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Example 3: P3+ / 6-311G(2df) calculations of vertical
detachment energy (VEDE) of chloride ion
Input to G16 program:
#p ept(p3,ReadOrbitals) 6-311G(2df)
Title: P3+ calculations for VEDEs of chloride ion.
-1 1
Cl
4 4
This input is similar to the one of Example 1.
Calculations are carried out for chloride ion, which has 18 electrons in 9 molecular orbitals.
5 out of these 9 occupied orbitals will be frozen by default and the remaining occupied orbitals used for correlation
will be numbered from 1 through 4. The above input therefore requests (through the last line 4 4)
vertical electron detachment energy (VEDE) calculations from HOMO.
The resulting output gives this VEDE as:
Summary of results for alpha spin-orbital 4 P3:
Koopmans theorem: -0.14401D+00 au -3.919 eV
Converged second order pole: -0.11439D+00 au -3.113 eV 0.911 (PS)
Converged 3rd order P3 pole: -0.12112D+00 au -3.296 eV 0.917 (PS)
Renormalized (P3+) P3 pole: -0.12027D+00 au -3.273 eV 0.916 (PS)
Similarly as in Example 1,
results are reported not only for P3+, but for Koopmans's theorem, D2 and P3, as well.
Pole strengths (PS) reported in the last column are equal to the norms of a Dyson orbitals corresponding to VEDEs
and are calculated from residues at VEDEs.
We re-emphasize that:
PS values below 0.85 indicate that the diagonal self-energy
approximations (i.e., D2, D3, OVGF, P3, P3+)
are unreliable!!!
Sign convention:
Numbers reported above are VEDEs
defined as the total energy of the N-electron system minus the
total energy of the (N-1)-electron system. A negative value of VEDE
therefore means that the N-electron system is bound. The above example
thus shows that the chloride ion is bound, i.e., it is energetically
more stable than the chlorine atom.
Note that instead of the 6-311G(2df) basis, we could have used another
triple-zeta quality basis containing polarization functions, e.g., the
correlation-consistent cc-pVTZ basis.
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