Q-Chem provides the option to calculate molecular properties in aqueous
solution and the magnitudes of the hydration free energies by the Langevin
dipoles (LD) solvation model developed by Jan Florián and Arieh
Warshel
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(1997),
101,
pp. 5583.
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,
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J. Phys. Chem. B
(1999),
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pp. 10282.
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at the University of Southern
California. In this model, a solute molecule is surrounded by a sphere of point
dipoles, with centers on a cubic lattice. Each of these “Langevin” dipoles
changes its size and orientation in the electrostatic field of the solute and
the other Langevin dipoles. The electrostatic field from the solute is
determined rigorously by the integration of its charge density, whereas for
dipole–dipole interactions, a 12 Å cutoff is used. The Q-Chem/ChemSol 1.0 implementation of the LD model is fully self-consistent in that
the molecular quantum mechanical calculation takes into account solute–solvent
interactions. Further details on the implementation and parameterization of
this model can be found in the literature.
366
J. Phys. Chem. B
(1997),
101,
pp. 5583.
Link
,
367
J. Phys. Chem. B
(1999),
103,
pp. 10282.
Link
The results of ChemSol calculations are printed in the standard output file. Below is a part of the output for a calculation on the methoxide anion (corresponding to the sample input given later on, and the sample file in the $QC/samples directory).
Energy Component | Value / kcal mol |
---|---|
LD Electrostatic energy | |
Hydrophobic energy | 0.28 |
van der Waals energy | |
Bulk correction | |
Solvation free energy, (ILD) |
The total hydration free energy, (ILD) is calculated as a sum of
several contributions. Note that the electrostatic part of is
calculated by using the linear-response approximation
366
J. Phys. Chem. B
(1997),
101,
pp. 5583.
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and
contains contributions from the polarization of the solute charge
distribution due to its interaction with the solvent. This results from the
self-consistent implementation of the Langevin dipoles model within Q-Chem.
To perform an LD calculation in Q-Chem, specify normal job-control variables for a Hartree-Fock or DFT calculation, and set SOLVENT_METHOD = CHEM_SOL in the $rem section. Additional fine-tuning is accomplished using a set of keywords in a $chem_sol input section. The remainder of this section summarizes these keywords.
EField
Determines how the solute charge distribution is approximated in evaluating
the electrostatic field of the solute.
INPUT SECTION: $chem_sol
TYPE:
INTEGER
DEFAULT:
1
OPTIONS:
1
Exact solute charge distribution is used.
0
Solute charge distribution is approximated by Mulliken atomic charges.
RECOMMENDATION:
None. The Mulliken-based procedure is faster but less rigorous.
NGrids
Sets the number of grids used to calculate the average hydration free energy.
INPUT SECTION: $chem_sol
TYPE:
INTEGER
DEFAULT:
5
will be averaged over 5 different grids.
OPTIONS:
Use different grids.
RECOMMENDATION:
None. The maximum allowed value of is 20.
Print
Controls printing in the ChemSol part of the Q-Chem output file.
INPUT SECTION: $chem_sol
TYPE:
INTEGER
DEFAULT:
0
OPTIONS:
0
Limited printout
1
Full printout
RECOMMENDATION:
None.
ReadRadii
Read user-defined atomic radii from section $van_der_waals.
INPUT SECTION: $chem_sol
TYPE:
None
DEFAULT:
Off
OPTIONS:
No options. Specify the keyword to use user-defined atomic radii.
RECOMMENDATION:
None.
Accurate calculations of hydration free energies require a judicious choice of
the solute–solvent boundary in terms of atom-type dependent parameters. The
default atomic van der Waals radii available in Q-Chem were chosen to provide
reasonable hydration free energies for most solutes and basis sets. These
parameters basically coincide with the ChemSol 2.0 radii given in
Ref.
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(1999),
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. The only difference between the Q-Chem and
ChemSol 2.0 atomic radii stems from the fact that Q-Chem parameter set
uses radii for carbon and oxygen that are independent of the atom’s
hybridization state. User-defined atomic radii can be specified by declaring
the option ReadRadii in the $chem_sol input section, and then placing
the radii in the $van_der_waals section. Two different (and mutually exclusive)
formats can be used, as shown below.
$van_der_waals 1 atomic_number vdW_radius ... $end $van_der_waals 2 sequential_atom_number vdW_radius ... $end
The purpose of the second format is to permit the user to customize the radius of specific atoms, in the order that they appear in the $molecule section, rather than simply by atomic numbers as in format 1. The radii of atoms that are not listed in the $van_der_waals input will be assigned default values. The atomic radii that were used in the calculation are printed in the ChemSol part of the output file in the column denoted rp. All radii should be given in Ångstroms.
$molecule -1 1 C 0.0000 0.0000 -0.5274 O 0.0000 0.0000 0.7831 H 0.0000 1.0140 -1.0335 H 0.8782 -0.5070 -1.0335 H -0.8782 -0.5070 -1.0335 $end $rem METHOD hf BASIS 6-31G SCF_CONVERGENCE 6 SOLVENT_METHOD Chem_Sol $end $chem_sol ReadRadii $end $van_der_waals 2 1 2.5 $end