MP2-based composite extrapolation schemes can predict core-ionization energies for first-row elements with coupled-cluster level accuracy
Abstract
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measures core-electron binding energies (CEBEs) to reveal element-specific insights into chemical environment and bonding. Accurate theoretical CEBE prediction aids XPS interpretation but requires proper modeling of orbital relaxation and electron correlation upon core-ionization. This work systematically investigates basis set selection for extrapolation to the complete basis set (CBS) limit of CEBEs from 2 and energies across 94 K-edges in diverse organic molecules. We demonstrate that an alternative composite scheme using 2 in a large basis corrected by -2 difference in a small basis can quantitatively recover optimally extrapolated CEBEs within 0.02 eV. Unlike , MP2 calculations do not suffer from convergence issues and are computationally cheaper, and, thus, the composite 2/ scheme balances accuracy and cost, overcoming limitations of solely using either method. We conclude by providing a comprehensive analysis of the choice of small and large basis sets for the composite schemes and provide practical recommendations for highly accurate (within 0.10-0.15 eV MAE) ab initio prediction of XPS spectra.
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