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Barrier heights of hydrogen‐transfer reactions with diffusion quantum monte carlo method
Author(s) -
Zhou Xiaojun,
Wang Fan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of computational chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.907
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1096-987X
pISSN - 0192-8651
DOI - 10.1002/jcc.24750
Subject(s) - quantum monte carlo , diffusion monte carlo , chemistry , density functional theory , coupled cluster , monte carlo method , wave function , dissociation (chemistry) , atomic orbital , basis set , computational chemistry , quantum , molecule , statistical physics , atomic physics , electron , physics , quantum mechanics , monte carlo molecular modeling , statistics , mathematics , organic chemistry , markov chain monte carlo
Hydrogen‐transfer reactions are an important class of reactions in many chemical and biological processes. Barrier heights of H‐transfer reactions are underestimated significantly by popular exchange–correlation functional with density functional theory (DFT), while coupled‐cluster (CC) method is quite expensive and can be applied only to rather small systems. Quantum Monte‐Carlo method can usually provide reliable results for large systems. Performance of fixed‐node diffusion quantum Monte‐Carlo method (FN‐DMC) on barrier heights of the 19 H‐transfer reactions in the HTBH38/08 database is investigated in this study with the trial wavefunctions of the single‐Slater–Jastrow form and orbitals from DFT using local density approximation. Our results show that barrier heights of these reactions can be calculated rather accurately using FN‐DMC and the mean absolute error is 1.0 kcal/mol in all‐electron calculations. Introduction of pseudopotentials (PP) in FN‐DMC calculations improves efficiency pronouncedly. According to our results, error of the employed PPs is smaller than that of the present CCSD(T) and FN‐DMC calculations. FN‐DMC using PPs can thus be applied to investigate H‐transfer reactions involving larger molecules reliably. In addition, bond dissociation energies of the involved molecules using FN‐DMC are in excellent agreement with reference values and they are even better than results of the employed CCSD(T) calculations using the aug‐cc‐pVQZ basis set. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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