Collective many-body van der Waals interactions in molecular systems

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Abstract

Van der Waals (vdW) interactions are ubiquitous in molecules and condensed matter, and play a crucial role in determining the structure, stability, and function for a wide variety of systems. The accurate prediction of these interactions from first principles is a substantial challenge because they are inherently quantum mechanical phenomena that arise from correlations between many electrons within a given molecular system. We introduce an efficient method that accurately describes the nonadditive many-body vdW energy contributions arising from interactions that cannot be modeled by an effective pairwise approach, and demonstrate that such contributions can significantly exceed the energy of thermal fluctuations - a critical accuracy threshold highly coveted during molecular simulations - in the prediction of several relevant properties. Cases studied include the binding affinity of ellipticine, a DNA-intercalating anticancer agent, the relative energetics between the A- and B-conformations of DNA, and the thermodynamic stability among competing paracetamol molecular crystal polymorphs. Our findings suggest that inclusion of the many-body vdW energy is essential for achieving chemical accuracy and therefore must be accounted for in molecular simulations.

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APA

DiStasio, R. A., Von Lilienfeld, O. A., & Tkatchenko, A. (2012). Collective many-body van der Waals interactions in molecular systems. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(37), 14791–14795. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1208121109

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