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Analytic energy gradients for orbital‐optimized MP3 and MP2.5 with the density‐fitting approximation: An efficient implementation
Author(s) -
Bozkaya Uğur
Publication year - 2018
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.25122
Subject(s) - computation , perturbation theory (quantum mechanics) , basis set , perturbation (astronomy) , acceleration , density functional theory , mathematics , computational physics , physics , algorithm , computational chemistry , statistical physics , quantum mechanics , chemistry
Efficient implementations of analytic gradients for the orbital‐optimized MP3 and MP2.5 and their standard versions with the density‐fitting approximation, which are denoted as DF‐MP3, DF‐MP2.5, DF‐OMP3, and DF‐OMP2.5, are presented. The DF‐MP3, DF‐MP2.5, DF‐OMP3, and DF‐OMP2.5 methods are applied to a set of alkanes and noncovalent interaction complexes to compare the computational cost with the conventional MP3, MP2.5, OMP3, and OMP2.5. Our results demonstrate that density‐fitted perturbation theory (DF‐MP) methods considered substantially reduce the computational cost compared to conventional MP methods. The efficiency of our DF‐MP methods arise from the reduced input/output (I/O) time and the acceleration of gradient related terms, such as computations of particle density and generalized Fock matrices (PDMs and GFM), solution of the Z‐vector equation, back‐transformations of PDMs and GFM, and evaluation of analytic gradients in the atomic orbital basis. Further, application results show that errors introduced by the DF approach are negligible. Mean absolute errors for bond lengths of a molecular set, with the cc‐pCVQZ basis set, is 0.0001–0.0002 Å. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.