Quasi-Relativistic Calculation of EPR g-Tensors with Derivatives of the Decoupling Transformation, Gauge-Including Atomic Orbitals, and Magnetic Balance

22 November 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

We present an exact two-component (X2C) ansatz for the EPR g-tensor using gauge-including atomic orbitals (GIAOs) and a magnetically balanced basis set expansion. In contrast to previous X2C and "fully" relativistic ansätze for the g-tensor, this implementation results in a gauge-origin invariant formalism. Furthermore, the derivatives of the relativistic decoupling matrix are considered to form the complete analytical derivative of the X2C Hamiltonian. To reduce the associated computational costs, we apply the diagonal local approximation to the unitary decoupling transformation (DLU) and the (multipole-accelerated) resolution of the identity approximation. The X2C ansatz is compared to Douglas-Kroll-Hess theory and the zeroth-order regular approximation for 11 diatomic molecules. The impact of the relativistic Hamiltonian, the basis set, and the density functional approximation is subsequently assessed for a set of 17 transition-metal complexes to complement our previous work on the hyperfine coupling constant [DOI: 10.33774/chemrxiv-2021-wnz1v-v2]. In total, 24 basis sets and 22 density functional approximations are considered. The quasi-relativistic X2C and DLU-X2C Hamiltonians accurately reproduce the results of the parent "fully" relativistic four-component theory when accounting for two-electron picture-change effects with the modified screened nuclear spin-orbit approximation in the respective one-electron integrals and integral derivatives. Generally, the uncontracted Dyall and segmented-contracted Karlsruhe x2c-type basis sets perform well when compared to large even-tempered basis sets. Moreover, (range-separated) hybrid density functional approximations are needed to match the experimental findings. Here, hybrids based on the meta -generalized gradient approximation are not an a priori improvement. Compared to the other computational parameters, the impact of the GIAOs and the magnetic balance on the actual results in standard calculations is less pronounced. Routine calculations of large molecules are possible with widely available and comparably low- cost hardware as demonstrated for [Pt(C6Cl5)4]− with 3360 basis functions and three spin-(1/2) La(II) and Lu(II) compounds. Both approaches based on a common gauge origin and GIAOs using triple- ζ basis sets lead to a good agreement with the experimental findings. The best agreement is found with hybrid functionals such as PBE0 and ωB97X-D.

Keywords

EPR
Lanthanide
Density Functional Theory
Gaussian Basis Set
Relativistic Effects
Gauge-Including Atomic Orbitals
Dirac Equation
Exact Two-Component Theory
pNMR

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Information
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Supporting Information is available • Further studies on the relativistic Hamiltonian, the basis set, density functional approximation, and the impact of the structure for the set of diatomic molecules in Sec. 5 • Comparison of the SNSO and mSNSO approximation to the one-electron X2C ansatz without corrections for Sec. 6.1 • Results and assessment of DLU error for the Sapporo basis sets featuring diffuse functions for Sec. 6.1 • Individual results for the basis set study in Sec. 6.2 (PDF) • Individual results for the DFT study in Sec. 6.3 • Results for the lanthanide compounds of Sec. 7 with the x2c-QZVPall-2c basis set • Application of the g-tensor and HFC implementation to calculate the temperature-dependent terms for pNMR shielding constants as outlined in Sec. A.3
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x2c-SVPall-2c-s
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Uncontracted x2c-type basis sets for Sec. 6.2, i.e. x2c-SVPall-2c-s
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x2c-TZVPall-2c-s
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Uncontracted x2c-type basis sets for Sec. 6.2, i.e. x2c-TZVPall-2c-s
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