Title: Introduction to Computational Chemistry
1Introduction to Computational Chemistry
Meredith J. T. Jordan m.jordan_at_chem.usyd.edu.au S
chool of Chemistry, University of Sydney
2Format
- Introductory lectures from me
- Master Classes from people who know what they are
doing - Concurrent introductory structured workshops to
introduce you to computational chemistry (me)
Peter Gill
Michelle Coote
Haibo Yu
Brian Yates
Tim Clark
3Overview
- Computational Chemistry
- What is Computational Chemistry
- Overview
- What kinds of problems can we solve?
- What kinds of tools can we use?
- Some examples
4What is Computational Chemistry?
- Chemistry in the computer instead of in the
laboratory - Use computer calculations to predict the
structures, reactivities and other properties of
molecules - Computational chemistry has become widely used
because of - Dramatic increase in computer speed and the
- Design of efficient quantum chemical algorithms
- The computer calculations enable us to
- explain and rationalize known chemistry
- explore new or unknown chemistry
5Why do Chemistry on a Computer?
- Calculations are easy to perform whereas
experiments are difficult - Calculations are safe whereas many experiments
are dangerous - Calculations are becoming less costly while
experiments are becoming more expensive - Calculations can be performed on any chemical
system, whereas experiments are relatively
limited - Calculations give direct information whereas
there is often uncertain in interpreting
experimental observation - Calculations give fundamental information about
isolated molecules without the complicating
solvent effects
6What Properties can be Calculated?
- Equilibrium structures
- Transition State structures
- Microwave, NMR spectra
- Reaction energies
- Reaction barriers
- Dissociation energies
- Charge distributions
- Reaction Rates
- Reaction Free Energies
- Circular Dichroism (optical, magnetic,
vibrational) - Spin-orbit couplings
- Full relativistic energies
- Excited States (vertical)
- Solvent Effects
- pKas
- Density matrix methods/geminals
- Linear Scaling (ie of the methods with number of
electrons/basis functions) - Local correlation methods
- Accurate enzyme-substrate interactions
7What Properties can be Calculated?
- In order of difficulty
- Molecular Structures (/ 1)
- Reaction Enthalpies (/ 2 kcal/mol)
- Vibrational Frequencies (/ 10)
- Reaction Free Energies (/ 5 kcal/mol)
- Infrared Intensities (normally not too bad for
fundamentals) - Dipole Moments (depends)
- Reaction Rates (errors vary enormously)
8Conceptual Approach
- Validation
- Interpretation
- Prediction
- give us insight, not numbers C. A. Coulson
- It is absolutely essential that we know how
accurate our computed results are to be if they
are to be of any use we want to get the right
answer for the right reason. - A celebrated target accuracy is Chemical
Accuracy ie to within 1 kcal/mol (4 kJ/mol) in
energy.
9A Computational Research Project
- What do you want to know? How accurately? Why?
- This is your research project
- How accurate do you predict the answer will be?
- What is an appropriate method to use
- How long do you expect it to take?
- What method can you feasibly use
- What approximations are being made? Which are
significant? - Can you actually answer your questions
- Once you have finally answered all of these
questions, you must determine what software is
available, what it costs and how to use it.
10Assessment
- Golden Rule
- Before applying a particular level of theory to
an experimentally unknown situation it is
essential to apply the same level of theory to
situations where experimental information is
available - Clearly unless the theory performs satisfactorily
in cases where we know the answer, there is
little point in using it to probe the unknown - Conversely, if the theory does work well in known
situations this lends confidence to the results
obtained in the unknown case.
11Flow Chart for a Calculation
- Molecule
- Coordinates
- Program
- Molecular Properties
- Interpretation
- Cartesian
- internal
- different types for different purposes
- Supplied
- Graphically
- by hand
- many different ones
- AMBER, CHARMM,
- GROMOS, Sybyl
- AMPAC, MOPAC, VAMP
- Gaussian, Gamess, MOLPRO
- human input
- choice!
- Difficult
- structures
- energies
- molecular orbitals
- IR, NMR, UV
12Overview of Methods
- Molecular mechanics, force fields
- easy to comprehend
- quickly programmed
- extremely fast
- no electrons limited interpretability
-
- Semiempirical methods
- quantum method
- valence electrons only
- fast
- limited accuracy
- ab initio methods
- full quantum method
13Atomic Units
Quantity Name Physical Significance Value in SI units
Energy Hartree 2 ? ionization energy of H 4.3597482 ? 1018 J
Length Bohr Bohr radius of H 1s orbital 0.529177249 ? 1010 m
Charge Electrons charge 1.60217733 ? 1019 C
Mass Electrons mass 9.1093898 ? 1031 kg
Velocity Electron velocity in 1 Bohr orbit 2.1876914 ? 106 m/s
Time time for electron to travel 1 Bohr radius 2.4188843 ? 1017 s
14Starting Point The Schrödinger Equation
- Foundation is the Schrödinger Equation of quantum
mechanics
H ? E ?
- E is the energy of the system
- ? is the molecular wavefunction. ? has no simple
physical meaning but ?2 represents a probability
distribution - H is the Hamiltonian operator (a set of
mathematical operations) describing the kinetic
energy (T) and the potential energy (V) of the
electrons and the nuclei - In principle we need to consider the electrons
and nuclei in a molecule together, in practice,
nuclei move much slower and we separate out
electronic and nuclear motion (the
Born-Oppenheimer approximation)
15Predicting the Structure of a Molecule
- The Schrödinger equation allows us to calculate
the energy (E) of a system as a function of
geometry
H ? E ?
Re
16Potential Energy Surfaces
- The Born-Oppenheimer approximation lets us
consider how - electronic energy changes with the nuclear
geometry, giving a Molecular Potential Energy
Surface - multidimensional (3N-6 dimensions)
- describes how energy varies as the atoms in the
system move, ie energy as a function of molecular
displacement - principally determined by what the bonding
electrons (the valence electrons) are doing
17Potential Energy Surfaces
18Equilibrium Molecular Structures
- Stable structures are minima
- energy curves upwards in all directions
- curvature is positive all vibrational
frequencies are real - often there are lots of minima
- the most stable structure is the global minimum
19Finding Minimum Energy Structures
- Gradient methods
- Steepest descents
- Conjugate gradient
- Second derivative methods
- Newton-Rhapson
- Quasi-Newton
- Fletcher Powell
- Rational Function Optimisation
?
20Finding Minimum Energy Structures
- Monte Carlo Methods
- Metropolis sampling
- Simulated annealing
- Divide and Conquer
- Break the probleminto smaller, more tractable
chunks
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xploration
21Transition State Structures
- For transition state structures
?
22Transition State Structures
- The maximum energy configuration along the
reaction path is called the transition state - energy curves downwards in one direction only
- There is one imaginary vibrational frequency, all
other vibrational frequencies are real
23Finding Transition State Structures
- Newton-Rhapson type method
- Start with a good guess structure
- Start with accurate second derivatives
- Walk uphill following the least steep route
24Chemical Reactivity
- Reactions are paths on the surface
- the lowest energy path between reactants and
products is called the intrinsic reaction path
25Vibrational Frequencies
- Indicate if the structure is a minimum
(equilibrium structure - all real frequencies
or a saddle point (transition state) one
imaginary frequency on the potential energy
surface - Allow us to calculate
- IR and Raman spectra
- zero-point vibrational energy (ZPVE)
- useful thermochemical quantities
- Reaction rate coefficients
- Isotopic substitution effects
- Tunneling corrections
26Theoretical Models
- The underlying physical laws necessary for the
mathematical theory of a large part of physics
and the whole of chemistry are thus completely
known, and the difficulty is only that the exact
application of these laws leads to equations much
too complicated to be soluble. -
- Paul Dirac 1929
- (Nobel Prize 1933)