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The difficulty of widely used density functionals in describing the dissociation behavior of some homonuclear and heteronuclear diatomic radicals is analyzed. It is shown that the self-interaction error of these functionals accounts for the problem—it is much larger for a system with a noninteger number of electrons than a system with an integer number of electrons. We find the condition for the erroneous dissociation behavior described by approximate density functionals: when the ionization energy of one dissociation partner differs from the electron affinity of the other partner by a small amount, the self-interaction error will lead to wrong dissociation limit. Systems with a noninteger number of electrons and hence the large amount of self-interaction error in approximate density functionals arise also in the transition states of some chemical reactions and in some charge-transfer complexes. In the course of analysis, we derive a scaling relation necessary for an exchange-correlation functional to be self-interaction free.
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Yingkai Zhang
New York University Shanghai
Weitao Yang
Brigham Young University
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Duke University
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Zhang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a09e58887ad1657d251d020 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.476859
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