Multimer Embedding Approach for Molecular Crystals up to Harmonic Vibrational Properties

Accurate calculations of molecular crystals are crucial for drug design and crystal engineering. However, periodic high-level density functional calculations using hybrid functionals are often prohibitively expensive for the relevant systems. These expensive periodic calculations can be circumvented...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of chemical theory and computation Vol. 20; no. 1; pp. 357 - 367
Main Authors Hoja, Johannes, List, Alexander, Boese, A. Daniel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 09.01.2024
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Summary:Accurate calculations of molecular crystals are crucial for drug design and crystal engineering. However, periodic high-level density functional calculations using hybrid functionals are often prohibitively expensive for the relevant systems. These expensive periodic calculations can be circumvented by the usage of embedding methods in which, for instance, the periodic calculation is only performed at a lower-cost level and then monomer energies and dimer interactions are replaced by those of the higher-level method. Herein, we extend such a multimer embedding approach to enable energy corrections for trimer interactions and the calculation of harmonic vibrational properties up to the dimer level. We evaluate this approach for the X23 benchmark set of molecular crystals by approximating a periodic hybrid density functional (PBE0+MBD) by embedding multimers into less expensive calculations using a generalized-gradient approximation functional (PBE+MBD). We show that trimer interactions are crucial for accurately approximating lattice energies within 1 kJ/mol and might also be needed for further improvement of lattice constants and hence cell volumes. Finally, the vibrational properties are already very well captured at the monomer and dimer level, making it possible to approximate vibrational free energies at room temperature within 1 kJ/mol.
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ISSN:1549-9618
1549-9626
DOI:10.1021/acs.jctc.3c01082