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A Graph-Based Toy Model of Chemistry
Author(s) -
Gil Benkö,
Christoph Flamm,
Peter F. Stadler
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of chemical information and computer sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1520-5142
pISSN - 0095-2338
DOI - 10.1021/ci0200570
Subject(s) - chemical reaction , computer science , graph , chemistry , graph theory , molecule , computational chemistry , theoretical computer science , mathematics , organic chemistry , combinatorics
Large scale chemical reaction networks are a ubiquitous phenomenon, from the metabolism of living cells to processes in planetary atmospheres and chemical technology. At least some of these networks exhibit distinctive global features such as the "small world" behavior. The systematic study of such properties, however, suffers from substantial sampling biases in the few networks that are known in detail. A computational model for generating them is therefore required. Here we present a Toy Model that provides a consistent framework in which generic properties of extensive chemical reaction networks can be explored in detail and that at the same time preserves the "look-and-feel" of chemistry: Molecules are represented as labeled graphs, i.e., by their structural formulas; their basic properties are derived by a caricature version of the Extended Hückel MO theory that operates directly on the graphs; chemical reaction mechanisms are implemented as graph rewriting rules acting on the structural formulas; reactivities and selectivities are modeled by a variant of the Frontier Molecular Orbital Theory based on the Extended Hückel scheme. The approach is illustrated for two types of reaction networks: Diels-Alder reactions and the formose reaction implicated in prebiotic sugar synthesis.

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