A regularized and renormalized electrostatic coupling Hamiltonian for hybrid quantum-mechanical–molecular-mechanical calculations
Author(s) -
Pradip Kumar Biswas,
Valentin Gogonea
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the journal of chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.071
H-Index - 357
eISSN - 1089-7690
pISSN - 0021-9606
DOI - 10.1063/1.2064907
Subject(s) - hamiltonian (control theory) , qm/mm , renormalization , coulomb , molecular dynamics , physics , electrostatics , quantum mechanics , molecular physics , electron , mathematical optimization , mathematics
We describe a regularized and renormalized electrostatic coupling Hamiltonian for hybrid quantum-mechanical QM-molecular-mechanical MM calculations. To remedy the nonphysical QM/MM Coulomb interaction at short distances arising from a point electrostatic potential ESP charge of the MM atom and also to accommodate the effect of polarized MM atom in the coupling Hamiltonian, we propose a partial-wave expansion of the ESP charge and describe the effect of a s-wave expansion, extended over the covalent radius rc, of the MM atom. The resulting potential describes that, at short distances, large scale cancellation of Coulomb interaction arises intrinsically from the localized expansion of the MM point charge and the potential self-consistently reduces to 1/ rc at zero distance providing a renormalization to the Coulomb energy near interatomic separations. Employing this renormalized Hamiltonian, we developed an interface between the Car-Parrinello molecular-dynamics program and the classical molecular-dynamics simulation program Groningen machine for chemical simulations. With this hybrid code we performed QM/ MM calculations on water dimer, imidazole carbon monoxide CO complex, and imidazole-heme- CO complex with CO interacting with another imidazole. The QM/MM results are in excellent agreement with experimental data for the geometry of these complexes and other computational data found in literature. © 2005 American Institute of Physics. DOI: 10.1063/1.2064907
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