CCSDT(Q) and CCSDTQ calculations are extraordinarily expensive, both in terms of FLOP count and RAM capacity requirements, eg. CCSDTQ requires a computational effort that scales as ~$N^{10}$, where N is the number of (contracted) basis functions. Given that, it is easy to see why running CCSDTQ calculations with fewer basis functions would be advantageous.
The obvious way to reduce N is to use a smaller basis set. While there is some evidence [1,2] that the CCSDT(Q)-CCSDT
and especially the CCSDTQ-CCSDT(Q)
contributions converge to the basis set limit faster than lower complexity contributions, CCSDT(Q)/cc-pVDZ can still be extremely demanding.
The other alternative would be to create basis sets optimized specifically for the purpose of post-CCSD(T) (CCSDT, CCSDT(Q), ...) calculations, with fewer contracted basis functions per atom. One could really crank up the number of primitive gaussians per basis function, if required, and integral evaluation time would still be utterly negligible compared to the time spent in the CCSDT(Q) code. Something like a hypothetical "ANO-CCQ" basis set might make CSSDT(Q) calculations more feasible.
My question is:
Has anyone ever developed or seen a basis set specifically optimized for post-CCSD(T) calculations?