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Libraries of Extremely Localized Molecular Orbitals. 1. Model Molecules Approximation and Molecular Orbitals Transferability
Author(s) -
Benjamin Meyer,
Benoît Guillot,
Manuel F. RuizLópez,
Alessandro Gei
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of chemical theory and computation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.001
H-Index - 185
eISSN - 1549-9626
pISSN - 1549-9618
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jctc.5b01007
Subject(s) - localized molecular orbitals , transferability , atomic orbital , molecular orbital , linear scale , context (archaeology) , computation , ab initio , chemical physics , computer science , scaling , molecule , linear combination of atomic orbitals , statistical physics , computational chemistry , physics , chemistry , electron , quantum mechanics , algorithm , mathematics , machine learning , paleontology , logit , geodesy , biology , geography , geometry
Despite more and more remarkable computational ab initio results are nowadays continuously obtained for large macromolecular systems, the development of new linear-scaling techniques is still an open and stimulating field of research in theoretical chemistry. In this family of methods, an important role is occupied by those strategies based on the observation that molecules are generally constituted by recurrent functional units with well-defined intrinsic features. In this context, we propose to exploit the notion of extremely localized molecular orbitals (ELMOs) that, due to their strict localization on small molecular fragments (e.g., atoms, bonds, or functional groups), are in principle transferable from one molecule to another. Accordingly, the construction of orbital libraries to almost instantaneously build up approximate wave functions and electron densities of very large systems becomes conceivable. In this work, the ELMOs transferability is further investigated in detail and, furthermore, suitable rules to construct model molecules for the computation of ELMOs to be stored in future databanks are also defined. The obtained results confirm the reliable transferability of the ELMOs and show that electron densities obtained from the transfer of extremely localized molecular orbitals are very close to the corresponding Hartree-Fock ones. These observations prompt us to construct new ELMOs databases that could represent an alternative/complement to the already popular pseudoatoms databanks both for determining electron densities and for refining crystallographic structures of very large molecules.

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