Revisiting the Half-and-Half Functional

04 March 2025, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Hybrid density functionals typically provide significantly better accuracy than semilocal functionals, but conventional wisdom holds that incorporating more than 20–25% exact exchange is deleterious to thermochemical properties and should be used only as a last resort, for problems that are dominated by self-interaction error. In such cases, the Becke-Lee-Yang-Parr "half-and-half" functional (BH&H-LYP) has emerged as a go-to choice, especially in time-dependent density functional theory calculations for excitation energies. Here, we examine the assumption that 50% exact exchange sacrifices thermochemical accuracy, using a sequence of functionals B(alpha)LYP with different percentages of exact exchange, 0 <= alpha <= 100. We find that alpha = 50, corresponding to BH&H-LYP, is nearly optimal and affords accuracy similar to B3LYP for thermochemistry, barrier heights, and excitation energies. Although atomization energies are significantly less accurate with 50% Hartree-Fock exchange, this emerges as the sole rationale for the taboo against values alpha > 25. Overall, BH&H-LYP emerges as a reasonable choice for problems that are dominated by self-interaction error, including charge-transfer complexes and core-level excitation energies. While B3LYP remains more accurate for valence excitation energies, the use of 50% exact exchange appears to be an acceptable compromise and BH&H-LYP can be used without excessive concern over its diminished accuracy for ground-state properties.

Keywords

DFT
benchmarking
self-interaction error
time-dependent DFT
thermochemistry

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Information
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Additional statistical analysis and benchmark data.
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