Bond dissociation is a fundamental chemical reaction, and the first principles modeling of the kinetics of dissociation reactions with a monotonically increasing potential energy along the dissociation coordinate presents a challenge not only for modern electronic structure methods but also for kinetics theory. In this work, we use multifaceted variable-reaction-coordinate variational transition-state theory (VRC-VTST) to compute the highpressure limit dissociation rate constant of tetrafluoroethylene (C 2 F 4 ), in which the potential energies are computed by direct dynamics with the M08-HX exchange correlation functional. To treat the pressure dependence of the unimolecular rate constants, we use the recently developed system-specific quantum Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel theory. The calculations are carried out by direct dynamics using an exchange correlation functional validated against calculations that go beyond coupled-cluster theory with single, double, and triple excitations. Our computed dissociation rate constants agree well with the recent experimental measurements.bond dissociation | barrierless reaction | variable-reaction-coordinate variational transition-state theory | falloff | system-specific quantum RRK theory B ond breaking and association of fragments to make new bonds are two of the most fundamental processes in chemistry. Gas-phase bond dissociation and radical-radical association reactions are of great importance in combustion and plasma chemistry and atmospheric chemistry. Accurately describing the energetics and kinetics of these processes in a practical way for mechanistic analysis offers great challenges to modern theoretical chemistry.The electronic structure of closed-shell singlets can often be described to a good approximation by a single configuration state function (CSF); such systems are called single-reference systems, and methods using a single CSF as a reference function are called single-reference methods. Bond dissociation is usually an intrinsically multiconfigurational problem, often called a multireference problem (1). Coupled cluster (CC) theory (2, 3), as a high-level single-reference wave function method, is able to provide fairly accurate energies for bond-dissociation processes only if a high-enough excitation level (such as quadruple excitations) is used for the cluster operatorT; however, lack of such expensive higher excitation operators in CC calculations [such as in the case of coupled-cluster theory with single and double excitations (CCSD) (4)] can lead to a significant unphysical bump (5, 6) in the potential energy curve for dissociation. Kohn-Sham density functional theory (KS-DFT) (7,8), however, with carefully chosen exchange correlation (XC) density functionals can produce smooth potential curves for dissociation with satisfactory accuracy without introducing any unphysical bump and with much smaller computational cost; however, at this time, an XC functional that can be used as a panacea does not exist. In addition to an adequate level of electronic structure...