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Computational chemistry

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Computational chemistry is a branch of theoretical chemistry whose major goals are to create efficient mathematical approximations and computer programs that calculate the properties of molecules (such as total energy, dipole and quadrupole moment, vibrational frequencies, reactivity and other diverse spectroscopic quantitities and cross sections for collision of molecules with diverse atomic or subatomic projectiles) and to apply these programs to concrete chemical objects. The term is also sometimes used to cover the areas of overlap between computer science and chemistry.

Contents

Introduction

The term theoretical chemistry may be defined as a mathematical description of chemistry, whereas computational chemistry is usually used when a mathematical method is sufficiently well developed that it can be automated for implementation on a computer. Note that the words exact and perfect do not appear here, as very few aspects of chemistry can be computed exactly. Almost every aspect of chemistry, however, can be and has been described in a qualitative or approximate quantitative computational scheme.

It is, in principle, possible to use one very accurate method and apply it to all molecules. Although such methods are well-known and available in many programs, the computational cost of their use grows factorially (even faster than exponentially) with the number of electrons. Therefore, a great number of approximate methods strive to achieve the best trade-off between accuracy and computational cost. Present computational chemistry can routinely and very accurately calculate the properties of molecules that contain no more than 10-40 electrons. The treatment of molecules that contain a few dozen electrons is computationally tractable by approximate methods such as DFT. There is some dispute within the field whether the latter methods are sufficient to describe complex chemical reactions, such as those in biochemistry.

In theoretical chemistry, chemists and physicists together develop algorithms and computer programs to predict atomic and molecular properties and reaction paths for chemical reactions. Computational chemists, in contrast, may simply apply existing computer programs and methodologies to specific chemical questions. There are two different approaches in doing this:

Several major areas may be distinguished within computational chemistry:

Ab initio methods

The programs used in computational chemistry are based on many different quantum-chemical methods that solve the molecular Schrödinger equation associated with the molecular Hamiltonian. Methods that do not include empirical or semi-empirical parameters in their equations - are derived directly from theoretical principles, with no inclusion of experimental data - are generally called ab initio methods. Most of the time this is referring to approximate quantum mechanical calculations. The approximations made in these cases, however, are usually mathematical in nature, such as using a simpler functional form or getting an approximate solution for a complicated differential equation.

Ab initio methods usually proceed in two succeeding steps (except some approaches called direct quantum chemistry which treat electons and nuclei on a common footing):

Electronic structure

The electronic structure is determined by solving the Schrödinger equation associated to the electronic molecular Hamiltonian. The molecular geometry is considered as an adiabatic parameter. Usually the basis set (which is usually built from the LCAO ansatz) used to solve the Schrödinger equation is not complete and does not span the Hilbert space associated to ionization and scattering processes (see continuous spectrum for more details). This approximation allows one to treat the Schrödinger equation as a "simple" eigenvalue equation of the electronic molecular Hamiltonian with a discrete set of solutions.

The obtained eigenvalues are functions of the molecular geometry which are called potential energy surfaces.

The most common type of ab initio electronic structure calculation is called a Hartree-Fock (HF) calculation, in which the Coulombic electron-electron repulsion is not specifically taken into account. Only its average effect is included in the calculation. This is a variational calculation, therefore the obtained approximate energies, expressed in terms of the system's wave function, are always equal to or greater than the exact energy, and tend to a limiting value called the Hartree-Fock limit. Many types of calculations begin with a HF calculation and subsequently correct for electron-electron repulsion, referred to also as electronic correlation. Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP) and Coupled cluster (CC) are examples of such methods.

A method that avoids making the variational overestimation of HF in the first place is Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC), in its variational, diffusion, and Green's functions flavors. These methods work with an explicitly correlated wave function and evaluate integrals numerically using a Monte Carlo integration. Such calculations can be very time consuming, but they are probably the most accurate methods known today.

Density Functional Theory (DFT) methods are often considered to be ab initio methods for determining the molecular electronic structure, even though they utilize a set of functionals usually derived from empirical data, or more complex calculations. In DFT, the total energy is expressed in terms of the total electron density, rather than the wave function. In this type of calculation, there is an approximate Hamiltonian and an approximate expression for the total electron density.

Ab initio electronic structure methods have the advantage that they can be made to converge to the exact solution, when all approximations are sufficiently small in magnitude. The convergence, however, is usually not monotonic, and sometimes the smallest calculation gives the best result for some properties. The bad side of ab initio methods is their cost. They often take enormous amounts of computer time, memory, and disk space. The HF method scales as N4 (N being the number of basis functions) – a calculation twice as big takes 16 times as long to complete – and correlated calculations often scale much less favorably (correlated DFT calculations being the most efficient of this lot).

Computational chemical methods can also be applied to solid state physics problems. The electronic structure of a crystal is in general described by a band structure, which defines the energies of electron orbitals for each point in the Brillouin zone. Ab initio and semiempirical calculations yield orbital energies, therefore they can be applied to band structure calculations. Since it is time consuming to calculate the energy for a molecule, it is even more time consuming to calculate them for the entire list of points in the Brillouin zone

The most popular classes of ab initio electronic structure methods:

Chemical dynamics

Once the electronic and nuclear variables are separated (within the Born-Oppenheimer approximation), in the time-dependent approach, the wave packet corresponding to the nuclear degrees of freedom is propagated via the time evolution operator (physics) associated to the time-dependent Schrödinger equation (for the full molecular Hamiltonian). In the complementary energy-dependent approach, the time-independent Schrödinger equation is solved using the scattering theory formalism. The potential respresenting the interatomic interaction is given by the potential energy surfaces. In general, the potential energy surfaces are coupled via the vibronic coupling terms.

The most popular methods for propagating the wave packet associated to the molecular geometry are

Molecular dynamics examines (using Newton's laws of motion) the time-dependent behavior of systems, including vibrations or Brownian motion, most often with a classical mechanical description as well. Combined with density functional theory methods molecular dynamics is called Carr-Parrinello method.

Semiempirical methods

Electronic structure

Within the framework of Hartree-Fock calculations, some pieces of information (such as two-elecron integrals) are sometimes approximated or completely omitted. In order to correct for this loss, semiempirical methods are parametrized, that is their results are fit by a set of parameters in such a way, as to produce results the best agree with experimental data.

Semiempirical calculations are much faster than their ab initio counterparts. Their results, however, can be very wrong if the molecule being computed is not similar enough to the molecules in the database used to parametrize the method.

Semiempirical calculations have been very successful in the description of organic chemistry, where only a few elements are used extensively and molecules are of moderate size.

Molecular mechanics

In many cases, large molecular systems can be modelled succesfully avoiding quantum mechanical calculations entirely. Molecular mechanics simulations, for example, use a single classical expression for the energy of a compound, for instance the harmonic oscillator. All constants appearing in the equations must be obtained beforehand from experimental data or ab initio calculations.

The database of compounds used for parameterization - (the resulting set of parameters and functions is called the force field) - is crucial to the success of molecular mechanics calculations. A force field parameterized against a specific class of molecules, for instance proteins, would be expected to only have any relevance when describing other proteins.

Software packages

A number of software packages that are self-sufficient and include many quantum-chemical methods are available. The following is a table illustrating the capabilities of various software packages, (corrections to table entries requested):

Package Molecular Mechanics Semi-Empirical Hartree-Fock Post-Hartree-Fock methods DFT Periodic
ACES N N Y Y N N
DALTON N N Y Y Y N
GAUSSIAN Y Y Y Y Y Y
GAMESS N Y Y Y Y N
JAGUAR Y N Y Y Y N
MOLCAS N N Y Y N N
MOLPRO N N Y Y Y N
MOPAC N Y N N N Y
NWChem Y N Y Y Y Y
PLATO Y N N N Y Y
PSI N N Y Y N N
Q-Chem ? N Y Y Y N

See also

References

External links


Chemistry
Analytical chemistry | Organic chemistry | Inorganic chemistry | Physical chemistry | Polymer chemistry | Biochemistry | Materials science | Environmental chemistry | Medicinal chemistry | Pharmacy | Thermochemistry | Electrochemistry | Nuclear chemistry | Computational chemistry | Photochemistry
Periodic table | List of inorganic compounds | List of organic compounds | List of biomolecules

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This page has been accessed 132 times. This page was last modified 21:40, 27 August 2005. All content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License.

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