Abstract

Many single-reference coupled cluster (CC) methods offer adiabatically incorrect potentials when calculating the diatomic carbon molecule, so this problem has been studied extensively. Analysis of the full configuration interaction (FCI) wave function indicates that the main cause of the adiabatic collapse of potentials calculated by the CC method with singles, doubles, and triples (CCSDT) is the strongly increasing bonding character of the T4FCI cluster contribution. In turn, comparative analysis of the CCSDTQ adiabats X1Σg+ and B'1Σg+ demonstrates that the gap between them near the avoided crossing geometry is significantly reduced by quantitatively differentiating the character of the T4 and cluster contributions. These observations clearly indicate the need to take into account the T4 cluster contribution in the standard CC wave function to obtain the correct adiabatic potential. Further analysis of this issue shows that the T4 contribution must be additionally bonding to ensure the adiabatic correctness of the potential. What also seems very interesting is that when the UCCSDecCCSD method [Toboła, Chem. Phys. Lett. 2014, 614, 82-88] is used for the potential calculation, the shape of the potential is entirely determined by a subset of unrestricted Hartree-Fock (UHF) configurations, which are structurally identical to the ground-state configuration in the UHF-based CCSD wave function.

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