Abstract
The accuracy of any observable derived from multi-scale simulations based on Frozen-
Density Embedding Theory (FDET) is affected by two inseparable factors: i) the
nad
approximation for the E xcT
[ρ A , ρ B ] term in the FDET expression for the total energy
and ii) the choice of the density ρ B (r) for which the FDET eigenvalue equation for the
embedded wave-function is solved. If ρ B is locally larger than the exact density of the
total system ρ AB , the difference ρ AB (r) − ρ B (r) (target density) cannot be obtained
from FDET. For an arbitrary choice for ρ B , FDET provides only the upper bound
of the exact energy. The relative significance of these two factors is investigated for
four representative weakly bound intermolecular clusters and various choices for ρ B .
It is shown that the violation of the non-negativity condition is the principal source
of error in the FDET energy if ρ B is the density of the isolated environment, i.e., is
generated without taking into account the interactions with the embedded species.
Reduction of both the magnitude of the violation of the non-negativity condition and
the error in the FDET energy can be pragmatically achieved by means of the explicit
treatment of the electronic polarisation of the environment.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Material
Description
A simple proof of the bounds for a parameter used in the manuscript.
Tables for numerical values present in Figures
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