| Literature DB >> 26273970 |
Michael J Turner, Simon Grabowsky, Dylan Jayatilaka, Mark A Spackman.
Abstract
The energy of interaction between molecules is commonly expressed in terms of four key components: electrostatic, polarization, dispersion, and exchange-repulsion. Using monomer wave functions to obtain accurate estimates of electrostatic, polarization, and repulsion energies along with Grimme's dispersion corrections, a series of energy models are derived by fitting to dispersion-corrected DFT energies for a large number of molecular pairs extracted from organic and inorganic molecular crystals. The best performing model reproduces B3LYP-D2/6-31G(d,p) counterpoise-corrected energies with a mean absolute deviation (MAD) of just over 1 kJ mol(-1) but in considerably less computation time. It also performs surprisingly well against benchmark CCSD(T)/CBS energies, with a MAD of 2.5 kJ mol(-1) for a combined data set including Hobza's X40, S22, A24, and S66 dimers. Two of these energy models, the most accurate and the fastest, are expected to find widespread application in investigations of molecular crystals.Keywords: dispersion; dispersion-corrected DFT; electrostatic; interaction energy; intermolecular interaction; molecular crystals
Year: 2014 PMID: 26273970 DOI: 10.1021/jz502271c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-7185 Impact factor: 6.475