Polarizable Multipolar Molecular Dynamics Using Distributed Point Charges.

J Chem Theory Comput

Department of Chemistry, University of Basel, Klingelbergstrasse 80, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland.

Published: December 2020

Distributed point charge models (DCM) and their minimal variants (MDCM) have been integrated with tools widely used for condensed-phase simulations, including a virial-based barostat and a slow-growth algorithm for thermodynamic integration. Minimal DCM is further developed in a systematic fashion to reduce fitting errors in the electrostatic interaction energy, and a new fragment-based approach offers considerable speedup of the MDCM fitting process for larger molecules with increased numbers of off-centered charged sites. Finally, polarizable (M)DCM is also introduced in the present work. The developments are used in condensed-phase simulations of popular force fields with commonly applied simulation conditions. (M)DCM equivalents for a range of widely used water force fields and for fluorobenzene (PhF) are developed and applied along with the original models to evaluate the impact of reformulating the electrostatic term. Comparisons of the molecular electrostatic potential (MEP), electrostatic interaction energies, and bulk properties from molecular dynamics simulations for a range of models from simple TIPP ( = 3-5) to the polarizable, multipolar iAMOEBA models for water and an existing quadrupolar model for PhF confirm that DCMs retain the accuracy of the original models, providing a homogeneous, efficient, and generic point charge alternative to a multipolar electrostatic model for force field development and multilevel simulations.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.0c00883DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

polarizable multipolar
8
molecular dynamics
8
distributed point
8
point charge
8
condensed-phase simulations
8
electrostatic interaction
8
force fields
8
original models
8
models
5
electrostatic
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!