ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We evaluated the non-additive contributions of the inter-molecular interactions in B-DNA stacking by using diffusion Monte Carlo methods with fixed node approximations (FNDMC). For some base-pair steps, we found that their non-additive contributions evaluated by FNDMC significantly differ from those by any other {it ab initio} methods, while there are no remarkable findings on their stacking energies themselves. The apparently unexpected results of non-additivity raise issues in both FNDMC and correlated wavefunction methods. For the latter, it can be partly attributed to the imperfect complete basis set (CBS) correction scheme due to the limitation of the computational costs. On the other hand, the striking contrast between the stacking and non-additivity behaviors was found in FNDMC. This might imply that the error cancellations of the fixed node biases in FNDMC work well for the stacking energies, while not for the non-additivity contributions involving charge transfers caused by hydrogen bonds bridging Watson-Crick base pairs.
Energy decomposition analysis (EDA) based on absolutely localized molecular orbitals (ALMOs) decomposes the interaction energy between molecules into physically interpretable components like geometry distortion, frozen interactions, polarization, and
We examined the reliability of exchange-correlation functionals for molecular encapsulations combined by van der Waals forces, comparing their predictions with those of diffusion Monte Carlo method. We established that functionals with D3 dispersion
Nuclear quantum effects, such as zero-point energy and tunneling, cause significant changes to the structure and dynamics of hydrogen bonded systems such as liquid water. However, due to the current inability to simulate liquid water using an exact d
Radium compounds have attracted recently considerable attention due to both development of experimental techniques for high-precision laser spectroscopy of molecules with short-lived nuclei and amenability of certain radium compounds for direct cooli
We describe a simple method to determine, from ab initio calculations, the complete orientation-dependence of interfacial free energies in solid-state crystalline systems. We illustrate the method with an application to precipitates in the Al-Ti allo