| Literature DB >> 29266931 |
Mary J Van Vleet1, Alston J Misquitta2, J R Schmidt1.
Abstract
Nearly all standard force fields employ the "sum-of-spheres" approximation, which models intermolecular interactions purely in terms of interatomic distances. Nonetheless, atoms in molecules can have significantly nonspherical shapes, leading to interatomic interaction energies with strong orientation dependencies. Neglecting this "atomic-level anisotropy" can lead to significant errors in predicting interaction energies. Herein, we propose a simple, transferable, and computationally efficient model (MASTIFF) whereby atomic-level orientation dependence can be incorporated into ab initio intermolecular force fields. MASTIFF includes anisotropic exchange-repulsion, charge penetration, and dispersion effects, in conjunction with a standard treatment of anisotropic long-range (multipolar) electrostatics. To validate our approach, we benchmark MASTIFF against various sum-of-spheres models over a large library of intermolecular interactions between small organic molecules. MASTIFF achieves quantitative accuracy, with respect to both high-level electronic structure theory and experiment, thus showing promise as a basis for "next-generation" force field development.Year: 2018 PMID: 29266931 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.7b00851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chem Theory Comput ISSN: 1549-9618 Impact factor: 6.006