Abstract

Density-corrected (DC) density functional theory (DFT) has been proposed to overcome difficulties related to the self-interaction error. The procedure uses the Hartree-Fock electron density (matrix) non-self-consistently in conjunction with an approximate functional. DC-DFT has so far mainly been tested for total energy differences, whereas other types of molecular properties have not been evaluated systematically. This work focuses on the performance of DC-DFT for molecular properties, namely, dipole moments, static polarizabilities, and electric field gradients (EFGs) at atomic nuclei. Accurate reference data were generated from coupled-cluster theory to assess the performance of DC and self-consistent DFT calculations for twelve molecules, including diatomics with transition metals. DC-DFT does no harm in dipole moment calculations, but it negatively impacts the polarizability in at least one case. DC-DFT performs well for EFGs, even for the difficult case of CuCl.

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