Force Field Treatment of Proton and Hydrogen Transfer in Molecular Systems

Tautomerism ◽  
2013 ◽  
pp. 253-276
Author(s):  
Jing Huang ◽  
Markus Meuwly
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximiliano Riquelme ◽  
Alejandro Lara ◽  
David L. Mobley ◽  
Toon Vestraelen ◽  
Adelio R Matamala ◽  
...  

<div>Computer simulations of bio-molecular systems often use force fields, which are combinations of simple empirical atom-based functions to describe the molecular interactions. Even though polarizable force fields give a more detailed description of intermolecular interactions, nonpolarizable force fields, developed several decades ago, are often still preferred because of their reduced computation cost. Electrostatic interactions play a major role in bio-molecular systems and are therein described by atomic point charges.</div><div>In this work, we address the performance of different atomic charges to reproduce experimental hydration free energies in the FreeSolv database in combination with the GAFF force field. Atomic charges were calculated by two atoms-in-molecules approaches, Hirshfeld-I and Minimal Basis Iterative Stockholder (MBIS). To account for polarization effects, the charges were derived from the solute's electron density computed with an implicit solvent model and the energy required to polarize the solute was added to the free energy cycle. The calculated hydration free energies were analyzed with an error model, revealing systematic errors associated with specific functional groups or chemical elements. The best agreement with the experimental data is observed for the MBIS atomic charge method, including the solvent polarization, with a root mean square error of 2.0 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup> for the 613 organic molecules studied. The largest deviation was observed for phosphor-containing molecules and the molecules with amide, ester and amine functional groups.</div>


2016 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 811-818 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suqing Zheng ◽  
Qing Tang ◽  
Jian He ◽  
Shiyu Du ◽  
Shaofang Xu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Rebecca Lindsey ◽  
Nir Goldman ◽  
Laurence E. Fried ◽  
Sorin Bastea

<p>We have developed a transferable reactive force field for C/O systems under extreme temperature and pressure conditions based on the many-body Chebyshev Interaction Model for Efficient Simulation (ChIMES). The resulting model is shown to recover much of the accuracy of DFT for prediction of structure, dynamics and chemistry when applied to dissociative systems at 1:1 and 1:2 C:O ratios, as well as molten carbon. Our C/O modeling approach exhibits a 10<sup>4</sup> increase in efficiency and linear system size scalability over standard quantum molecular dynamics methods, allowing simulation of significantly larger systems than previously possible. Furthermore, we show that system sizes of at least 500 atoms are required to observe the formation of experimentally predicted molten carbon condensates under oxygen-deficient conditions, indicative of possible system size effects in quantum simulations of these types of systems. Overall, we find the present ChIMES model to be well suited for modeling chemical processes and cluster formation at pressures and temperatures typical of shock waves. We expect that the present C/O modeling paradigm can serve as a template for the development of a high pressure --high temperature organic chemistry force-field. </p>


1984 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 313-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Charzewski ◽  
G.W. Herzog ◽  
H. Leitner

Author(s):  
Javier Caceres-Delpiano ◽  
Lee-Ping Wang ◽  
Jonathan Wynne Essex

Atomistic models provide a detailed representation of molecular systems, but are sometimes inadequate for simulations of large systems over long timescales. Coarse-grained models enable accelerated simulations by reducing the number...


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Caceres-Delpiano ◽  
Lee-Ping Wang ◽  
Jonathan W. Essex

AbstractAtomistic models provide a detailed representation of molecular systems, but are sometimes inadequate for simulations of large systems over long timescales. Coarse-grained models enable accelerated simulations by reducing the number of degrees of freedom, at the cost of reduced accuracy. New optimisation processes to parameterise these models could improve their quality and range of applicability. We present an automated approach for the optimisation of coarse-grained force fields, by reproducing free energy data derived from atomistic molecular simulations. To illustrate the approach, we implemented hydration free energy gradients as a new target for force field optimisation in ForceBalance and applied it successfully to optimise the un-charged side-chains and the protein backbone in the SIRAH protein coarse-grain force field. The optimised parameters closely reproduced hydration free energies of atomistic models and gave improved agreement with experiment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexey Odinokov ◽  
Alexander Yakubovich ◽  
Won-Joon Son ◽  
Yongsik Jung ◽  
Hyeonho Choi

AbstractThe computational design of functional materials relies heavily on large-scale atomistic simulations. Such simulations are often problematic for conventional classical force fields, which require tedious and time-consuming parameterization of interaction parameters. The problem can be solved using a quantum mechanically derived force field (QMDFF)—a system-specific force field derived directly from the first-principles calculations. We present a computational approach for atomistic simulations of complex molecular systems, which include the treatment of chemical reactions with the empirical valence bond approach. The accuracy of the QMDFF is verified by comparison with the experimental properties of liquid solvents. We illustrate the capabilities of our methodology to simulate functional materials in several case studies: chemical degradation of material in organic light-emitting diode (OLED), polymer chain packing, material morphology of organometallic photoresists. The presented methodology is fast, accurate, and highly automated, which allows its application in diverse areas of materials science.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. Mobley ◽  
Caitlin C. Bannan ◽  
Andrea Rizzi ◽  
Christopher I. Bayly ◽  
John D. Chodera ◽  
...  

AbstractHere, we focus on testing and improving force fields for molecular modeling, which see widespread use in diverse areas of computational chemistry and biomolecular simulation. A key issue affecting the accuracy and transferrability of these force fields is the use of atom typing. Traditional approaches to defining molecular mechanics force fields must encode, within a discrete set of atom types, all information which will ever be needed about the chemical environment; parameters are then assigned by looking up combinations of these atom types in tables. This atom typing approach leads to a wide variety of problems such as inextensible atom-typing machinery, enormous difficulty in expanding parameters encoded by atom types, and unnecessarily proliferation of encoded parameters. Here, we describe a new approach to assigning parameters for molecular mechanics force fields based on the industry standard SMARTS chemical perception language (with extensions to identify specific atoms available in SMIRKS). In this approach, each force field term (bonds, angles, and torsions, and nonbonded interactions) features separate definitions assigned in a hierarchical manner without using atom types. We accomplish this using direct chemical perception, where parameters are assigned directly based on substructure queries operating on the molecule(s) being parameterized, thereby avoiding the intermediate step of assigning atom types — a step which can be considered indirect chemical perception. Direct chemical perception allows for substantial simplification of force fields, as well as additional generality in the substructure queries. This approach is applicable to a wide variety of (bio)molecular systems, and can greatly reduce the number of parameters needed to create a complete force field. Further flexibility can also be gained by allowing force field terms to be interpolated based on the assignment of fractional bond orders via the same procedure used to assign partial charges. As an example of the utility of this approach, we provide a minimalist small molecule force field derived from Merck’s parm@Frosst (an Amber parm99 descendant), in which a parameter definition file only ≈ 300 lines long can parameterize a large and diverse spectrum of pharmaceutically relevant small molecule chemical space. We benchmark this minimalist force field on the FreeSolv small molecule hydration free energy set and calculations of densities and dielectric constants from the ThermoML Archive, demonstrating that it achieves comparable accuracy to the Generalized Amber Force Field (GAFF) that consists of many thousands of parameters.


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