On the structure of Si(100) surface: importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer

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Standard

On the structure of Si(100) surface : importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer. / Back, Seoin; Schmidt, Johan Albrecht; Ji, Hyunjun; Heo, Jiyoung; Shao, Yihan; Jung, Yousung.

In: Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol. 138, No. 20, 2013.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Back, S, Schmidt, JA, Ji, H, Heo, J, Shao, Y & Jung, Y 2013, 'On the structure of Si(100) surface: importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer', Journal of Chemical Physics, vol. 138, no. 20. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4807334

APA

Back, S., Schmidt, J. A., Ji, H., Heo, J., Shao, Y., & Jung, Y. (2013). On the structure of Si(100) surface: importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer. Journal of Chemical Physics, 138(20). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4807334

Vancouver

Back S, Schmidt JA, Ji H, Heo J, Shao Y, Jung Y. On the structure of Si(100) surface: importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer. Journal of Chemical Physics. 2013;138(20). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4807334

Author

Back, Seoin ; Schmidt, Johan Albrecht ; Ji, Hyunjun ; Heo, Jiyoung ; Shao, Yihan ; Jung, Yousung. / On the structure of Si(100) surface : importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer. In: Journal of Chemical Physics. 2013 ; Vol. 138, No. 20.

Bibtex

@article{5dce80bd2aea4abfb0490d284ebb4641,
title = "On the structure of Si(100) surface: importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer",
abstract = "We revisit a dangling theoretical question of whether the surface reconstruction of the Si(100) surface would energetically favor the symmetric or buckled dimers on the intrinsic potential energy surfaces at 0 K. This seemingly simple question is still unanswered definitively since all existing density functional based calculations predict the dimers to be buckled, while most wavefunction based correlated treatments prefer the symmetric configurations. Here, we use the doubly hybrid density functional (DHDF) geometry optimizations, in particular, XYGJ-OS, complete active space self-consistent field theory, multi-reference perturbation theory, multi-reference configuration interaction (MRCI), MRCI with the Davidson correction (MRCI + Q), multi-reference average quadratic CC (MRAQCC), and multi-reference average coupled pair functional (MRACPF) methods to address this question. The symmetric dimers are still shown to be lower in energy than the buckled dimers when using the CASPT2 method on the DHDF optimized geometries, consistent with the previous results using B3LYP geometries [Y. Jung, Y. Shao, M. S. Gordon, D. J. Doren, and M. Head-Gordon, J. Chem. Phys. 119, 10917 (2003)]. Interestingly, however, the MRCI + Q, MRAQCC, and MRACPF results (which give a more refined description of electron correlation effects) suggest that the buckled dimer is marginally more stable than its symmetric counterpart. The present study underlines the significance of having an accurate description of the electron-electron correlation as well as proper multireference wave functions when exploring the extremely delicate potential energy surfaces of the reconstructed Si(100) surface. (C) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC.",
author = "Seoin Back and Schmidt, {Johan Albrecht} and Hyunjun Ji and Jiyoung Heo and Yihan Shao and Yousung Jung",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1063/1.4807334",
language = "English",
volume = "138",
journal = "The Journal of Chemical Physics",
issn = "0021-9606",
publisher = "American Institute of Physics",
number = "20",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - On the structure of Si(100) surface

T2 - importance of higher order correlations for buckled dimer

AU - Back, Seoin

AU - Schmidt, Johan Albrecht

AU - Ji, Hyunjun

AU - Heo, Jiyoung

AU - Shao, Yihan

AU - Jung, Yousung

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We revisit a dangling theoretical question of whether the surface reconstruction of the Si(100) surface would energetically favor the symmetric or buckled dimers on the intrinsic potential energy surfaces at 0 K. This seemingly simple question is still unanswered definitively since all existing density functional based calculations predict the dimers to be buckled, while most wavefunction based correlated treatments prefer the symmetric configurations. Here, we use the doubly hybrid density functional (DHDF) geometry optimizations, in particular, XYGJ-OS, complete active space self-consistent field theory, multi-reference perturbation theory, multi-reference configuration interaction (MRCI), MRCI with the Davidson correction (MRCI + Q), multi-reference average quadratic CC (MRAQCC), and multi-reference average coupled pair functional (MRACPF) methods to address this question. The symmetric dimers are still shown to be lower in energy than the buckled dimers when using the CASPT2 method on the DHDF optimized geometries, consistent with the previous results using B3LYP geometries [Y. Jung, Y. Shao, M. S. Gordon, D. J. Doren, and M. Head-Gordon, J. Chem. Phys. 119, 10917 (2003)]. Interestingly, however, the MRCI + Q, MRAQCC, and MRACPF results (which give a more refined description of electron correlation effects) suggest that the buckled dimer is marginally more stable than its symmetric counterpart. The present study underlines the significance of having an accurate description of the electron-electron correlation as well as proper multireference wave functions when exploring the extremely delicate potential energy surfaces of the reconstructed Si(100) surface. (C) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC.

AB - We revisit a dangling theoretical question of whether the surface reconstruction of the Si(100) surface would energetically favor the symmetric or buckled dimers on the intrinsic potential energy surfaces at 0 K. This seemingly simple question is still unanswered definitively since all existing density functional based calculations predict the dimers to be buckled, while most wavefunction based correlated treatments prefer the symmetric configurations. Here, we use the doubly hybrid density functional (DHDF) geometry optimizations, in particular, XYGJ-OS, complete active space self-consistent field theory, multi-reference perturbation theory, multi-reference configuration interaction (MRCI), MRCI with the Davidson correction (MRCI + Q), multi-reference average quadratic CC (MRAQCC), and multi-reference average coupled pair functional (MRACPF) methods to address this question. The symmetric dimers are still shown to be lower in energy than the buckled dimers when using the CASPT2 method on the DHDF optimized geometries, consistent with the previous results using B3LYP geometries [Y. Jung, Y. Shao, M. S. Gordon, D. J. Doren, and M. Head-Gordon, J. Chem. Phys. 119, 10917 (2003)]. Interestingly, however, the MRCI + Q, MRAQCC, and MRACPF results (which give a more refined description of electron correlation effects) suggest that the buckled dimer is marginally more stable than its symmetric counterpart. The present study underlines the significance of having an accurate description of the electron-electron correlation as well as proper multireference wave functions when exploring the extremely delicate potential energy surfaces of the reconstructed Si(100) surface. (C) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC.

U2 - 10.1063/1.4807334

DO - 10.1063/1.4807334

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23742502

VL - 138

JO - The Journal of Chemical Physics

JF - The Journal of Chemical Physics

SN - 0021-9606

IS - 20

ER -

ID: 117983531