The bonding structures of infinitene, the Chemical and Engineering News 2021 Molecule of the Year, is studied by means of oriented quasi-atomic orbitals (QUAOs) to assess the degree of aromaticity within the molecule. It is found that the angularity introduced into infinitene when it takes on the helical shape of the infinity symbol has a profound effect on bond order, delocalization of bonding interactions, and the aromatic character of the system. In kekulene, a planar isomer of infinitene, the bonding analysis shows fluctuations of pocketed delocalization of bonding interactions in π-sextets associated with Clar's rule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe bonding structures of COLi and CSLi are studied by means of oriented quasi-atomic orbitals (QUAOs) to assess the possibility of these molecules being planar hexacoordinated carbon (phC) systems. CHLi and CO are employed as reference molecules. It is found that the introduction of Li ions into the molecular environment of carbonate has a greater effect on the orbital structure of the O atoms than it does on the C atom.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe primary focus of GAMESS over the last 5 years has been the development of new high-performance codes that are able to take effective and efficient advantage of the most advanced computer architectures, both CPU and accelerators. These efforts include employing density fitting and fragmentation methods to reduce the high scaling of well-correlated (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe quasi-atomic orbital (QUAO) bonding analysis is used to study intramolecular hydrogen bonding (IMHB) in salicylic acid and an intermediate that is crucial to the synthesis of aspirin. The bonding analysis rigorously explores IMHB through directly accessing information that is intrinsic to the molecular wave function, thereby bypassing the need for intrinsically biased methods. The variables that affect the strength of IMHB are determined using kinetic bond orders, QUAO populations, and QUAO hybridizations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
November 2021
The time to solution and parallel efficiency of several commonly used electronic structure methods (Hartree-Fock, density functional theory, second order perturbation theory, resolution of the identity second order perturbation theory, coupled cluster) are evaluated on both the Intel Xeon Haswell and the Intel Xeon Phi Knights Landing (KNL) architectures. The Haswell completes the benchmark calculations with a faster time to solution than the KNL for all molecules and methods tested. While the Haswell exhibits an average speedup of at least 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA discussion of many of the recently implemented features of GAMESS (General Atomic and Molecular Electronic Structure System) and LibCChem (the C++ CPU/GPU library associated with GAMESS) is presented. These features include fragmentation methods such as the fragment molecular orbital, effective fragment potential and effective fragment molecular orbital methods, hybrid MPI/OpenMP approaches to Hartree-Fock, and resolution of the identity second order perturbation theory. Many new coupled cluster theory methods have been implemented in GAMESS, as have multiple levels of density functional/tight binding theory.
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