Subsystem
density functional theory (DFT) is emerging
as a powerful
electronic structure method for large-scale simulations of molecular
condensed phases and interfaces. Key to its computational efficiency
is the use of approximate nonadditive noninteracting kinetic energy
functionals. Unfortunately, currently available nonadditive functionals
lead to inaccurate results when the subsystems interact strongly such
as when they engage in chemical reactions. This work disrupts the
status quo by devising a workflow that extends subsystem DFT’s
applicability also to strongly interacting subsystems. This is achieved
by implementing a fully automated adaptive definition of subsystems
which is realized during geometry optimizations or ab initio molecular
dynamics simulations. The new method prescribes subsystem merging
and splitting events redistributing the resources (both for work and
data) in an efficient way making use of modern parallelization strategies
and object-oriented programming. We showcase the method with examples
probing from moderate-to-strong inter-subsystem interactions, opening
the door to using subsystem DFT for modeling chemical reactions in
molecular condensed phases with a black box computational tool.
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