Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.118, No.24, 6519-6525, 2014
Separate Electronic Attenuation Allowing a Spin-Component-Scaled Second-Order Moller-Plesset Theory to Be Effective for Both Thermocheniistry and Noncovalent Interactions
Spin-component-scaled (SCS) second-order Moller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2) improves the treatment of thermochemistry and noncovalent interactions relative to MP2, although the optimal scaling coefficients are quite different for thermochemistry versus noncovalent interactions. This work reconciles these two different scaling regimes for SCS-MP2 by using two different length scales for electronic attenuation of the two spin components. The attenuation parameters and scaling coefficients are optimized in the aug-cc-pVTZ (aTZ) basis using the S66 database of intermolecular interactions and the W4-11 database of thermochemistry. Transferability tests are performed for atomization energies and barrier heights, as well as on further test sets for inter- and intramolecular interactions. SCS dual-attenuated MP2 in the aTZ basis, SCS-MP2(2terfc, aTZ), performs similarly to SCS-MP2/aTZ for thermochemistry while frequently outperforming MP2 at the complete basis set limit (CBS) for nonbonded interactions.