Publications by authors named "Sidney R Santana"

In this work, we introduce the , a comprehensive and modular command-line interface designed for molecular simulation and microsolvation modeling. The suite interfaces with widely used scientific software, streamlining computational experiments for liquid systems through the automated creation of simulation boxes and topology with adjustable simulation parameters. Furthermore, it has features for graphical and statistical analysis of simulated properties and extraction of trajectory configurations with various filters.

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In this study, we present some modifications in the semiempirical quantum chemistry MOPAC2009 code that accelerate single-point energy calculations (1SCF) of medium-size (up to 2500 atoms) molecular systems using GPU coprocessors and multithreaded shared-memory CPUs. Our modifications consisted of using a combination of highly optimized linear algebra libraries for both CPU (LAPACK and BLAS from Intel MKL) and GPU (MAGMA and CUBLAS) to hasten time-consuming parts of MOPAC such as the pseudodiagonalization, full diagonalization, and density matrix assembling. We have shown that it is possible to obtain large speedups just by using CPU serial linear algebra libraries in the MOPAC code.

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Ab initio (MP2) and DFT (B3LYP) calculations, using the cc-pVTZ and aug-cc-pVTZ basis sets, have been performed to characterize some stationary points on the ground state potential energy surface of the title molecules. Several properties as, for instance, relative energies, the barriers for NO rotation around the NN bond, NBO charges on O and amino N atoms, as well as the dipole moments, have been calculated and analyzed in the light of the structures found. Both computational levels here employed yield three minima, in which the C(2)NNO frame is 'planar' or 'quasi-planar'.

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The relative stabilities of the alkali [M subset 222]+ cryptates (M = Na, K, Rb and Cs) in the gas phase and in solution (80:20 v/v methanol:water mixture) at 298 K, are computed using a combination of ab initio quantum-chemical calculations (HF/6-31G and MP2/6-31+G*//HF/6-31+G*) and explicit-solvent Monte Carlo free-energy simulations. The results suggest that the relative stabilities of the cryptates in solution are due to a combination of steric effects (compression of large ions within the cryptand cavity), electronic effects (delocalization of the ionic charge onto the cryptand atoms) and solvent effects (dominantly the ionic dessolvation penalty). Thus, the relative stabilities in solution cannot be rationalized solely on the basis of a simple match or mismatch between the ionic radius and the cryptand cavity size as has been suggested previously.

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