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arxiv: 2603.23761 · v3 · pith:PFI2WFTRnew · submitted 2026-03-24 · ⚛️ physics.chem-ph

Application of the aperiodic defect model to a negatively charged monovacancy in phosphorene

Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 10:08 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.chem-ph
keywords aperiodic defect modelphosphorenemonovacancyformation energyCCSD(T)EOM-CCSDdefects in 2D materials
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The pith

The aperiodic defect model computes a formation energy of 0.81 eV for the negatively charged monovacancy in phosphorene.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper applies the aperiodic defect model to a negatively charged monovacancy in a phosphorene monolayer. The model embeds a single defect in the true non-defective crystalline mean field, avoiding spurious defect-defect interactions and charge corrections that arise in conventional supercell calculations. This embedding reduces the problem to a molecular fragment, which permits the direct use of high-level quantum chemistry methods such as CCSD(T). Converging the Hartree-Fock and correlation parts to the thermodynamic limit produces a benchmark formation energy of 0.81 eV together with an excitation energy of 1.95 eV. Readers care because these numbers supply reliable references for how charged defects influence the stability and electronic properties of two-dimensional materials.

Core claim

Converging the Hartree-Fock and correlation contributions to the thermodynamic limit yields a benchmark CCSD(T)/POB-TZVP-rev2 formation energy of 0.81 eV for the negatively charged monovacancy in the (5|9) configuration. The excitation energy to the lowest singlet excited state of this defect at the EOM-CCSD/POB-TZVP-rev2 level is found to be 1.95 eV. The ADM provides a highly promising route towards quantitatively accurate and systematically improvable descriptions of defects in solids and on surfaces.

What carries the argument

The aperiodic defect model, which embeds a single defect in the true non-defective crystalline mean field, thereby eliminating spurious defect-defect interactions and charge corrections while permitting reduction to a molecular fragment for high-level calculations.

If this is right

  • Delivers a converged formation energy benchmark of 0.81 eV without requiring charge corrections.
  • Enables application of CCSD(T) and similar molecular methods to periodic defect problems via fragment reduction.
  • Yields an excitation energy of 1.95 eV for the lowest singlet state of the charged vacancy.
  • Bridges solid-state periodic calculations with molecular quantum chemistry for improved quantitative accuracy.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same embedding strategy could be tested on neutral vacancies or on other two-dimensional materials to check transferability.
  • Combining the model with larger basis sets or higher-level correlation methods would further tighten the benchmark values.
  • Accurate defect formation and excitation energies can help interpret spectroscopic signals observed in phosphorene samples.

Load-bearing premise

The aperiodic defect model correctly embeds a single defect in the true non-defective crystalline mean field without introducing artifacts from the embedding procedure.

What would settle it

A converged large-supercell calculation that includes proper charge corrections or a direct experimental measurement of the formation energy that differs substantially from 0.81 eV would challenge the benchmark value.

read the original abstract

We apply the recently introduced aperiodic defect model (ADM) to a negatively charged monovacancy in a phosphorene monolayer. In contrast to conventional supercell approaches, the ADM treats a single defect embedded in the true non-defective crystalline mean field thereby avoiding spurious defect-defect interactions and the need for charge corrections. At the same time, it effectively reduces the calculation to a fragment, enabling the use of high-level molecular electronic-structure methods. Converging the Hartree-Fock and correlation contributions to the thermodynamic limit yields a benchmark CCSD(T)/POB-TZVP-rev2 formation energy of 0.81 eV for the negatively charged monovacancy in the (5|9) configuration. The excitation energy to the lowest singlet excited state of this defect at the EOM-CCSD/POB-TZVP-rev2 level is found to be 1.95 eV. Overall, the ADM provides a highly promising route towards quantitatively accurate and systematically improvable descriptions of defects in solids and on surfaces, bridging the gap between solid-state physics and molecular quantum chemistry.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper applies the aperiodic defect model (ADM) to a negatively charged monovacancy in phosphorene. A periodic HF calculation on the pristine lattice supplies the mean-field embedding potential; a finite fragment containing the (5|9) defect is then treated at the CCSD(T) level while the surrounding mean field remains fixed. Both HF and correlation contributions are extrapolated to the thermodynamic limit by systematic fragment enlargement, producing a benchmark formation energy of 0.81 eV at CCSD(T)/POB-TZVP-rev2 and an EOM-CCSD excitation energy of 1.95 eV to the lowest singlet state.

Significance. If the central result holds, the work supplies a useful benchmark formation energy for the negatively charged monovacancy in phosphorene and illustrates how the ADM can combine periodic mean-field embedding with high-level molecular correlation methods. The systematic extrapolation of both HF and correlation pieces to the thermodynamic limit, together with the avoidance of supercell artifacts and charge corrections, constitutes a concrete strength that makes the reported 0.81 eV value a credible reference point for future studies on 2D-material defects.

minor comments (2)
  1. [Results] The manuscript would benefit from explicit inclusion (or clear reference to supplementary material) of the fragment-size convergence data or plots for both the HF and correlation contributions; without these, readers cannot independently judge the reliability of the quoted 0.81 eV value.
  2. [Computational Details] A short justification or literature reference for the specific choice of the POB-TZVP-rev2 basis set in the context of phosphorene would improve reproducibility.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive evaluation of our work and for recommending minor revision. We appreciate the acknowledgment that the ADM approach provides a credible benchmark formation energy of 0.81 eV by avoiding supercell artifacts and charge corrections, as well as the recognition of its potential to bridge solid-state and molecular methods.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained

full rationale

The paper constructs the ADM by first running a periodic Hartree-Fock calculation on the pristine phosphorene lattice to generate the embedding mean-field potential, then performing CCSD(T) on an enlarging finite fragment that contains the (5|9) monovacancy while holding the surrounding mean field fixed, and finally extrapolating both HF and correlation contributions to the thermodynamic limit. The reported 0.81 eV formation energy and 1.95 eV excitation energy are direct outputs of these calculations on the ADM fragment; they do not reduce by the paper's own equations to any fitted parameter, self-referential definition, or load-bearing self-citation whose validity is assumed rather than independently verified. The ADM itself is presented as a methodological choice whose correctness is an external assumption, not derived from the target defect energy. No step matches the enumerated circularity patterns.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central numerical results rest on the correctness of the recently introduced ADM and on the assumption that the chosen fragment plus mean-field treatment converges to the thermodynamic limit for both HF and correlation contributions.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The aperiodic defect model accurately represents a single defect embedded in the true non-defective crystalline mean field without spurious interactions.
    Invoked to justify avoidance of supercell artifacts and charge corrections; central to the method's validity.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5738 in / 1467 out tokens · 63486 ms · 2026-05-21T10:08:50.789957+00:00 · methodology

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