Abstract
An efficient fragment-based approach for predicting the ground-state energies and structures of large molecules at the Hartree−Fock (HF) and post-HF levels is described. The physical foundation of this approach is attributed to the “quantum locality” of the electron correlation energy and the HF total energy, which is revealed by a new energy decomposition analysis of the HF total energy proposed in this work. This approach is based on the molecular fractionation with conjugated caps (MFCC) scheme (Zhang, D. W.; Zhang, J. Z. H. J. Chem. Phys.2003, 119, 3599), by which a macromolecule is partitioned into various capped fragments and conjugated caps formed by two adjacent caps. We find that the MFCC scheme, if corrected by the interaction between non-neighboring fragments, can be used to predict the total energy of large molecules only from energy calculations on a series of small subsystems. The approach, named as energy-corrected MFCC (EC-MFCC), computationally achieves linear scaling with the molecular size. Our test calculations on a broad range of medium- and large molecules demonstrate that this approach is able to reproduce the conventional HF and second-order Møller−Plesset perturbation theory (MP2) energies within a few millihartree in most cases. With the EC-MFCC optimization algorithm described in this work, we have obtained the optimized structures of long oligomers of trans-polyacetylene and BN nanotubes with up to about 400 atoms, which are beyond the reach of traditional computational methods. In addition, the EC-MFCC approach is also applied to estimate the heats of formation for a series of organic compounds. This approach provides an appealing approach alternative to the traditional additivity rules based on either bond or group contributions for the estimation of thermochemical properties.