Dalton is a powerful general-purpose program system for the study of molecular electronic structure at the Hartree–Fock, Kohn–Sham, multiconfigurational self-consistent-field, Møller–Plesset, configuration-interaction, and coupled-cluster levels of theory. Apart from the total energy, a wide variety of molecular properties may be calculated using these electronic-structure models. Molecular gradients and Hessians are available for geometry optimizations, molecular dynamics, and vibrational studies, whereas magnetic resonance and optical activity can be studied in a gauge-origin-invariant manner. Frequency-dependent molecular properties can be calculated using linear, quadratic, and cubic response theory. A large number of singlet and triplet perturbation operators are available for the study of one-, two-, and three-photon processes. Environmental effects may be included using various dielectric-medium and quantum-mechanics/molecular-mechanics models. Large molecules may be studied using linear-scaling and massively parallel algorithms. Dalton is distributed at no cost from http://www.daltonprogram.org for a number of UNIX platforms.
One Sentence Summary The central light atom in the iron-molybdenum cofactor of nitrogenase is identified as carbon. Nitrogenase is a complex enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of dinitrogen to ammonia. Despite insight from structural and biochemical studies, its structure and mechanism await full characterization. An iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco) is thought to be the site of dinitrogen reduction, but the identity of a central atom in this cofactor remains unknown. Fe Kß X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) of intact nitrogenase MoFe protein, isolated FeMoco, and the FeMoco-deficient ∆nifB protein indicates that among the candidate atoms O, N, and C, it is C that best fits the XES data. The experimental XES is supported by computational efforts, which shows that oxidation and spin states do not affect the assignment of the central atom to C4-. Identification of the central atom will drive further studies on its role in catalysis.
We propose a reformulation of the traditional (T) triples correction to the coupled cluster singles and doubles (CCSD) energy in terms of local Hartree-Fock (HF) orbitals such that its structural form aligns with our recently developed linear-scaling divide-expand-consolidate (DEC) coupled cluster family of local correlation methods. In a DEC-CCSD(T) calculation, a basis of local occupied and virtual HF orbitals is used to partition the correlated calculation on the full system into a number of independent atomic fragment and pair fragment calculations, each performed within a truncated set of the complete orbital space. In return, this leads to a massively parallel algorithm for the evaluation of the DEC-CCSD(T) correlation energy, which formally scales linearly with the size of the full system and has a tunable precision with respect to a conventional CCSD(T) calculation via a single energy-based input threshold. The theoretical developments are supported by proof of concept DEC-CCSD(T) calculations on a series of medium-sized molecular systems.
The Resolution of the Identity second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (RI-MP2) method is implemented within the linear-scaling Divide-Expand-Consolidate (DEC) framework. In a DEC calculation, the full molecular correlated calculation is replaced by a set of independent fragment calculations each using a subset of the total orbital space. The number of independent fragment calculations scales linearly with the system size, rendering the method linear-scaling and massively parallel. The DEC-RI-MP2 method can be viewed as an approximation to the DEC-MP2 method where the RI approximation is utilized in each fragment calculation. The individual fragment calculations scale with the fifth power of the fragment size for both methods. However, the DEC-RI-MP2 method has a reduced prefactor compared to DEC-MP2 and is well-suited for implementation on massively parallel supercomputers, as demonstrated by test calculations on a set of medium-sized molecules. The DEC error control ensures that the standard RI-MP2 energy can be obtained to the predefined precision. The errors associated with the RI and DEC approximations are compared, and it is shown that the DEC-RI-MP2 method can be applied to systems far beyond the ones that can be treated with a conventional RI-MP2 implementation.
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