Mol. Phys. 91, 145-160 (1997)
Multicentre multipole expansions allow to solve the
`shape' convergence problem arising in the calculation of long-range
interaction energies between large non-spherical molecules via point-multipole
expansions. In paper I of this series
(1996, Molec. Phys., 88 69) it has been shown that
this is the case for first-order electrostatic and second-order induction
energies when employing distributed multipole moments and static
polarizabilities generated from topological partitioning of the molecular
volume as provided by Bader's `atoms-in-molecules' theory.
Their generalization to frequency-dependent, topologically partitioned
polarizabilities is used in the present contribution to compare the
convergence behaviour of one-centre and multicentre multipole expansions
of the second-order dispersion energy for homonuclear dimers of the water,
carbon monoxide, cyanogen and urea molecules. The findings are similar to
those for the induction energy: the radial `extension' convergence
problem, which exists already for point-multipole expanded interaction energies
between atoms, necessarily persists, but the angular convergence problems
linked to the shape of interacting molecules can succesfully be treated
by multicentre multipole expansions of the dispersion energy.
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