Dec 2000
Critical assessment of the performance of the semiempirical divide and conquer method for single point calculations and geometry optimizations of large chemical systems
December 15, 2000 Filed In:Theory
Abstract: We present a detailed
analysis of the performance of the semiempirical
divide and conquer method as compared with standard
semiempirical MO calculations. The influence of
different subsetting schemes involving dual buffer
regions on the magnitude of the errors in energies
and computational cost of the calculations are
discussed. In addition, the results of geometry
optimizations on several protein systems (453 to 4088
atoms) driven by a quasi-Newton algorithm are also
presented. These results indicate that the divide and
conquer approach gives reliable energies and
gradients and suggest that protein geometry
optimization using semiempirical methods can be
routinely feasible using current computational
resources.
Authors: Arjan van der Vaart, Dimas Suárez, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: J. Chem. Phys. 2000, 113(23), 10512-10523. (see link for full paper).
Authors: Arjan van der Vaart, Dimas Suárez, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: J. Chem. Phys. 2000, 113(23), 10512-10523. (see link for full paper).