Challenges for density functional theory in simulating metal-metal singlet bonding: a case study of dimerized VO2
Yubo Zhang, Da Ke, Junxiong Wu, Chutong Zhang, Baichen Lin, Zuhuang, Chen, John P. Perdew, Jianwei Sun

TL;DR
This paper investigates the limitations of density functional theory in accurately modeling the complex structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of VO2's phase transition, highlighting the challenges in simulating metal-metal singlet bonds.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that common DFT functionals fail to predict V-V dimer lengths accurately and reveals the inherent difficulties in simulating VO2's phase transition using DFT methods.
Findings
DFT functionals do not accurately predict V-V dimer length
Spin-restricted DFT overestimates V-V bond strength
Spin-symmetry-breaking DFT underestimates V-V bond strength
Abstract
VO2 is renowned for its electric transition from an insulating monoclinic (M1) phase characterized by V-V dimerized structures, to a metallic rutile (R) phase above 340 Kelvin. This transition is accompanied by a magnetic change: the M1 phase exhibits a non-magnetic spin-singlet state, while the R phase exhibits a state with local magnetic moments. Simultaneous simulation of the structural, electric, and magnetic properties of this compound is of fundamental importance, but the M1 phase alone has posed a significant challenge to density functional theory (DFT). In this study, we show none of the commonly used DFT functionals, including those combined with on-site Hubbard U to better treat 3d electrons, can accurately predict the V-V dimer length. The spin-restricted method tends to overestimate the strength of the V-V bonds, resulting in a small V-V bond length. Conversely, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTransition Metal Oxide Nanomaterials · Ga2O3 and related materials · Catalysis and Oxidation Reactions
