Literature DB >> 26583221

Expanding the Scope of Density Derived Electrostatic and Chemical Charge Partitioning to Thousands of Atoms.

Louis P Lee1, Nidia Gabaldon Limas2, Daniel J Cole3, Mike C Payne1, Chris-Kriton Skylaris4, Thomas A Manz2.   

Abstract

The density derived electrostatic and chemical (DDEC/c3) method is implemented into the onetep program to compute net atomic charges (NACs), as well as higher-order atomic multipole moments, of molecules, dense solids, nanoclusters, liquids, and biomolecules using linear-scaling density functional theory (DFT) in a distributed memory parallel computing environment. For a >1000 atom model of the oxygenated myoglobin protein, the DDEC/c3 net charge of the adsorbed oxygen molecule is approximately -1e (in agreement with the Weiss model) using a dynamical mean field theory treatment of the iron atom, but much smaller in magnitude when using the generalized gradient approximation. For GaAs semiconducting nanorods, the system dipole moment using the DDEC/c3 NACs is about 5% higher in magnitude than the dipole computed directly from the quantum mechanical electron density distribution, and the DDEC/c3 NACs reproduce the electrostatic potential to within approximately 0.1 V on the nanorod's solvent-accessible surface. As examples of conducting materials, we study (i) a 55-atom Pt cluster with an adsorbed CO molecule and (ii) the dense solids Mo2C and Pd3V. Our results for solid Mo2C and Pd3V confirm the necessity of a constraint enforcing exponentially decaying electron density in the tails of buried atoms.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 26583221     DOI: 10.1021/ct500766v

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput        ISSN: 1549-9618            Impact factor:   6.006


  6 in total

1.  Computation of protein-ligand binding free energies using quantum mechanical bespoke force fields.

Authors:  Daniel J Cole; Israel Cabeza de Vaca; William L Jorgensen
Journal:  Medchemcomm       Date:  2019-02-27       Impact factor: 3.597

2.  Numerical study on the partitioning of the molecular polarizability into fluctuating charge and induced atomic dipole contributions.

Authors:  Ye Mei; Andrew C Simmonett; Frank C Pickard; Robert A DiStasio; Bernard R Brooks; Yihan Shao
Journal:  J Phys Chem A       Date:  2015-05-18       Impact factor: 2.781

3.  Introducing DDEC6 atomic population analysis: part 4. Efficient parallel computation of net atomic charges, atomic spin moments, bond orders, and more.

Authors:  Nidia Gabaldon Limas; Thomas A Manz
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2018-01-11       Impact factor: 4.036

4.  Biomolecular Force Field Parameterization via Atoms-in-Molecule Electron Density Partitioning.

Authors:  Daniel J Cole; Jonah Z Vilseck; Julian Tirado-Rives; Mike C Payne; William L Jorgensen
Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput       Date:  2016-04-21       Impact factor: 6.006

5.  New scaling relations to compute atom-in-material polarizabilities and dispersion coefficients: part 1. Theory and accuracy.

Authors:  Thomas A Manz; Taoyi Chen; Daniel J Cole; Nidia Gabaldon Limas; Benjamin Fiszbein
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2019-06-19       Impact factor: 4.036

6.  Charge transfer as a ubiquitous mechanism in determining the negative charge at hydrophobic interfaces.

Authors:  Emiliano Poli; Kwang H Jong; Ali Hassanali
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-02-14       Impact factor: 14.919

  6 in total

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