Projection-based embedding provides a simple and numerically robust framework for multiscale wavefunction-in-density-functional-theory (WF-in-DFT) calculations. The approach works well when the approximate DFT is sufficiently accurate to describe the energetics of the low-level subsystem and the coupling between subsystems. It is also necessary that the low-level DFT produces a qualitatively reasonable description of the total density, and in this work, we study model systems where delocalization error prevents this from being the case.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProjector-based embedding has recently emerged as a robust multiscale method for the calculation of various electronic molecular properties. We present the coupling of projector embedding with quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics modeling and apply it for the first time to an enzyme-catalyzed reaction. Using projector-based embedding, we combine coupled-cluster theory, density-functional theory (DFT), and molecular mechanics to compute energies for the proton abstraction from acetyl-coenzyme A by citrate synthase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this article, we investigated the hydroxylation of methane catalyzed by the binuclear copper site of a pMMO enzyme, through a radical rebound mechanism. All intermediates and transition states along the reaction coordinate were located and the energies involved in the mechanism calculated using the B3LYP functional including dispersion effects. Our B3LYP-D2 results show that the singlet state of the (μ-1,2-peroxo)Cu(II)2 complex plays an important role as the lowest energy species prior to C-H bond activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Fenton reaction is a famous reaction in inorganic chemistry, with relevance to topics such as bioinorganic oxidation and fundamental redox chemistry of water and oxygen. It is also a reaction concerning which there has been very extensive mechanistic debate, with experimental and computational work leading to extensive evidence concerning its mechanism-not all of which is consistent. Here, we use this reaction as a challenge to modern electronic structure theory methods and show that density functional theory, when validated by accurate ab initio methods, can yield a picture of this reaction that is consistent with experiment.
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