Spin contamination in density functional studies has been identified as a cause of discrepancies between theoretical and experimental spectra of metal oxide clusters such as MoNbO2. We perform calculations to simulate the photoelectron spectra of the MoNbO2 anion using broken-symmetry density functional theory incorporating recently developed approximate projection methods. These calculations are able to account for the presence of contaminating spin states at single-reference computational cost. Results using these new tools demonstrate the significant effect of spin-contamination on geometries and force constants and show that the related errors in simulated spectra may be largely overcome by using an approximate projection model.
The use of broken-symmetry electronic structure methods is required in order to obtain correct behavior of electronically strained open-shell systems, such as transition states, biradicals, and transition metals. This approach often has issues with spin contamination, which can lead to significant errors in predicted energies, geometries, and properties. Approximate projection schemes are able to correct for spin contamination and can often yield improved results. To fully make use of these methods and to carry out exploration of the potential energy surface, it is desirable to develop an efficient second energy derivative theory. In this paper, we formulate the analytical second derivatives for the Yamaguchi approximate projection scheme, building on recent work that has yielded an efficient implementation of the analytical first derivatives.
Broken symmetry solutions—solutions to the independent particle model that do not obey all symmetries required by the Hamiltonian—have attracted significant interest for capturing multireference properties with mean-field scaling. However, identification and optimization of broken-symmetry solutions is difficult owing to the non-linear nature of the self-consistent field (SCF) equations, particularly for solutions belonging to low-symmetry subgroups and where multiple broken symmetry solutions are sought. Linearization of SCF solution space results in the Lie algebra, which this work utilizes as a framework for elucidation of the set of solutions that exist at the desired symmetry. To demonstrate that searches constructed in the Lie algebra yield the set of broken symmetry solutions, a grid-based search of real-restricted, real-unrestricted, complex-restricted, paired-unrestricted, and real-general solutions of the C2v (nearly D4h) H4 molecule is performed.
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