The Effective Fragment Potential (EFP) method is a computationally inexpensive
way of modeling intermolecular interactions in non-covalent systems.
The EFP approach can be viewed as a polarizable QM/MM scheme with no empirical
parameters. EFP was originally developed by Prof. Mark Gordon’s
group
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J. Chem. Phys.
(1996),
105,
pp. 1968.
Link
,
442
J. Phys. Chem. A
(2001),
105,
pp. 293.
Link
and implemented in gamess.
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(1983),
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pp. 1347.
Link
A review of the EFP theory and applications can
be found in Refs.
407
J. Phys. Chem. A
(2010),
114,
pp. 12739.
Link
and
441
Chem. Rev.
(2012),
112,
pp. 632.
Link
.
A new implementation of the EFP method based on the libefp library
by Dr. Ilya Kaliman (see https://libefp.github.io)
has been added to Q-Chem.
625
J. Comput. Chem.
(2013),
34,
pp. 2284.
Link
,
626
J. Comput. Chem.
(2015),
36,
pp. 129.
Link
The new
EFP module is called EFPMAN2. EFPMAN2 can run calculations in parallel on
shared memory multi-core computers and clusters of computers. EFPMAN2 is
interfaced with the CCMAN and CCMAN2 modules to allow coupled cluster
and EOM-CC calculations with EFP and with ADCMAN module which allows ADC/EFP
calculations. CIS and TDDFT calculations with EFP are also available.