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Importance of Nuclear Quantum Effects for NMR Crystallography
- Publisher :
- AMER CHEMICAL SOC
-
Abstract
- The resolving power of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) crystallography depends heavily on the accuracy of computational predictions of NMR chemical shieldings of candidate structures, which are usually taken to be local minima in the potential energy. To test the limits of this approximation, we systematically study the importance of finite-temperature and quantum nuclear fluctuations for $^1$H, $^{13}$C, and $^{15}$N shieldings in polymorphs of three paradigmatic molecular crystals -- benzene, glycine, and succinic acid. The effect of quantum fluctuations is comparable to the typical errors of shielding predictions for static nuclei with respect to experiments, and their inclusion to improve the agreement with measurements, translating to more reliable assignment of the NMR spectra to the correct candidate structure. The use of integrated machine-learning models, trained on first-principles energies and shieldings, renders rigorous sampling of nuclear fluctuations affordable, setting a new standard for the calculations underlying NMR structure determinations.
- Subjects :
- 1st-principles calculation
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
molecular-dynamics
Glycine
Succinic Acid
FOS: Physical sciences
o-17
010402 general chemistry
7. Clean energy
01 natural sciences
Machine Learning
Molecular dynamics
benzene i
Physics - Chemical Physics
spin coupling-constants
hydrogen-bond
0103 physical sciences
General Materials Science
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Quantum
Quantum fluctuation
Physics
Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)
parameters
Condensed Matter - Materials Science
Carbon Isotopes
Crystallography
010304 chemical physics
Nitrogen Isotopes
Hydrogen bond
Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)
temperature
Benzene
Potential energy
0104 chemical sciences
NMR spectra database
Maxima and minima
chemical-shift
Electromagnetic shielding
shieldings
Hydrogen
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....268082fcd9f6f244e21f4eb8638647fb