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Atoms, molecules, solids, and surfaces: Applications of the generalized gradient approximation for exchange and correlation.

TLDR
A way is found to visualize and understand the nonlocality of exchange and correlation, its origins, and its physical effects as well as significant interconfigurational and interterm errors remain.
Abstract
Generalized gradient approximations (GGA's) seek to improve upon the accuracy of the local-spin-density (LSD) approximation in electronic-structure calculations. Perdew and Wang have developed a GGA based on real-space cutoff of the spurious long-range components of the second-order gradient expansion for the exchange-correlation hole. We have found that this density functional performs well in numerical tests for a variety of systems: (1) Total energies of 30 atoms are highly accurate. (2) Ionization energies and electron affinities are improved in a statistical sense, although significant interconfigurational and interterm errors remain. (3) Accurate atomization energies are found for seven hydrocarbon molecules, with a rms error per bond of 0.1 eV, compared with 0.7 eV for the LSD approximation and 2.4 eV for the Hartree-Fock approximation. (4) For atoms and molecules, there is a cancellation of error between density functionals for exchange and correlation, which is most striking whenever the Hartree-Fock result is furthest from experiment. (5) The surprising LSD underestimation of the lattice constants of Li and Na by 3--4 % is corrected, and the magnetic ground state of solid Fe is restored. (6) The work function, surface energy (neglecting the long-range contribution), and curvature energy of a metallic surface are all slightly reduced in comparison with LSD. Taking account of the positive long-range contribution, we find surface and curvature energies in good agreement with experimental or exact values. Finally, a way is found to visualize and understand the nonlocality of exchange and correlation, its origins, and its physical effects.

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Structure sensitivity of methanol electrooxidation on transition metals.

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Defect-assisted surface modification enhances the visible light photocatalytic performance of g-C3N4@C-TiO2 direct Z-scheme heterojunctions

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A flexible non-enzymatic glucose sensor based on copper nanoparticles anchored on laser-induced graphene

TL;DR: An enzyme-free glucose amperometric biosensor based on Cu nanoparticles anchored on laser-induced graphene (Cu NPs-LIG) composite is successfully developed by a simple substrate-assisted electroless deposition (SAED) technique as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

“Ab initio” synthesis of zeolites for preestablished catalytic reactions

TL;DR: This work presents a methodology for synthesizing active and selective zeolites by using organic structure-directing agents that mimic the transition state of preestablished reactions to be catalyzed, and synthesizes a catalyst for the isomerization of endo-dicyclopentane into adamantane.
Journal ArticleDOI

Control and manipulation of gold nanocatalysis: effects of metal oxide support thickness and composition.

TL;DR: Control and tunability of the catalytic oxidation of CO by gold clusters deposited on MgO surfaces grown on molybdenum, Mo(100), to various thicknesses are explored through temperature-programmed reaction measurements on mass-selected 20-atom gold clusters and via first-principles density functional theory calculations.
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