首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
 Hybrid potentials have become a common tool in the study of many condensed-phase processes and are the subject of much active research. An important aspect of the formulation of a hybrid potential concerns how to handle covalent bonds between atoms that are described with different potentials and, most notably, those at the interface of the quantum mechanical (QM) and molecular mechanical (MM) regions. Several methods have been proposed to deal with this problem, ranging from the simple link-atom method to more sophisticated hybrid-orbital techniques. Although it has been heavily criticized, the link-atom method has probably been the most widely used in applications, especially with hybrid potentials that use semiempirical QM methods. Our aim in this paper has been to evaluate the link-atom method for ab initio QM/MM hybrid potentials and to compare the results it gives with those of previously published studies. Given its simplicity and robustness, we find that the link-atom method can produce results of comparable accuracy to other methods as long as the charge distribution on the MM atoms at the interface is treated appropriately. Received: 27 September 2002 / Accepted: 21 October 2002 / Published online: 8 January 2003 Correspondence to: M. J. Field e-mail: mjfield@ibs.fr Acknowledgements. The authors thank the Institut de Biologie Structurale – Jean-Pierre Ebel, the Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique and the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique for support of this work.  相似文献   

2.
 Hybrid quantum mechanical (QM)/molecular mechanical (MM) calculations are used to study two aspects of enzyme catalysis, Kinetic isotope effects associated with the hydride ion transfer step in the reduction of benzyl alcohol by liver alcohol dehydrogenase are studied by employing variational transition-state theory and optimised multidimensional tunnelling. With the smaller QM region, described at the Hartree–Fock ab initio level, together with a parameterised zinc atom charge, good agreement with experiment is obtained. A comparison is made with the proton transfer in methylamine dehydrogenase. The origin of the large range in pharmacological activity shown by a series of α-ketoheterocycle inhibitors of the serine protease, elastase, is investigated by both force field and QM/MM calculations. Both models point to two different inhibition mechanisms being operative. Initial QM/MM calculations suggest that these are binding, and reaction to form a tetrahedral intermediate, the latter process occurring for only the more potent set of inhibitors. Recieved 3 October 2001 / Accepted: 6 September 2002 / Published online: 31 January 2003 Contribution to the Proceedings of the Symposium on Combined QM/MM Methods at the 222nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2001 Correspondence to: I. H. Hillier Acknowledgements. We thank EPSRC and BBSRC for support of the research and D.G. Truhlar for the use of the POLYRATE code.  相似文献   

3.
We used molecular dynamics simulation and free energy perturbation (FEP) methods to investigate the hydride-ion transfer step in the mechanism for the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-dependent reduction of a novel substrate by the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). The system is represented by a coupled quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) model based on the AM1 semiempirical molecular orbital method for the reacting substrate and NADPH cofactor fragments, the AMBER force field for DHFR, and the TIP3P model for solvent water. The FEP calculations were performed for a number of choices for the QM system. The substrate, 8-methylpterin, was treated quantum mechanically in all the calculations, while the larger cofactor molecule was partitioned into various QM and MM regions with the addition of “link” atoms (F, CH3, and H). Calculations were also carried out with the entire NADPH molecule treated by QM. The free energies of reaction and the net charges on the NADPH fragments were used to determine the most appropriate QM/MM model. The hydride-ion transfer was also carried out over several FEP pathways, and the QM and QM/MM component free energies thus calculated were found to be state functions (i.e., independent of pathway). A ca. 10 kcal/mol increase in free energy for the hydride-ion transfer with an activation barrier of ca. 30 kcal/mol was calculated. The increase in free energy on the hydride-ion transfer arose largely from the QM/MM component. Analysis of the QM/MM energy components suggests that, although a number of charged residues may contribute to the free energy change through long-range electrostatic interactions, the only interaction that can account for the 10 kcal/mol increase in free energy is the hydrogen bond between the carboxylate side chain of Glu30 (avian DHFR) and the activated (protonated) substrate. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 19: 977–988, 1998  相似文献   

4.
 We have investigated the S0 and S1 electronic states in bacteriorhodopsin using a variety of QM/MM levels. The decomposition of the calculated excitation energies into electronic and electrostatic components shows that the interaction of the chromophore with the protein electric field increases the excitation energy, while polarization effects are negligible. Therefore, the experimentally observed reduction in excitation energy from solution phase to protein environment (the Opsin shift) does not come from the electrostatic interaction with the protein environment, but from either the interaction ofthe chromophore with the solvent or counter ion, or structural effects. Our high-level ONIOM(TD– B3LYP:Amber) calculation predicts the excitation energy within 8 kcal/mol from experiment, the discrepancy probably being caused by the neglect of polarization of the protein environment. In addition, we have shown that the level of optimization is extremely critical for the calculation of accurate excitation energies in bacteriorhodopsin. Received: 13 October 2001 / Accepted: 6 September 2002 / Published online: 3 February 2003 Contribution to the Proceedings of the Symposium on Combined QM/MM Methods at the 222nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2001 Correspondence to: K. Morokuma e-mail: morokuma@emory.edu  相似文献   

5.
Two different transition structures (TSs) have been located and characterized for the chorismate conversion to prephenate in Bacillus subtilis chorismate mutase by means of hybrid quantum-mechanical/molecular-mechanical (QM/MM) calculations. GRACE software, combined with an AM1/CHARMM24/TIP3P potential, has been used involving full gradient relaxation of the position of ca. 3300 atoms. These TSs have been connected with their respective reactants and products by the intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) procedure carried out in the presence of the protein environment, thus obtaining for the first time a realistic enzymatic reaction path for this reaction. Similar QM/MM computational schemes have been applied to study the chemical reaction solvated by ca. 500 water molecules. Comparison of these results together with gas phase calculations has allowed understanding of the catalytic efficiency of the protein. The enzyme stabilizes one of the TSs (TSOHout) by means of specific hydrogen bond interactions, while the other TS (TSOHin) is the preferred one in vacuum and in water. The enzyme TS is effectively more polarized but less dissociative than the corresponding solvent and gas phase TSs. Electrostatic stabilization and an intramolecular charge-transfer process can explain this enzymatically induced change. Our theoretical results provide new information on an important enzymatic transformation and the key factors responsible for efficient selectivity are clarified. Received: 25 March 2000 / Accepted: 7 August 2000 / Published online: 23 November 2000  相似文献   

6.
 Hybrid quantum mechanical (QM) and molecular mechanical (MM) potentials are becoming increasingly important for studying condensed-phase systems but one of the outstanding problems in the field has been how to treat covalent bonds between atoms of the QM and MM regions. Recently, we presented a generalized hybrid orbital (GHO) method that was designed to tackle this problem for hybrid potentials using semiempirical QM methods [Gao et al. (1998) J Phys Chem A 102: 4714–4721]. We tested the method on some small molecules and showed that it performed well when compared to the purely QM or MM potentials. In this article, we describe the formalism for the determination of the GHO energy derivatives and then present the results of more tests aimed at validating the model. These tests, involving the calculation of the proton affinities of some model compounds and a molecular dynamics simulation of a protein, indicate that the GHO method will prove useful for the application of hybrid potentials to solution-phase macromolecular systems. Received: 4 October 1999 / Accepted: 18 December 1999 / Published online: 5 June 2000  相似文献   

7.
The partial Hessian vibrational analysis (PHVA), in which only a subblock of the Hesssian matrix is diagonalized to yield vibrational frequencies for partially optimized systems, is extended to the calculation of vibrational enthalpy and entropy changes for chemical reactions. The utility of this method is demonstrated for various deprotonation reactions by reproducing full HVA values to within 0.1–0.4 kcal/mol, depending on the number atoms included in the PHVA. When combined with the hybrid effective fragment potential method [Gordon MS, et al. (2001) J Phys Chem A 105:293–307], the PHVA method can provide (harmonic) free-energy changes for localized chemical reactions in very large systems. Received: 21 September 2001 / Accepted: 30 October 2001 / Published online: 22 March 2002  相似文献   

8.
A hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) potential energy function with Hartree-Fock, density functional theory (DFT), and post-HF (RIMP2, MP2, CCSD) capability has been implemented in the CHARMM and Q-Chem software packages. In addition, we have modified CHARMM and Q-Chem to take advantage of the newly introduced replica path and the nudged elastic band methods, which are powerful techniques for studying reaction pathways in a highly parallel (i.e., parallel/parallel) fashion, with each pathway point being distributed to a different node of a large cluster. To test our implementation, a series of systems were studied and comparisons were made to both full QM calculations and previous QM/MM studies and experiments. For instance, the differences between HF, DFT, MP2, and CCSD QM/MM calculations of H2O...H2O, H2O...Na+, and H2O...Cl- complexes have been explored. Furthermore, the recently implemented polarizable Drude water model was used to make comparisons to the popular TIP3P and TIP4P water models for doing QM/MM calculations. We have also computed the energetic profile of the chorismate mutase catalyzed Claisen rearrangement at various QM/MM levels of theory and have compared the results with previous studies. Our best estimate for the activation energy is 8.20 kcal/mol and for the reaction energy is -23.1 kcal/mol, both calculated at the MP2/6-31+G(d)//MP2/6-31+G(d)/C22 level of theory.  相似文献   

9.
Results of ab initio self-consistent-field (SCF) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the gas-phase structure, acidity (free energy of deprotonation, ΔGo), and aromaticity of 1,2-diseleno-3,4-dithiosquaric acid (3,4-dithiohydroxy-3-cyclobutene-1,2-diselenone, H2C4Se2S2) are reported. The global minimum found on the potential energy surface of 1,2-diseleno-3,4-dithiosquaric acid presents a planar conformation. The ZZ isomer was found to have the lowest energy among the three planar conformers and the ZZ and ZE isomers are very close in energy. The optimized geometric parameters exhibit a bond length equalization relative to reference compounds, cyclobutanediselenone, and cyclobutenedithiol. The computed aromatic stabilization energy (ASE) by homodesmotic reaction (Eq 1) is −20.1 kcal/mol (MP2(fu)/6-311+G** //RHF/6-311+G**) and −14.9 kcal/mol (B3LYP//6-311+G**//B3LYP/6-311+G**). The aromaticity of 1,2-diseleno-3,4-dithiosquaric acid is indicated by the calculated diamagnetic susceptibility exaltation (Λ) −17.91 (CSGT(IGAIM)-RHF/6-311+G**//RHF/6-311+G**) and −31.01 (CSGT(IGAIM)-B3LYP/6-311+G**//B3LYP/6-311+G**). Thus, 1,2-diseleno-3,4-dithiosquaric acid fulfils the geometric, energetic and magnetic criteria of aromaticity. The calculated theoretical gas-phase acidity is ΔGo 1(298K)=302.7 kcal/mol and ΔGo 2(298K)=388.4 kcal/mol. Hence, 1,2-diseleno-3,4-dithiosquaric acid is a stronger acid than squaric acid(3,4-dihydroxy-3-cyclobutene-1,2-dione, H2C4O4). Received: 11 April 2000 / Accepted: 7 July 2000 / Published online: 27 September 2000  相似文献   

10.
 The relationship between hydrogen bonding and NMR chemical shifts in the catalytic triad of low-pH α-chymotrypsin is investigated by combined use of the effective fragment potential [(2001) J Phys Chem A 105:293] and ONIOM–NMR [(2000) Chem Phys Lett 317:589] methods. Our study shows that while the His57 Nδ1−H bond is stretched by a relatively modest amount (to about 1.060 ?) this lengthening, combined with the polarization due to the molecular environment, is sufficient to explain the experimentally observed chemical shifts of 18.2 ppm. Furthermore, the unusual down-field shift of Hɛ1 (9.2 ppm) observed experimentally is reproduced and shown to be induced by interactions with the C=O group of Ser214 as previously postulated. The free-energy cost of moving Hδ1 from His57 to Asp102 is predicted to be 5.5 kcal/mol. Received: 26 September 2001 / Accepted: 6 September 2002 / Published online: 21 January 2003 Contribution to the Proceedings of the Symposium on Combined QM/MM Methods at the 222nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2001 Correspondence to: J. H. Jensen e-mail: jan-jensen@uiowa.edu Acknowledgements. This work was supported by a Research Innovation Award from the Research Corporation and a type G starter grant from the Petroleum Research Fund. The calculations were performed on IBM RS/6000 workstations obtained through a CRIF grant from the NSF (CHE-9974502) and on supercomputers at the National Center for Supercomputer Applications at Urbana-Champaign. The authors are indebted to Visvaldas Kairys for help with the CHARMM program, and to Daniel Quinn for many helpful discussions.  相似文献   

11.
 In order to calculate more accurately the enthalpies of formation, ΔH f°(298 K), for large molecules using the CBS-4M method, a new formulation of the empirical higher-level correction to the energy is proposed: ΔE=a|S|2 i i I i i +b(n α+n β)+cΔ<S 2>+Σn i d i . The new methodology (CBS-4MB) applied to a set of 114 molecules of different size significantly decreases the mean absolute deviation from 3.78 to 2.06 kcal/mol. Received: 7 February 2001 / Accepted: 5 April 2001 / Published online: 13 June 2001  相似文献   

12.
We report systematic quantum mechanics‐only (QM‐only) and QM/molecular mechanics (MM) calculations on an enzyme‐catalyzed reaction to assess the convergence behavior of QM‐only and QM/MM energies with respect to the size of the chosen QM region. The QM and MM parts are described by density functional theory (typically B3LYP/def2‐SVP) and the CHARMM force field, respectively. Extending our previous work on acetylene hydratase with QM regions up to 157 atoms (Liao and Thiel, J. Chem. Theory Comput. 2012, 8, 3793), we performed QM/MM geometry optimizations with a QM region M4 composed of 408 atoms, as well as further QM/MM single‐point calculations with even larger QM regions up to 657 atoms. A charge deletion analysis was conducted for the previously used QM/MM model ( M3a , with a QM region of 157 atoms) to identify all MM residues with strong electrostatic contributions to the reaction energetics (typically more than 2 kcal/mol), which were then included in M4 . QM/MM calculations with this large QM region M4 lead to the same overall mechanism as the previous QM/MM calculations with M3a , but there are some variations in the relative energies of the stationary points, with a mean absolute deviation (MAD) of 2.7 kcal/mol. The energies of the two relevant transition states are close to each other at all levels applied (typically within 2 kcal/mol), with the first (second) one being rate‐limiting in the QM/MM calculations with M3a ( M4 ). QM‐only gas‐phase calculations give a very similar energy profile for QM region M4 (MAD of 1.7 kcal/mol), contrary to the situation for M3a where we had previously found significant discrepancies between the QM‐only and QM/MM results (MAD of 7.9 kcal/mol). Extension of the QM region beyond M4 up to M7 (657 atoms) leads to only rather small variations in the relative energies from single‐point QM‐only and QM/MM calculations (MAD typically about 1–2 kcal/mol). In the case of acetylene hydratase, a model with 408 QM atoms thus seems sufficient to achieve convergence in the computed relative energies to within 1–2 kcal/mol.Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
 We present a method for the correction of errors in combined QM/MM calculations using a semiempirical Hamiltonian for enzyme reactions. Since semiempirical models can provide a reasonable representation of the general shape of the potential energy surface for chemical reactions, we introduce a simple valence bond-like (SVB) term to correct the energies at critical points on the potential energy surface. The present SVB term is not a stand-alone potential energy function, but it is used purely for introducing small energy corrections to the semiempirical Hamiltonian to achieve the accuracy needed for modeling enzymatic reactions. We show that the present coupled QM-SVB/MM approach can be parameterized to reproduce experimental and ab initio results for model reactions, and have applied the PM3-SVB/MM potential to the nucleophilic addition reaction in haloalkane dehalogenase. In a preliminary energy minimization study, the PM3-SVB/MM results are reasonable, suggesting that it may be used in free energy simulations to assess enzymatic reaction mechanism. Received: 1 November 2001 / Accepted: 6 September 2002 / Published online: 19 February 2003 Contribution to the Proceedings of the Symposium on Combined QM/MM Methods at the 222nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2001 Correspondence to: Lakshmi S. Devi-Kesavan e-mail: kesavan@chem.umn.edu Acknowledgments. The work is partially supported by the NIH and the NSF.  相似文献   

14.
A complete cycle of chemical transformations for the serine protease prototype reaction is modeled following calculations with the flexible effective fragment quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) method. The initial molecular model is based on the crystal structure of the trypsin–bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor complex including all atoms of the enzyme within approximately 15–18 Å of the oxygen center O of the catalytic serine residue. Several selections of the QM/MM partitioning are considered. Fractions of the side chains of the residues from the catalytic triad (serine, histidine and aspartic acid) and a central part of a model substrate around the C–N bond to be cleaved are included into the QM subsystem. The remaining part, or the MM subsystem, is represented by flexible chains of small effective fragments, whose potentials explicitly contribute to the Hamiltonian of the QM part, but the corresponding fragment–fragment interactions are described by the MM force fields. The QM/MM boundaries are extended over the C–C bonds of the peptides assigned to the QM subsystem in the enzyme, C–C and C–N bonds in model substrates. Multiple geometry optimizations have been performed by using the RHF/6-31G method in the QM part and OPLSAA or AMBER sets of MM parameters, resulting in a series of stationary points on the complex potential-energy surfaces. All structures generally accepted for the serine protease catalytic cycle have been located. Energies at the stationary points found have been recomputed at the MP2/6-31+G* level for the QM part in the protein environment. Structural changes along the reaction path are analyzed with special attention to hydrogen-bonding networks. In the case of a model substrate selected as a short peptide CH3(NHCO-CH2)2 – HN–CO–(CH2–NHCO)CH3 the computed energy profile for the acylation step shows too high activation energy barriers. The energetics of this rate-limiting step is considerably improved, if more realistic model for the substrate is considered, following the motifs of the ThrI11–GlyI12–ProI13-–CysI14–LysI15–AlaI16–ArgI17–IleI18–IleI19 sequence of the bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor.  相似文献   

15.
The controversial 'near attack conformation'(NAC) effect in the important model enzyme chorismate mutase is calculated to be 3.8-4.6 kcal mol(-1) by QM/MM free energy perturbation molecular dynamics methods, showing that the NAC effect by itself does not account for catalysis in this enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
 Using 6-31G and 6-311G basis sets to which diffuse and polarization functions were added in a stepwise fashion (a total of 16 basis sets), Hartree–Fock (HF), MP2 and B3LYP geometry optimizations were performed on biphenyl. With the MP2 method, diffuse functions raise the dihedral angle φ, for example, from 46.3° for 6-31G to 54.1° for 6-311++G, while polarization functions lower it, for example, from 54.1° for 6-311++G to 42.1° for 6-311++G(2d,2p). For a single set of polarization functions, φ(MP2) lies close to or above φ(HF) (44–47°), but for a double set it is below φ(HF) and is close to B3LYP values (38–42°) which show little basis set dependence. The most reliable value for φ, 42.1° [MP2/6-311++G(2d,2p)], is expected to increase slightly by adding more diffuse functions. The corresponding best calculated energy barrier at 0° (coplanar conformation) is 2.83 kcal/mol, much higher than the experimental estimate (1.4 ± 0.5 kcal/mol). The barrier at 90° is 1.82 kcal/mol, in line with the experimental estimate (1.6 ± 0.5 kcal/mol) and with previous theoretical results. Received: 9 September 2002 / Accepted: 15 November 2002 / Published online: 1 April 2003 Correspondence to: Friedrich Grein e-mail: fritz@unb.ca Acknowledgement. The author would like to thank NSERC (Canada) for financial support.  相似文献   

17.
 We present a method to treat the solvent efficiently in hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical simulations of chemical reactions in enzymes. The method is an adaptation of an approach developed for molecular-mechanical free-energy simulations. The charges of each of the exposed ionizable groups are scaled, and the system is simulated in the presence of a limited number of explicit solvent molecules to obtain a reasonable set of structures. Continuum electrostatics methods are then used to correct the energies. Variations in the procedure are discussed with an emphasis on modifications from the original protocol. We illustrate the method by applying it to the study of a hydrolysis reaction in a highly charged system comprising a complex between the base excision repair enzyme uracil-DNA glycosylase and double-stranded DNA. The resulting adiabatic reaction profile is in good agreement with experiment, in contrast to that obtained without scaling the charges. Received: 5 October 2001 / Accepted: 6 September 2002 / Published online: 28 February 2003 Contribution to the Proceedings of the Symposium on Combined QM/MM Methods at the 222nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2001 Correspondence to: M. Karplus e-mail: marci@tammy.harvard.edu  相似文献   

18.
We report a combined quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) study on the mechanism of the enzymatic Baeyer-Villiger reaction catalyzed by cyclohexanone monooxygenase (CHMO). In QM/MM geometry optimizations and reaction path calculations, density functional theory (B3LYP/TZVP) is used to describe the QM region consisting of the substrate (cyclohexanone), the isoalloxazine ring of C4a-peroxyflavin, the side chain of Arg-329, and the nicotinamide ring and the adjacent ribose of NADP(+), while the remainder of the enzyme is represented by the CHARMM force field. QM/MM molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculations at the semiempirical OM3/CHARMM level employ the same QM/MM partitioning. According to the QM/MM calculations, the enzyme-reactant complex contains an anionic deprotonated C4a-peroxyflavin that is stabilized by strong hydrogen bonds with the Arg-329 residue and the NADP(+) cofactor. The CHMO-catalyzed reaction proceeds via a Criegee intermediate having pronounced anionic character. The initial addition reaction has to overcome an energy barrier of about 9 kcal/mol. The formed Criegee intermediate occupies a shallow minimum on the QM/MM potential energy surface and can undergo fragmentation to the lactone product by surmounting a second energy barrier of about 7 kcal/mol. The transition state for the latter migration step is the highest point on the QM/MM energy profile. Gas-phase reoptimizations of the QM region lead to higher barriers and confirm the crucial role of the Arg-329 residue and the NADP(+) cofactor for the catalytic efficiency of CHMO. QM/MM calculations for the CHMO-catalyzed oxidation of 4-methylcyclohexanone reproduce and rationalize the experimentally observed (S)-enantioselectivity for this substrate, which is governed by the conformational preferences of the corresponding Criegee intermediate and the subsequent transition state for the migration step.  相似文献   

19.
 The accurate modeling of biological processes presents major computational difficulties owing to the inherent complexity of the macromolecular systems of interest. Simulations of biochemical reactivity tend to require highly computationally intensive quantum mechanical methods, but localized chemical effects tend to depend significantly on properties of the extended biological environment – a regime far more readily examined with lower-level classical empirical models. Mixed quantum/classical techniques are gaining in popularity as a means of bridging these competing requirements. Here we present results comparing two quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics implementations (the SIMOMM technique of Gordon et al. as implemented in GAMESS, and the ONIOM technique of Morokuma et al. found in Gaussian 98) as performed on the enzyme acetylcholinesterase and model nerve agents. This work represents part of the initial phase of a DoD HPCMP Challenge project in which we are attempting to reliably characterize the biochemical processes responsible for nerve agent activity and inhibition, thereby allowing predictions on compounds unrelated to those already studied. Received: 10 October 2001 / Accepted: 13 November 2002 / Published online: 1 April 2003 Contribution to the Proceedings of the Symposium on Combined QM/MM Methods at the 222nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2001 Correspondence to: M. M. Hurley e-mail: hurley@arl.army.mil  相似文献   

20.
 An overlap criterion is defined that connects the identification of core orbitals in a molecular system, which can be problematic, to that in isolated atoms, which is well defined. This approach has been tested on a variety of troublesome systems that have been identified in the literature, including molecules containing third-row main-group elements, and is shown to remove errors of up to 100 kcal/mol arising from an inconsistent treatment of core orbitals at different locations on a potential-energy surface. For some systems and choices of core orbitals, errors as large as 19 kcal/mol can be introduced even when consistent sets of orbitals are frozen, and the new method is shown to identify these cases of substantial core–valence mixing. Finally, even when there is limited core–valence mixing, the frozen-core approximation can introduce errors of more than 5 kcal/mol, which is much larger than the presumed accuracy of models such as G2 and CBS-QB3. The source of these errors includes interatomic core–core and core–valence dispersion forces. Received: 31 August 2001 / Accepted: 11 October 2001 / Published online: 9 January 2002  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号