Abstract

Transition states for Diels-Alder reactions are strongly correlated, as evidenced by high-to-very-high M diagnostics, and therefore they require treatment by multireference methods. Multiconfiguration pair-density functional theory (MC-PDFT) combines a multiconfiguration wave function with a functional of the electron density and the on-top pair density to calculate the electronic energy for strongly correlated systems at a much lower cost than wave function methods that do not employ density functionals. Here we apply MC-PDFT to the Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction of 1,3-butadiene with ethylene, where two kinds of reaction paths have been widely studied: concerted synchronous paths and diradical stepwise paths. The lowest-energy reaction path is now known to be a concerted synchronous one, and a method's ability to predict this is an important test. By comparison to the best available theoretical results in the literature, we test the accuracy of MC-PDFT with several choices of on-top functional for geometries and enthalpies of stable structures along both paths and for the transition state geometries. We also calculate the Arrhenius activation energies for both paths and compare these to experiment. We also compare to Kohn-Sham density functional theory (KS-DFT) with selected exchange-correlation functionals. CAS-PDFT gives consistently good energies and geometries for both the concerted and stepwise mechanisms, but none of the KS-DFT functionals gives accurate activation energies for both. The stepwise transition state is very strongly correlated, and MC-PDFT can treat it, but KS-DFT (which involves a single-configuration treatment) has larger errors. The results confirm that using a multiconfigurational reference function for strongly correlated transition states can significantly improve the reliability and that MC-PDFT can provide good accuracy at a much lower computational cost than competing multireference methods.

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