Five different orientations of the acetylene-benzene dimer including the T-shaped global minimum structure are used to assess the accuracy of the density functional theory combined with symmetry adapted perturbation theory (DFT-SAPT) approach in its density-fitting implementation (DF-DFT-SAPT) for the study of CH-pi and pi-pi interactions. The results are compared with the outcome of counterpoise corrected supermolecular calculations employing second-order Møller-Plesset (MP2), spin-component scaled MP2 (SCS-MP2) and single and double excitation coupled cluster theory including perturbative triple excitations (CCSD(T)). For all considered orientations MP2 predicts much deeper potential energy curves with considerably shifted minima compared to CCSD(T) and DFT-SAPT. In spite of being an improvement over the results of MP2, SCS-MP2 tends to underestimate the well depth while DFT-SAPT, employing an asymptotically corrected hybrid exchange-correlation potential in conjunction with the adiabatic local density approximation for the exchange-correlation kernel, is found to be in excellent agreement with CCSD(T). Furthermore, DFT-SAPT provides a detailed understanding of the importance of the electrostatic, induction and dispersion contributions to the total interaction energy and their repulsive exchange corrections.
The widespread adoption of hydrogen as an energy carrier could bring significant benefits, but only if a number of currently intractable problems can be overcome. Not the least of these is the problem of storage, particularly when aimed at use onboard light-vehicles. The aim of this overview is to look in depth at a number of areas linked by the recently concluded HYDROGEN research network, representing an intentionally multi-faceted selection with the goal of advancing the field on a number of fronts simultaneously. For the general reader we provide a concise outline of the main approaches to storing hydrogen before moving on to detailed reviews of recent research in the solid chemical storage of hydrogen, and so provide an entry point for the interested reader on these diverse topics. The subjects covered include: the mechanisms of Ti catalysis in alanates; the kinetics of the borohydrides and the resulting limitations; novel transition metal catalysts for use with complex hydrides; less common borohydrides; protic-hydridic stores; metal ammines and novel approaches to nano-confined metal hydrides.
The potential energy surface of LiBH4 is investigated by a ground-state search method based on simulated annealing and first-principles density functional theory calculations. A new stable orthogonal structure with Pnma symmetry is found, which is 9.66 kJ/mol lower in energy than the proposed Pnma structure by Soulié et al. [J. Alloys Compd. 346, 200 (2002)]. For the high-temperature structure, we suggest a new monoclinic P2/c structure, which is 21.26 kJ/mol over the ground-state energy and shows no lattice instability.
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