Structural manifestation of the delocalization error of density functional approximations: C(4N+2) rings and C(20) bowl, cage, and ring isomers.


Autoria(s): Heaton-Burgess, T; Yang, W
Data(s)

21/06/2010

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20572695

J Chem Phys, 2010, 132 (23), pp. 234113 - ?

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/3322

1089-7690

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/3322

Idioma(s)

ENG

en_US

Relação

J Chem Phys

10.1063/1.3445266

Journal of Chemical Physics

Palavras-Chave #bonds (chemical) #coupled cluster calculations #density functional theory #electron correlations #ground states #HMO calculations #isomerism #organic compounds
Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

The ground state structure of C(4N+2) rings is believed to exhibit a geometric transition from angle alternation (N < or = 2) to bond alternation (N > 2). All previous density functional theory (DFT) studies on these molecules have failed to reproduce this behavior by predicting either that the transition occurs at too large a ring size, or that the transition leads to a higher symmetry cumulene. Employing the recently proposed perspective of delocalization error within DFT we rationalize this failure of common density functional approximations (DFAs) and present calculations with the rCAM-B3LYP exchange-correlation functional that show an angle-to-bond-alternation transition between C(10) and C(14). The behavior exemplified here manifests itself more generally as the well known tendency of DFAs to bias toward delocalized electron distributions as favored by Huckel aromaticity, of which the C(4N+2) rings provide a quintessential example. Additional examples are the relative energies of the C(20) bowl, cage, and ring isomers; we show that the results from functionals with minimal delocalization error are in good agreement with CCSD(T) results, in contrast to other commonly used DFAs. An unbiased DFT treatment of electron delocalization is a key for reliable prediction of relative stability and hence the structures of complex molecules where many structure stabilization mechanisms exist.

Formato

234113 - ?