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Alcohols, ethers, carbohydrates, and related compounds. I. The MM4 force field for simple compounds
Author(s) -
Allinger Norman L.,
Chen KuoHsiang,
Lii JennHuei,
Durkin Kathleen A.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of computational chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.907
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1096-987X
pISSN - 0192-8651
DOI - 10.1002/jcc.10268
Subject(s) - chemistry , force field (fiction) , dipole , bond length , molecular geometry , computational chemistry , molecule , electronegativity , torsion (gastropod) , ab initio , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , medicine , surgery
Simple alcohols and ethers have been studied with the MM4 force field. The structures of 13 molecules have been well fit using the MM4 force field. Moments of inertia have been fit with rms percentage errors as indicated: 18 moments for ethers, 0.28%; 21 moments for alcohols, 0.22%. Rotational barriers and conformational equilibria have also been examined, and the experimental and ab initio results are reproduced substantially better with MM4 than they were with MM3. Much of the improvement comes from the use of additional interaction terms in the force constant matrix, of which the torsion–bend and torsion–torsion are particularly important. Induced dipoles are included in the calculation, and dipole moments are reasonably well fit. It has been possible for the first time to fit conformational energetic data for both open chain and cyclic alcohols (e.g., propanol and cyclohexanol) with the same parameter set. For vibrational spectra, over a total of 82 frequencies, the rms error is 27 cm −1 , as opposed to 38 cm −1 with MM3. Both the α and β bond shortening resulting from the presence of the electronegative oxygen atom in the molecule are well reproduced. The electronegativity of the oxygen is sufficient that one must also include not only the α and β electronegativity effects on bond lengths, but also on angle distortions, if structures are to be well reproduced. The heats of formation of 32 alcohols and ethers were fit overall to within experimental error (weighted standard deviation error 0.26 kcal/mol). © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem 24: 1447–1472, 2003

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