Abstract The environment may significantly affect molecular properties. Thus, it is desirable to account explicitly for these effects on the wave function and its derivatives, especially when the latter are evaluated with accurate methods, such as those belonging to coupled cluster (CC) theory. In this tutorial review, we discuss how to combine CC methods with the polarizable continuum model of solvation (PCM). We describe useful approximations that include the solvent response to the correlation and excited state equations while maintaining the computational cost comparable to in vacuo calculations. Although applied to PCM, the theoretical framework presented in this review is general and can be used with any polarizable embedding model. Representative applications of the CC‐PCM method to ground and excited state properties of solvated molecules are presented, and comparisons with experiment, and between the full and approximate schemes are discussed.
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Coupled cluster theory in the condensed phase within the singles‐T density scheme for the environment response
Abstract Reliable simulations of molecules in condensed phase require the combination of an accurate quantum mechanical method for the core region, and a realistic model to describe the interaction with the environment. Additionally, this combination should not significantly increase the computational cost of the calculation compared to the corresponding in vacuo case. In this review, we describe the combination of methods based on coupled cluster (CC) theory with polarizable classical models for the environment. We use the polarizable continuum model (PCM) of solvation to discuss the equations, but we also show how the same theoretical framework can be extended to polarizable force fields. The theory is developed within the perturbation theory energy and singles‐T density (PTES) scheme, where the environmental response is computed with the CC single excitation amplitudes as an approximation for the full one‐particle reduced density. The CC‐PTES combination provides the best compromise between accuracy and computational effort for CC calculations in condensed phase, because it includes the response of the environment to the correlation density at the same computational cost of in vacuo CC. We discuss a number of numerical applications for ground and excited state properties, based on the implementation of CC‐PTES with single and double excitations (CCSD‐PTES), which show the reliability and computational efficiency of the method in reproducing experimental or full‐CC data. This article is characterized under:Electronic Structure Theory > Ab Initio Electronic Structure MethodsElectronic Structure Theory > Combined QM/MM MethodsSoftware > Quantum Chemistry
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- Award ID(s):
- 1650942
- PAR ID:
- 10448936
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- WIREs Computational Molecular Science
- Volume:
- 10
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 1759-0876
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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