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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 117, 2019 - Issue 9-12: Dieter Cremer Memorial Issue
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Dieter Cremer Memorial

Probing the basis set limit for thermochemical contributions of inner-shell correlation: balance of core-core and core-valence contributionsFootnote*

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Pages 1078-1087 | Received 18 Apr 2018, Accepted 04 May 2018, Published online: 31 May 2018
 

ABSTRACT

The inner-shell correlation contributions to the total atomisation energies of the W4-17 computational thermochemistry benchmark have been determined at the CCSD(T) level near the basis set limit using several families of core correlation basis sets, such as aug-cc-pCVnZ (n = 3–6), aug-cc-pwCVnZ (n = 3–5) and nZaPa-CV (n = 3–5). The three families of basis sets agree very well with each other (0.01 kcal/mol RMS) when extrapolating from the two largest available n: however, there are considerable differences in convergence behaviour for the smaller basis sets. nZaPa-CV is superior for the core-core term and awCVnZ for the core-valence term. While the aug-cc-pwCV(T+d)Z basis set of Yockel and Wilson is superior to aug-cc-pwCVTZ, further extension of this family proved unproductive. The best compromise between accuracy and computational cost, in the context of high-accuracy computational thermochemistry methods, is CCSD(T)/awCV{T,Q}Z, where the {T,Q} notation stands for extrapolation from the awCVTZ and awCVQZ basis set pair. For lower-cost calculations, we recommend a previously proposed combination of CCSD-F12b/cc-pCVTZ-F12 and CCSD(T)/pwCVTZ(no f). While in first-row molecules core-valence correlation on average accounts for over 90% of the inner-shell contribution, in second-row molecules core-core contributions may become important, particularly in systems like P4 and S4 with multiple adjacent second-row atoms.

GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

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Corrigendum

Acknowledgments

We thank Prof. Amir Karton (U. of Western Australia) for helpful discussions.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

* In memory of Dieter Cremer (1944–2017)

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (grant number 1358/15); the Minerva Foundation, Munich, Germany, as well as by two internal Weizmann Institute funding sources: the Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for Molecular Design and a research grant from the estate of Emile Mimran.

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