Literature DB >> 25408114

Accurate and efficient quantum chemistry calculations for noncovalent interactions in many-body systems: the XSAPT family of methods.

Ka Un Lao1, John M Herbert.   

Abstract

We present an overview of "XSAPT", a family of quantum chemistry methods for noncovalent interactions. These methods combine an efficient, iterative, monomer-based approach to computing many-body polarization interactions with a two-body version of symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT). The result is an efficient method for computing accurate intermolecular interaction energies in large noncovalent assemblies such as molecular and ionic clusters, molecular crystals, clathrates, or protein-ligand complexes. As in traditional SAPT, the XSAPT energy is decomposable into physically meaningful components. Dispersion interactions are problematic in traditional low-order SAPT, and two new approaches are introduced here in an attempt to improve this situation: (1) third-generation empirical atom-atom dispersion potentials, and (2) an empirically scaled version of second-order SAPT dispersion. Comparison to high-level ab initio benchmarks for dimers, water clusters, halide-water clusters, a methane clathrate hydrate, and a DNA intercalation complex illustrate both the accuracy of XSAPT-based methods as well as their limitations. The computational cost of XSAPT scales as O(N(3))-O(N(5)) with respect to monomer size, N, depending upon the particular version that is employed, but the accuracy is typically superior to alternative ab initio methods with similar scaling. Moreover, the monomer-based nature of XSAPT calculations makes them trivially parallelizable, such that wall times scale linearly with respect to the number of monomer units. XSAPT-based methods thus open the door to both qualitative and quantitative studies of noncovalent interactions in clusters, biomolecules, and condensed-phase systems.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25408114     DOI: 10.1021/jp5098603

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem A        ISSN: 1089-5639            Impact factor:   2.781


  5 in total

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Journal:  J Chem Phys       Date:  2015-07-14       Impact factor: 3.488

2.  Survival of the most transferable at the top of Jacob's ladder: Defining and testing the ωB97M(2) double hybrid density functional.

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Journal:  J Chem Phys       Date:  2018-06-28       Impact factor: 3.488

3.  Physical mechanisms of intermolecular interactions from symmetry-adapted perturbation theory.

Authors:  Krzysztof Szalewicz; Bogumił Jeziorski
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2022-08-25       Impact factor: 2.172

Review 4.  Advanced Potential Energy Surfaces for Molecular Simulation.

Authors:  Alex Albaugh; Henry A Boateng; Richard T Bradshaw; Omar N Demerdash; Jacek Dziedzic; Yuezhi Mao; Daniel T Margul; Jason Swails; Qiao Zeng; David A Case; Peter Eastman; Lee-Ping Wang; Jonathan W Essex; Martin Head-Gordon; Vijay S Pande; Jay W Ponder; Yihan Shao; Chris-Kriton Skylaris; Ilian T Todorov; Mark E Tuckerman; Teresa Head-Gordon
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2016-09-22       Impact factor: 3.466

5.  Electrostatics does not dictate the slip-stacked arrangement of aromatic π-π interactions.

Authors:  Kevin Carter-Fenk; John M Herbert
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2020-06-05       Impact factor: 9.825

  5 in total

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