“…While the SEGWE method was explicitly designed for small molecules, containing only lighter atoms such as C, H, and O, this has not stopped its use in the analysis of compounds and complexes containing aluminium [254][255][256], cobalt [257], copper [258,259], gold [260], heavy alkaline earth elements [261], all heavier Group 14 elements [262], iridium [263], nickel [264], palladium [236,265,266], samarium [267], selenium [268], silver [269,270], titanium [271], uranium [272], yttrium [273,274], and zinc [275,276]. While caution might be well advised in the extrapolated use of an effective density optimised using a training set consisting solely of small, organic molecules, it was noted in [259] that for the species studied therein, the ligand units used made up the bulk of the molecular weight, 540 g mol −1 , compared with the heavier Cu (64 g mol −1 ) atom and halides (35 g mol −1 for Cl, 127 g mol −1 for I).…”