Abstract

SCF-CI calculations have been performed on a number of chemical reactions between closed shell molecules in order to determine the heats of reaction. Contracted Gaussian type atomic basis sets of three different qualities were used and the CI calculations were performed in a truncated approximate natural orbital space. The conclusions to be drawn from these calculations are rather pessimistic. For heats of reaction, errors up to 6 kcal/mole are obtained on the SCF-level with a double zeta plus polarization atomic basis. A further improvement is only possible if extended basis sets are used. Correlation effects on heats of reaction are of the same size and CI calculations are therefore only meaningful with large atomic basis sets. For the CI calculations a one-electron space of approximate natural orbitals, obtained from second order RS perturbation theory, was used. Different truncations, using the occupation number as criterion, were tested. The general conclusion is that errors in energy differences obtained with a truncated basis set are of the same magnitude as the error in the total correlation energy. In practice this means that not more than 20–30% of the approximate natural orbitals can be deleted if the error is to be kept less than a few kcal/mole. Finally the truncation error in calculations of bond distances was tested for a few cases. Errors of around 10% of the total change due to correlation were found when 30% of the lowest occupied natural orbitals were deleted.

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