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Evaluating Force-Field London Dispersion Coefficients Using the Exchange-Hole Dipole Moment Model
- Source :
- Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation. 13:6146-6157
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 2017.
-
Abstract
- London dispersion interactions play an integral role in materials science and biophysics. Force fields for atomistic molecular simulations typically represent dispersion interactions by the 12-6 Lennard-Jones potential using empirically determined parameters. These parameters are generally underdetermined, and there is no straightforward way to test if they are physically realistic. Alternatively, the exchange-hole dipole moment (XDM) model from density-functional theory predicts atomic and molecular London dispersion coefficients from first principles, providing an innovative strategy to validate the dispersion terms of molecular-mechanical force fields. In this work, the XDM model was used to obtain the London dispersion coefficients of 88 organic molecules relevant to biochemistry and pharmaceutical chemistry and the values compared with those derived from the Lennard-Jones parameters of the CGenFF, GAFF, OPLS, and Drude polarizable force fields. The molecular dispersion coefficients for the CGenFF, GAFF, and OPLS models are systematically higher than the XDM-calculated values by a factor of roughly 1.5, likely due to neglect of higher order dispersion terms and premature truncation of the dispersion-energy summation. The XDM dispersion coefficients span a large range for some molecular-mechanical atom types, suggesting an unrecognized source of error in force-field models, which assume that atoms of the same type have the same dispersion interactions. Agreement with the XDM dispersion coefficients is even poorer for the Drude polarizable force field. Popular water models were also examined, and TIP3P was found to have dispersion coefficients similar to the experimental and XDM references, although other models employ anomalously high values. Finally, XDM-derived dispersion coefficients were used to parametrize molecular-mechanical force fields for five liquids-benzene, toluene, cyclohexane, n-pentane, and n-hexane-which resulted in improved accuracy in the computed enthalpies of vaporization despite only having to evaluate a much smaller section of the parameter space.
- Subjects :
- Molecular Dynamics Simulation
010402 general chemistry
01 natural sciences
London dispersion force
Force field (chemistry)
symbols.namesake
Molecular dynamics
Halogens
Polarizability
0103 physical sciences
Statistical physics
Physics::Chemical Physics
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
010304 chemical physics
Chemistry
Intermolecular force
Water
0104 chemical sciences
Computer Science Applications
Oxygen
Dipole
Solvents
symbols
Thermodynamics
Density functional theory
van der Waals force
Hydrogen
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15499626 and 15499618
- Volume :
- 13
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b472c6e192a1b0aec51d156db7fd1dfe
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.7b00522