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We introduce the alchemical harmonic approximation (AHA) of the absolute electronic energy for charge-neutral iso-electronic diatomics at fixed interatomic distance d0. To account for variations in distance, we combine AHA with this ansatz for the electronic binding potential, E(d)=(Eu-Es)Ec-EsEu-Esd/d0+Es, where Eu, Ec, Es correspond to the energies of the united atom, calibration at d0, and the sum of infinitely separated atoms, respectively. Our model covers the two-dimensional electronic potential energy surface spanned by distances of 0.7-2.5 Å and differences in nuclear charge from which only one single point (with elements of nuclear charge Z1, Z2, and distance d0) is drawn to calibrate Ec. Using reference data from pbe0/cc-pVDZ, we present numerical evidence for the electronic ground-state of all neutral diatomics with 8, 10, 12, and 14 electrons. We assess the validity of our model by comparison to legacy interatomic potentials (harmonic oscillator, Lennard-Jones, and Morse) within the most relevant range of binding (0.7-2.5 Å) and find comparable accuracy if restricted to single diatomics and significantly better predictive power when extrapolating to the entire iso-electronic series. We also investigated Δ-learning of the electronic absolute energy using our model as a baseline. This baseline model results in a systematic improvement, effectively reducing training data needed for reaching chemical accuracy by up to an order of magnitude from ∼1000 to ∼100. By contrast, using AHA+Morse as a baseline hardly leads to any improvement and sometimes even deteriorates the predictive power. Inferring the energy of unseen CO converges to a prediction error of ∼0.1 Ha in direct learning and ∼0.04 Ha with our baseline.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0241872 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Phys
January 2025
Machine Learning Group, Technische Universität Berlin, 10587 Berlin, Charlottenburg, Germany.
We introduce the alchemical harmonic approximation (AHA) of the absolute electronic energy for charge-neutral iso-electronic diatomics at fixed interatomic distance d0. To account for variations in distance, we combine AHA with this ansatz for the electronic binding potential, E(d)=(Eu-Es)Ec-EsEu-Esd/d0+Es, where Eu, Ec, Es correspond to the energies of the united atom, calibration at d0, and the sum of infinitely separated atoms, respectively. Our model covers the two-dimensional electronic potential energy surface spanned by distances of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
January 2025
Machine Learning Group, Technische Universität Berlin, 10587 Berlin, Germany.
We recently introduced the Alchemical Integral Transform (AIT), enabling the prediction of energy differences, and guessed an ansatz to parameterize space r in some alchemical change λ. Here, we present a rigorous derivation of AIT's kernel K and discuss the parameterization r(λ) in n dimensions, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
December 2024
EaStCHEM School of Chemistry, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3FJ, United Kingdom.
While relative binding free energy (RBFE) calculations using alchemical methods are routinely carried out for many pharmaceutically relevant protein targets, challenges remain. For example, open-source tools do not support the easy setup and simulation of metalloproteins, particularly when ligands directly coordinate to the metal site. Here, we evaluate the performance of RBFE methods for KPC-2, a serine-β-lactamase (SBL), and two nonbonded metal parameter setups for VIM-2, a metallo-β-lactamase (MBL) with two active site zinc ions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
October 2022
Machine Learning Group, Technische Universität Berlin and Institute for the Foundations of Learning and Data, 10587 Berlin, Germany.
We show that the energy of a perturbed system can be fully recovered from the unperturbed system's electron density. We derive an alchemical integral transform by parametrizing space in terms of transmutations, the chain rule, and integration by parts. Within the radius of convergence, the zeroth order yields the energy expansion at all orders, restricting the textbook statement by Wigner that the p-th order wave function derivative is necessary to describe the (2p + 1)-th energy derivative.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Sci
September 2021
Computational and Systems Biology Program, Sloan Kettering Institute, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center New York NY 10065 USA
The computation of tautomer ratios of druglike molecules is enormously important in computer-aided drug discovery, as over a quarter of all approved drugs can populate multiple tautomeric species in solution. Unfortunately, accurate calculations of aqueous tautomer ratios-the degree to which these species must be penalized in order to correctly account for tautomers in modeling binding for computer-aided drug discovery-is surprisingly difficult. While quantum chemical approaches to computing aqueous tautomer ratios using continuum solvent models and rigid-rotor harmonic-oscillator thermochemistry are currently state of the art, these methods are still surprisingly inaccurate despite their enormous computational expense.
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