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Combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) methods play an important role in multiscale modeling and simulations. is a general-purpose program for single-point calculations, geometry optimizations, transition state optimizations, and molecular dynamics (MD) at the QM/MM level. It calls a QM package and an MM package to perform the required single-level calculations and combines them into a QM/MM energy by a variety of schemes. supports GAMESS-US, , and ORCA as QM packages and TINKER as the MM package. Four types of treatments are available for embedding the QM subsystem in the MM environment: mechanical embedding with gas-phase calculations of the QM region, electronic embedding that allows polarization of the QM region by the MM environment, polarizable embedding for mutual polarization of the QM and MM regions, and flexible embedding for both mutual polarization and partial charge transfer between the QM and MM regions. Boundaries between QM and MM regions that pass through covalent bonds can be treated by several methods, including the redistributed charge (RC) scheme, redistributed charge and dipole (RCD) scheme, balanced-RC, balanced-RCD, screened charge scheme that takes account of charge penetration effects, and smeared charge scheme that delocalizes the MM charges near the QM-MM boundary. Geometry optimization can be done using the optimizer implemented in or the Berny optimizer in through external calls to . Molecular dynamics simulations can be performed at the pure-MM level, pure-QM level, fixed-partitioning QM/MM level, and adaptive-partitioning QM/MM level. The adaptive-partitioning treatments permit on-the-fly relocation of the QM-MM boundary by dynamically reclassifying atoms or groups into the QM or MM subsystems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cpc.2023.108987 | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
September 2025
Kathleen Lonsdale Materials Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University College London, London WC1H 0AJ, U.K.
The exceptional performance of ceria (CeO) in catalysis and energy conversion is fundamentally governed by its defect chemistry, particularly oxygen vacancies. The formation of each oxygen vacancy (V) is assumed to be compensated by two localized electrons on cations (Ce). Here, we show by combining theory with experiment that while this 1 V: 2Ce ratio accounts for the global charge compensation, it does not apply at the local scale, particularly in nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
September 2025
Centre for Computational Chemistry, School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1TS, U.K.
The anaerobic glycyl radical enzyme choline trimethylamine-lyase (CutC) is produced by multiple bacterial species in the human gut microbiome and catalyzes the conversion of choline to trimethylamine (TMA) and acetaldehyde. CutC has emerged as a promising therapeutic target due to its role in producing TMA, which is subsequently oxidized in the liver to form trimethylamine--oxide (TMAO). Elevated TMAO levels are associated with several human diseases, including atherosclerosis and other cardiovascular disorders─a leading cause of mortality worldwide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
July 2025
Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague 160 00, Czech Republic.
Proton transfer reactions are among the most common chemical transformations and are central to enzymatic catalysis and bioenergetic processes. Their mechanisms are often investigated using DFT or approximate quantum chemical methods, whose accuracy directly impacts the reliability of the simulations. Here, a comprehensive set of semiempirical molecular orbital and tight-binding DFT approaches, along with recently developed machine learning (ML) potentials, are benchmarked against high-level MP2 reference data for a curated set of proton transfer reactions representative of biochemical systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIUCrJ
July 2025
Novartis Campus, Novartis Pharma AG, Postfach, Basel CH-4002, Switzerland.
There is a need for fast, efficient and accurate solid-state structure optimization for imprecise crystal structures (`augmentation') for subsequent property prediction in the pharmaceutical industry. Crystal structures from single-crystal X-ray, 3D electron or powder diffraction are widely available but require augmentation to the same quality level for comparative studies. Properties can be best calculated when the level of theory is alike and the accuracy, as well as the precision, are high.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem A
June 2025
Shandong Province Key Laboratory of Medical Physics and Image Processing Technology, Institute of Materials and Clean Energy, School of Physics and Electronics, Shandong Normal University, Jinan 250014, China.
Nonmonotonic pressure-dependent luminescent efficiency is commonly observed in inorganic systems. In contrast, organic room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) materials exhibiting monotonic efficiency enhancement remain scarce, with the underlying mechanisms being poorly understood. Herein, we present a comprehensive theoretical investigation of pressure-induced RTP dynamics in organic crystals, which not only advances the fundamental understanding of excited-state processes but also paves the way for high-precision pressure-sensing applications.
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