Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1232954 Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Charge transfer and dipolar polarisation treated on a common footing.•Elimination of polarisation catastrophe.•No need for penetration corrections.•Kriging successfully predicts multipole moments directly from coordinates.•High rank multipole moments guarantee accurate electrostatics.

As intermolecular interactions such as the hydrogen bond are electrostatic in origin, rigorous treatment of this term within force field methodologies should be mandatory. We present a method able of accurately reproducing such interactions for seven van der Waals complexes. It uses atomic multipole moments up to hexadecupole moment mapped to the positions of the nuclear coordinates by the machine learning method kriging. Models were built at three levels of theory: HF/6-31G**, B3LYP/aug-cc-pVDZ and M06-2X/aug-cc-pVDZ. The quality of the kriging models was measured by their ability to predict the electrostatic interaction energy between atoms in external test examples for which the true energies are known. At all levels of theory, >90% of test cases for small van der Waals complexes were predicted within 1 kJ mol−1, decreasing to 60–70% of test cases for larger base pair complexes. Models built on moments obtained at B3LYP and M06-2X level generally outperformed those at HF level. For all systems the individual interactions were predicted with a mean unsigned error of less than 1 kJ mol−1.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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