1 research outputs found
Generating Converged Accurate Free Energy Surfaces for Chemical Reactions with a Force-Matched Semiempirical Model
We demonstrate the
capability of creating robust density functional
tight binding (DFTB) models for chemical reactivity in prebiotic mixtures
through force matching to short time scale quantum free energy estimates.
Molecular dynamics using density functional theory (DFT) is a highly
accurate approach to generate free energy surfaces for chemical reactions,
but the extreme computational cost often limits the time scales and
range of thermodynamic states that can feasibly be studied. In contrast,
DFTB is a semiempirical quantum method that affords up to a thousandfold
reduction in cost and can recover DFT-level accuracy. Here, we show
that a force-matched DFTB model for aqueous glycine condensation reactions
yields free energy surfaces that are consistent with experimental
observations of reaction energetics. Convergence analysis reveals
that multiple nanoseconds of combined trajectory are needed to reach
a steady-fluctuating free energy estimate for glycine condensation.
Predictive accuracy of force-matched DFTB is demonstrated by direct
comparison to DFT, with the two approaches yielding surfaces with
large regions that differ by only a few kcal mol<sup>–1</sup>