Classical molecular mechanics force fields typically model interatomic electrostatic interactions with point charges or multipole expansions, which can fail for atoms in close contact due to the lack of a description of penetration effects between their electron clouds. These short-range penetration effects can be significant and are essential for accurate modeling of intermolecular interactions. In this work we report parametrization of an empirical charge-charge function previously reported (Piquemal, J.-P.; J. Phys. Chem. A 2003, 107) 10353) to correct for the missing penetration term in standard molecular mechanics force fields. For this purpose, we have developed a database (S101×7) of 101 unique molecular dimers, each at 7 different intermolecular distances. Electrostatic, induction/polarization, repulsion, and dispersion energies, as well as the total interaction energy for each complex in the database are calculated using the SAPT2+ method (Parker, T. M.; J. Chem. Phys. 2014, 140, 094106). This empirical penetration model significantly improves agreement between point multipole and quantum mechanical electrostatic energies across the set of dimers and distances, while using only a limited set of parameters for each chemical element. Given the simplicity and effectiveness of the model, we expect the electrostatic penetration correction will become a standard component of future molecular mechanics force fields.
CITATION STYLE
Wang, Q., Rackers, J. A., He, C., Qi, R., Narth, C., Lagardere, L., … Ren, P. (2015). General Model for Treating Short-Range Electrostatic Penetration in a Molecular Mechanics Force Field. Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, 11(6), 2609–2618. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.5b00267
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