observable, the dipole moment, for molecules
with nonzero ground-state dipole moments. One protocol is based on
the ground-state dipole moment, and the other is based on the excited-state
dipole moments. To evaluate the protocols, we constructed a dataset
of 1275 active spaces from 25 molecules, each with 51 active space
sizes considered, and have mapped out the relationship between the
active space, dipole moments, and vertical excitation energies. We
have demonstrated that, within this dataset, our protocols allow one
to choose among a number of accessible active spaces one that is likely
to give reasonable vertical excitation energies, especially for the
first three excitations, with no parameters manually decided by the
user. We show that, with large active spaces removed from consideration,
the accuracy is similar and the time-to-solution can be reduced by
more than 10 fold. We also show that the protocols can be applied
to potential energy surface scans and determining the spin states
of transition metal oxides.