Abstract
Benchmarks that span a broad swath of chemical space, such as GMTKN55, are very useful for assessing progress in the quest for more universal DFT functionals. We find that the WTMAD2 metrics for a great number of functionals show a clear “Jacob’s Ladder hierarchy”; that the “combinatorial” development strategy of Head-Gordon and coworkers generates “best on rung” performers; that the quality of the nonlocal dispersion correction becomes more important as functionals become more accurate for nondispersion properties; that fitting against small, unrepresentative benchmark sets leads to underperforming functionals; and that ωB97M(2) is currently the best DFT functional of any kind, but that revDSD-D4 functionals are able to reach similar performance using fewer parameters, and that revDOD-D4 in addition permits reduced-scaling algorithms. If one seeks a range-separated hybrid (RSH) GGA that also performs well for optical excitation energies, CAM-QTP-01 may be a viable option. The D4 dispersion model, with its partial charge dependence, appears to be clearly superior to D3BJ and even possibly NL. Should one require a double hybrid without dispersion model, noDispSD-SCAN is a viable option. Performance for the MOBH35 transition metal benchmark is different: the best double hybrids are competitive but not superior to ωB97M-V, which offers the best performance compromise for mixed main group-transition metal problems.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 030004 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Journal | AIP CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS |
Volume | 2186 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published Online - 10 Dec 2019 |