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I have a very very general question:

In DFT functional selection , mostly people speak about the most recent ones. For example my professor always asks: " which DFT Functional did you select ? " and if I say B3LYP, he says : " No ! that's too old ! " but if I answer: M06 , he says : " hmm ... sounds promising, that's a modern functional ".

I think it is too naive to select functionals just based on their chronologic sequence. I want to ask if there is any good and reliable criteria for functional selection. For example a criteria that says for an alkene with some specific characteristics, go for M06-L and for an alkane with other characteristics, use B97xxx family and so on..

Is there such a criteria ? I hope this topic can become a good guideline for future reference. !

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    $\begingroup$ DFT functionals usually contain constants, that were fitted for better reproductions of real-world data on some set of specific cases. For example, b3lyp is fitted using small molecules of light elements. Given that, the answer is simple: find source article for the functionals you can use in your package and choose one fitted for case similar enough for yours. $\endgroup$
    – permeakra
    Mar 14, 2015 at 18:09

4 Answers 4

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What's up with all that magic? (A chapter formerly known as Introduction)

The hunt for for the holy grail of density functional theory (DFT) has come a long way.[1] Becke states in the introduction of the cited paper:

Density-functional theory (DFT) is a subtle, seductive, provocative business. Its basic premise, that all the intricate motions and pair correlations in a many-electron system are somehow contained in the total electron density alone, is so compelling it can drive one mad.

I really like this description, it points out why we use and need DFT, and as it also points out the flaws, that every computational chemist has to deal with: How can something with such a simple approach be correct?
Something that is often forgotten about DFT is, that in principle it is correct. It's the implementations and approximations, that make it incorrect, but usable. Becke states this in the following quote:

Let us introduce the acronym DFA at this point for “density-functional approximation.” If you attend DFT meetings, you will know that Mel Levy often needs to remind us that DFT is exact. The failures we report at meetings and in papers are not failures of DFT, but failures of DFAs.

I sometimes here that the abbreviation DFT is often used in the wrong context, since we are not talking about the theory itself any more, but about the implementations and approximations of it. One suggestion I heard was, that it should rather be used as density functional technique.

With that in mind I would like to state, that I absolutely agree with the previous answer by user1420303 and it's subsequent comment by Geoff Hutchison. Since you asked for a somewhat more practical approach, I like to offer the advice I usually give to students new in the field.

Old is bad, isn't it?

Some of the functionals are now around for about thirty years. That does not make them bad, maybe even the opposite. It shows, that they are still applicable today, giving reasonable results. One of my personal favourites is the conjunction of Becke 1988 and Perdew 1986, often abbreviated as BP86.[2] It's a pure functional which is available most modern quantum chemical packages.[3] It performs usually well enough for geometries and reasonable well for energies for simple systems, i.e. small organic molecules and reactions.

The magical functional B3LYP was one of the first hybrid functionals, and it was introduced by Gaussian's very own developers.[4] A lot of people were surprised how well it worked and it quickly became one of the most popular functionals of all time. It combines Becke's three parameter functional B3[5] with Lee, Yang and Parr's correlation functional.[6] But why are we surprised it works? The answer is quite simple, it was not fitted to anything. Frish et. al. just reworked the B3PW91 functional to use LYP instead of PW91. As a result, it heavily suffers or benefits from error compensation. Some even go as far as to say: “It is right for the wrong reasons.”[7-9] Is it a bad choice? No. It might not be the best choice, but as long as you know what you are doing and you know it is not failing for your system, it is a reasonable choice.

One functional is enough, is it?

Now that we established, that old functionals are not out of fashion, we should establish something very, very important: One is never enough.

There are a few things, where it is appropriate to do most of the work with one functional, but in these cases the observations have to be validated with other methods. Often it is best to work your way up Jacob's ladder.[10]

How do I start?

It really depends on your system and what you are looking for. You are trying to elucidate a reaction mechanism? Start with something very simple, to gain structures, many structures. Reaction mechanisms are often about the quantity of the different conformers and later about suitable initial structures for transition states. As this can get complex very fast, it's best to keep it simple. Semi-empirical methods and force fields can often shorten a long voyage. Then use something more robust for a first approach to energy barriers. I rely on BP86 for most of the heavy computing. As a modern alternative, another pure density functional, M06-L is quite a good choice, too.[11] Some of the popular quantum chemistry suites let you use density fitting procedures, which allow you to get even more out of the computer. Just to name a few, without any particular order: Gaussian, MolPro, Turbomole.
After you have developed a decent understanding of the various structures you obtained, you would probably want to take it up a notch. Now it really depends on what equipment you have at hand. How much can you afford? Ideally, more is better. At least you should check your results with a pure, a hybrid, and a meta-hybrid functional. But even that can sometimes be a stretch.[12]

If you are doing bonding analysis, elucidation of the electronic structure, conformation analysis, or you want to know more about the spectrum, you should try to use at least five different functionals, which you later also check versus ab initio approaches. Most of the times you do not have the hassle to deal with hundreds of structures, so you should focus of getting the most accurate result. As a starting point I would still use a pure functional, the worst thing that could happen is probably, that is reduces the times of subsequent optimisations. Work your way up Jacob's ladder, do what you can, take it to the max.[13]
But of course, keep in mind, that some functionals were designed for a specific purpose. You can see that in the Minnesota family of functionals. The basic one is M06-L, as previously stated a pure functional, with the sole purpose of giving fast results. M06 is probably the most robust functional in this family. It was designed for a wide range of applications and is best chosen when dealing with transition metals. M06-2X is designed for main group chemistry. It comes with somewhat built in non-covalent interactions and other features. This functional (like most other though) will fail horribly, if you have multi-reference character in your system. The M06-HF functional incorporates 100% Hartree-Fock exchange and was designed to accurately calculate time dependent DFT properties and spectra. It should be a good choice for charge transfer systems. See the original publication for a more detailed description.[14]
Then we have another popular functional: PBE.[15a] In this initial publication an exchange as well as a correlation functional was proposed, both pure density functionals, often used in conjunction.[15b] I don't know much about it's usefulness, since I prefer another quite robust variation of it: PBE0, which is a hybrid functional.[15c,d] Because of its adiabatic connection formula, it is described by the authors as a non-empirical hybrid functional.[15d]
Over the years there have been various developments, some of the are called improvement, but it often boils down to personal taste and applicability. For example, Handy and Cohen reintroduced the concept of left-right correlation into their OPTX functional and subsequently used it in combination with LYP, P86 and P91. Aparently, they work well and are now often used also as a reference for other density functionals. They went on and developed a functional analogous to B3LYP but outperforming it.[16]
But these were obviously not the only attempts. Xu and Goddard III extended the B3LYP scheme to include long range effects. They claim a good description of dipole moments, polarizabilities and accurate excitation energies.[17]
And with the last part in mind, it is also necessary to address long range corrections. Sometimes a system cannot be described accurately without them, sometimes they make the description worse. To name only one, CAM-B3LYP, which uses the coulomb attenuating method.[18] And there are a couple of more, and a couple of more to come, head on over to a similar question: What do short-range and long-range corrections mean in DFT methods?

As you can see, there is no universal choice, it depends on your budget and on the properties you are interested in. There are a couple of theoretical/ computational chemists on this platform. I like BP86 as a quick shot and answer questions relating to MO theory with it, shameless self-promotion: Rationalizing the Planarity of Formamide or Rationalising the order of reactivity of carbonyl compounds towards nucleophiles. And sometimes we have overachievers like LordStryker, that use a whole bunch of methods to make a point: Dipole moment of cis-2-butene.

So I picked a functional, what else?

You still have to pick a basis set. And even here you have to pick one that fits what you need. Since this answer is already way longer than I intended in the first place (Procrastination, yay!), I will keep it short(er).

There are a couple of universally applicable basis sets. The most famous is probably 6-31G*. This is a nice ancient basis set that is often used for its elegance and simplicity. Explaining how it was built is easier, than for other basis sets. I personally prefer the Ahlrichs basis set def2-SVP, as it comes with a pre-defined auxiliary basis set suitable for density fitting (even in Gaussian).[19]

Worth mentioning is the Dunning basis set family cc-pVDZ, cc-pVTZ, ... . They were specifically designed to be used in correlated molecular calculations. They have been reworked and improved after its initial publication, to fit them to modern computational standards.[20]

The range of suitable basis sets is large, most of them are available through the basis set exchange portal for a variety of QC programs.

Sometimes an effective core potential can be used to reduce computational cost and is worth considering.

*Sigh* What else?

When you are done with that, consider dispersion corrections. The easiest way is to pick a functional that has already implemented this, but this is quite dependent on the program of you choice (although the main ones should have this by now, it's not something brand new). However, the standalone DFT-D3 program by Stefan Grimme's group can be obtained from his website.[21]

Still reading? Read more! (A chapter formerly known as Notes and References)

  1. Axel D. Becke, J. Chem. Phys., 2014, 140, 18A301.
  2. (a) A. D. Becke, Phys. Rev. A, 1988, 38, 3098-3100. (b) John P. Perdew, Phys. Rev. B, 1986, 33, 8822-8824.
  3. Unfortunately this functional is not always implemented in the same way, although the differences are pretty small. It basically boils down as to which VWN variation is used in the local spin density approximation term. Also see S. H. Vosko, L. Wilk, and M. Nusair, Can. J. Phys., 1980, 58 (8), 1200-1211.
  4. P. J. Stephens, F. J. Devlin, C. F. Chabalowski, and M. J. Frisch, J. Phys. Chem., 1994, 98 (45), 11623–11627.
  5. Axel D. Becke, J. Chem. Phys., 1993, 93, 5648.
  6. C. Lee, W. Yang, and R. G. Parr, Phys. Rev. B, 1988, 37, 785–789
  7. Unfortunately the B3LYP functional suffers from the same problems that are mentioned in [3].
  8. The failures of B3LYP are known and often well documented. Here are a few recent papers, but there are many, many more. (a) Holger Kruse, Lars Goerigk, and Stefan Grimme, J. Org. Chem., 2012, 77 (23), 10824–10834. (b) Joachim Paier, Martijn Marsman and Georg Kresse, J. Chem. Phys., 2007, 127, 024103. (c) Igor Ying Zhang, Jianming Wu and Xin Xu, Chem. Commun., 2010, 46, 3057-3070. (pdf via researchgate.net)
  9. Just my two cents, that I am hiding in the footnotes: “Pretty please do not make this your first choice.”
  10. John P. Perdew and Karla Schmidt, AIP Conf. Proc., 2001, 577, 1. (pdf via molphys.org)
  11. Yan Zhao and Donald G. Truhlar, J. Chem. Phys., 2006, 125, 194101.
  12. Note, that not always full recomputations of geometries are necessary for all different functionals you apply. Often single point energies can tell you quite much how good your original model performs. Keep the computations to what you can afford.
  13. Don't use an overkill of methods, if you already have five functionals agreeing with each other and possibly with an MP2 calculation, you are pretty much done. What can the use of another five functionals tell you more?
  14. Y. Zhao, N.E. Schultz, and D.G. Truhlar, Theor. Chem. Account, 2008, 120, 215–241.
  15. (a) John P. Perdew, Kieron Burke, and Matthias Ernzerhof, Phys. Rev. Lett., 1996, 77, 3865. (b) The exchange functional was revised in Matthias Ernzerhof and John P. Perdew, J. Chem. Phys., 1998, 109, 3313. (c) Carlo Adamo and Vincenzo Barone, J. Chem. Phys., 1999, 110, 6158. (d) Kieron Burke, Matthias Ernzerhof, and John P. Perdew, Chem. Phys. Lett., 1997, 265, 115-120.
  16. (a) N. C. Handy and A. J. Cohen, Mol. Phys., 2001, 99, 403-12. (b) A. J. Cohen and N. C. Handy, Mol. Phys., 2001, 99 607-15.
  17. X. Xu and W. A. Goddard III, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 2004, 101, 2673-77.
  18. T. Yanai, D. P. Tew, and N. C. Handy, Chem. Phys. Lett., 2004, 393, 51-57.
  19. (a) Florian Weigend and Reinhart Ahlrichs, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2005, 7, 3297-3305. (b) Florian Weigend, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2006, 8, 1057-1065.
  20. The point where the use of more basis functions does not effect the calculation. For the correlation consistent basis sets, see a comment by Ernest R. Davidson, Chem. Phys. Rev., 1996, 260, 514-518 and references therein. Also see Thom H. Dunning Jr, J. Chem. Phys., 1989, 90, 1007 as the original source.
  21. DFT-D3 Website; Stefan Grimme, Jens Antony, Stephan Ehrlich, and Helge Krieg, J. Chem. Phys., 2010, 132, 154104.
  22. Have fun and good luck!
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    $\begingroup$ @Martin Very informative answer. I also prefere Ahlrichs def2 family :) . As a personal opinion, I would always try to avoid the Dunning basis set when feasible. Only use them for special cases where auxiliary basis sets are not available for other basis set families. "Still reading? Read more!" $\endgroup$ Mar 16, 2015 at 22:00
  • $\begingroup$ Beautiful review, but PBE is pure functional, not a hybrid one. It was made into made into a hybrid PBE0 by Adamo. $\endgroup$
    – Wildcat
    May 17, 2015 at 21:36
  • $\begingroup$ @Wildcat Thank you very much, for the compliment and correction. Indeed I was already thinking about PBE0, I hope the edit clarified it now. $\endgroup$ May 18, 2015 at 4:42
  • $\begingroup$ Point number 22 is very important :) Thanks for the answer @Martin-マーチン ! $\endgroup$
    – Sufyan
    Sep 17, 2021 at 11:38
  • $\begingroup$ There's now also a thorough article from Grimme et. al on this: doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-n304h $\endgroup$ Apr 26, 2022 at 14:16
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There are many criteria that you can follow to choose a functional, in no special order:

  • Availability: Do you have access to a software package in which the functional is implemented? If yes, are analytic derivatives also implemented? Do you need extra dispersion corrections? Are they available?

  • Computational cost: Functionals in different steps of "Jacob's ladder" (pure, hybrids, double-hybrid) scale in different way with system size (N^3,N^4,N^5).

  • Accuracy of the functional for the property that you want to calculate.

Of course it is not a good idea to select a functional based in a chronological sequence. It is true that newer functionals tend to be more accurate that old ones. BUT, it is not always the case, there are very new functionals that have high theoretical interest, but lacks of outstanding performance.

¿What about B3LYP? It is true that the 'magical functional' is not the best performer today, but it is widely accepted, no one will complain about its usage. For most applications, it is very good for geometry optimization in my opinion.

There is not a simple recipe, the best you can do is just compare the results of many functionals in many test sets. Look at the test set designed to test the properties that you need to predict.

In short, till today, for almost any application you will be ok if just read the results of this paper:
Lars Goerigk and Stefan Grimme, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 6670-6688. (DOI: 10.1039/C0CP02984J)

There are too few functionals out there in which you can be interested

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    $\begingroup$ +10. Excellent response. I think the one caveat I'd add is for "accuracy" since different functionals are designed for different properties. So if you want an accurate functional for intermolecular interactions, it might be different than one for transition state barriers. $\endgroup$ Mar 14, 2015 at 18:01
  • $\begingroup$ This answer really helps but I am looking for something more structured and practical ( as what is in here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnesota_Functionals ) that's why I decided to put a bounty . $\endgroup$
    – Aug
    Mar 16, 2015 at 5:33
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    $\begingroup$ I agree with what you said, except the part with the B3LYP functional, I would always complain about that, but that is because the magical functional is also the lazy functional. $\endgroup$ Mar 16, 2015 at 6:06
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    $\begingroup$ I have been a busy bee and obsessively compiled my two cents, not particularly to answer your comment, that was just a side effect.|| @LordStryker In what cases don't you need another functional ;) $\endgroup$ Mar 16, 2015 at 14:22
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    $\begingroup$ @Martin Going by what I see published in something like "Journal of Medicinal Chemistry", some people think that you don't need anything other than Hartree-Fock. $\endgroup$ Mar 16, 2015 at 14:37
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In addition to the good answers that have already been given, it is important to note that for DFT to be properly implemented, you must calibrate the functional(s) to whatever it is you are examining. While this is idealistic, it is far from common practice.

Calibrating is very tedious and time intensive than just running with a single functional. For instance, when examining systems with large dispersion components to say, an intermolecular interaction, a slew of 13 DFT functionals (and corresponding variants) were tested to find qualitative agreement against a variety of computed properties (nature of the stationary point, binding energy, geometry, etc.) and compared against the MP2 wavefunction method (see: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp502588h). Some functionals were clearly underperforming while quite a few functionals were in very good (qualitative) agreement amongst each other as well as MP2. This is one approach you can use to validate your choice of functional.

You have to be careful about promoting one functional over another based on this type of analysis alone if experimental results are not available (or some previous calibration study) as was the case in this paper. Experimental values were available for formaldehyde dimer but not for any of the sulfur containing systems. The computational methods were validated by producing numbers that agree with experiment and extended to the sulfur containing systems. But this does not mean that you will get the same performance on these novel systems. In this case, more rigorous examinations are required and the authors of this paper state that future work include implementing the CCSD(T) level of theory to verify not only the MP2 results but also the functionals used.

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Short answer: No.

Long answer: There are too many different ways to categorize the myriad conceivable chemical species, and too many properties of potential interest, for such a 'lookup database' of functionals to be feasible.

Numerous theoretical chemists are actively engaged in benchmarking of functionals for their performance in predicting particular properties of particular sets of related compounds; searching the literature for benchmark studies pertinent to the system/property you wish to examine is likely the best course of action.

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