Chen Qu*, Paul L. Houston, Thomas Allison, Barry I. Schneider and Joel M. Bowman*,
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Hydrocarbons are ubiquitous as fuels, solvents, lubricants, and as the principal components of plastics and fibers, yet our ability to predict their dynamical properties is limited to force-field mechanics. Here, we report two machine-learned potential energy surfaces (PESs) for the linear 44-atom hydrocarbon C14H30 using an extensive data set of roughly 250,000 density functional theory (DFT) (B3LYP) energies for a large variety of configurations, obtained using MM3 direct-dynamics calculations at 500, 1000, and 2500 K. The surfaces, based on Permutationally Invariant Polynomials (PIPs) and using both a many-body expansion approach and a fragmented-basis approach, produce precise fits for energies and forces and also produce excellent out-of-sample agreement with direct DFT calculations for torsional and dihedral angle potentials. Going beyond precision, the PESs are used in molecular dynamics calculations that demonstrate the robustness of the PESs for a large range of conformations. The many-body PIPs PES, although more compute intensive than the fragmented-basis one, is directly transferable for other linear hydrocarbons.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation invites new and original contributions with the understanding that, if accepted, they will not be published elsewhere. Papers reporting new theories, methodology, and/or important applications in quantum electronic structure, molecular dynamics, and statistical mechanics are appropriate for submission to this Journal. Specific topics include advances in or applications of ab initio quantum mechanics, density functional theory, design and properties of new materials, surface science, Monte Carlo simulations, solvation models, QM/MM calculations, biomolecular structure prediction, and molecular dynamics in the broadest sense including gas-phase dynamics, ab initio dynamics, biomolecular dynamics, and protein folding. The Journal does not consider papers that are straightforward applications of known methods including DFT and molecular dynamics. The Journal favors submissions that include advances in theory or methodology with applications to compelling problems.