The Born-Oppenheimer potential energy hypersurfaces of copper and gold trimers were calculated using density functional theory with an analytic potential. The calculated Jahn-Teller distortion energies, pseudorotation barriers, dissociation, and isomerization energies for the two trimers are discussed. Global minima from the surfaces were optimized using the density functional theory method as well as the coupled cluster-singles-doubles-with-triples energies technique. The agreement of the optimized structures with the analytic potential was very good. The Mulliken population analysis compared favorably with the experimental electron spin resonance results. Spin-orbit coupling was subsequently included and the effect was significant for gold, but negligible for copper. The spin-orbit effect suppressed the Jahn-Teller distortion of the gold trimer, and the potential surface with the spin-orbit effect included was also obtained. The spin-orbit splitting for the D(3h) geometry of the gold trimer was in excellent agreement with the most recent infrared spectroscopic results.
Ab initio calculations of the interaction potential between Cu (or Cu(+)) and Ar (or Kr) have been carried out. A range of theoretical methods, including Hartree-Fock (HF), Moeller-Plesset perturbation methods to second order (MP2), and single and double excitation coupled cluster methods, with the perturbational effect of triple excitations (CCSD(T)), were employed with relativistic pseudopotential basis sets. The effects of bond functions and diffuse polarization (f, g, h) functions were tested on the calculation of the weak intermolecular interactions. Potential energy curves were obtained for all four complexes by MP2 and CCSD(T) methods. For CuKr, even with the largest basis set used, a binding energy that is only 37% of the measured value was obtained. Possible reasons for the disagreement are discussed.
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