Abstract
We investigate the use of density matrix embedding theory to facilitate the computation of core ionization energies (IP) of large molecules at the equation of motion
coupled-cluster singles doubles with perturbative triples (EOM-CCSD*) level in combination with the core-valence separation (CVS) approximation. The unembedded
IP-CVS-EOM-CCSD* method with a triple-ζ basis set produces ionization energies
within < 1 eV of experiment with a standard deviation of about 0.2 eV for the core65
dataset. The embedded variant contributes very little systematic error relative to the
unembedded method, with a mean unsigned error of 0.07 eV and a standard deviation
of about 0.1 eV, in exchange for accelerating the calculations by many orders of magnitude. By employing embedded EOM-CC methods, we computed the core-ionization
energies of uracil-hexamer, doped fullerene, and chlorophyll molecule, utilizing up to
∼4000 basis functions within < 1 eV from experimental values. Such calculations are
not currently possible with unembedded EOM-CC method.
Supplementary materials
Title
SI-1
Description
Contain the geometries of molecules used in the main text.
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Title
SI-2
Description
Contains the additional data of the tables and figures used in main text.
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