Institute Affiliations


All Publications


  • TeraChem protocol buffers (TCPB): Accelerating QM and QM/MM simulations with a client–server model THE JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Cruzeiro, V. D., Wang, Y., Pieri, E., Hohenstein, E. G., Martínez, T. J. 2023; 158 (044801)

    View details for DOI 10.1063/5.0130886

  • TeraChem: A graphical processing unit-acceleratedelectronic structure package forlarge-scaleab initio molecular dynamics WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-COMPUTATIONAL MOLECULAR SCIENCE Seritan, S., Bannwarth, C., Fales, B. S., Hohenstein, E. G., Isborn, C. M., Kokkila-Schumacher, S. L., Li, X., Liu, F., Luehr, N., Snyder, J. W., Song, C., Titov, A., Ufimtsev, I. S., Wang, L., Martinez, T. J. 2020

    View details for DOI 10.1002/wcms.1494

    View details for Web of Science ID 000552279200001

  • Strong, Nonresonant Radiation Enhances Cis-Trans Photoisomerization of Stilbene in Solution. The journal of physical chemistry. A van den Berg, J. L., Neumann, K. I., Harrison, J. A., Weir, H., Hohenstein, E. G., Martinez, T. J., Zare, R. N. 2020

    Abstract

    Previously, it has been demonstrated that external electric fields may be used to exert control over chemical reactivity. In this study, the impact of a strong, nonresonant IR field (1064 nm) on the photoisomerization of cis-stilbene is investigated in cyclohexane solution. The design of a suitable reaction vessel for characterization of this effect is presented. The electric field supplied by the pulsed, near-IR radiation (epsilonl = 4.5 * 107 V/cm) enhances the cis trans photoisomerization yield at the red edge of the absorption spectrum (wavelengths between 337 and 340 nm). Within the microliter focal volume, up to 75% of all cis-stilbene molecules undergo isomerization to trans-stilbene in the strong electric-field environment, indicating a significant increase relative to the 35% yield of trans-stilbene under field-free conditions. This result correlates with a 1-3% enhancement in the trans-stilbene concentration throughout the bulk solution. Theoretical analysis suggests that the observed change is the result of dynamic Stark shifting of the ground and first excited states, leading to a significant redshift in cis-stilbene's absorption spectrum. The predicted increase in the absorption cross section in this range of excitation wavelengths is qualitatively consistent with the experimental increase in trans-stilbene production.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.jpca.0c02732

    View details for PubMedID 32585098

  • Performance of Coupled-Cluster Singles and Doubles on Modern Stream Processing Architectures. Journal of chemical theory and computation Fales, B. S., Curtis, E. R., Johnson, K. G., Lahana, D., Seritan, S., Wang, Y., Weir, H., Martinez, T. J., Hohenstein, E. G. 2020

    Abstract

    We develop a new implementation of coupled-cluster singles and doubles (CCSD) optimized for the most recent graphical processing unit (GPU) hardware. We find that a single node with 8 NVIDIA V100 GPUs is capable of performing CCSD computations on roughly 100 atoms and 1300 basis functions in less than 1 day. Comparisons against massively parallel implementations of CCSD suggest that more than 64 CPU-based nodes (each with 16 cores) are required to match this performance.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.jctc.0c00336

    View details for PubMedID 32567305

  • Psi4 1.4: Open-source software for high-throughput quantum chemistry. The Journal of chemical physics Smith, D. G., Burns, L. A., Simmonett, A. C., Parrish, R. M., Schieber, M. C., Galvelis, R., Kraus, P., Kruse, H., Di Remigio, R., Alenaizan, A., James, A. M., Lehtola, S., Misiewicz, J. P., Scheurer, M., Shaw, R. A., Schriber, J. B., Xie, Y., Glick, Z. L., Sirianni, D. A., O'Brien, J. S., Waldrop, J. M., Kumar, A., Hohenstein, E. G., Pritchard, B. P., Brooks, B. R., Schaefer, H. F., Sokolov, A. Y., Patkowski, K., DePrince, A. E., Bozkaya, U., King, R. A., Evangelista, F. A., Turney, J. M., Crawford, T. D., Sherrill, C. D. 2020; 152 (18): 184108

    Abstract

    PSI4 is a free and open-source ab initio electronic structure program providing implementations of Hartree-Fock, density functional theory, many-body perturbation theory, configuration interaction, density cumulant theory, symmetry-adapted perturbation theory, and coupled-cluster theory. Most of the methods are quite efficient, thanks to density fitting and multi-core parallelism. The program is a hybrid of C++ and Python, and calculations may be run with very simple text files or using the Python API, facilitating post-processing and complex workflows; method developers also have access to most of PSI4's core functionalities via Python. Job specification may be passed using The Molecular Sciences Software Institute (MolSSI) QCSCHEMA data format, facilitating interoperability. A rewrite of our top-level computation driver, and concomitant adoption of the MolSSI QCARCHIVE INFRASTRUCTURE project, makes the latest version of PSI4 well suited to distributed computation of large numbers of independent tasks. The project has fostered the development of independent software components that may be reused in other quantum chemistry programs.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/5.0006002

    View details for PubMedID 32414239

  • Hole-hole Tamm-Dancoff-approximated density functional theory: A highly efficient electronic structure method incorporating dynamic and static correlation. The Journal of chemical physics Bannwarth, C. n., Yu, J. K., Hohenstein, E. G., Martínez, T. J. 2020; 153 (2): 024110

    Abstract

    The study of photochemical reaction dynamics requires accurate as well as computationally efficient electronic structure methods for the ground and excited states. While time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) is not able to capture static correlation, complete active space self-consistent field methods neglect much of the dynamic correlation. Hence, inexpensive methods that encompass both static and dynamic electron correlation effects are of high interest. Here, we revisit hole-hole Tamm-Dancoff approximated (hh-TDA) density functional theory for this purpose. The hh-TDA method is the hole-hole counterpart to the more established particle-particle TDA (pp-TDA) method, both of which are derived from the particle-particle random phase approximation (pp-RPA). In hh-TDA, the N-electron electronic states are obtained through double annihilations starting from a doubly anionic (N+2 electron) reference state. In this way, hh-TDA treats ground and excited states on equal footing, thus allowing for conical intersections to be correctly described. The treatment of dynamic correlation is introduced through the use of commonly employed density functional approximations to the exchange-correlation potential. We show that hh-TDA is a promising candidate to efficiently treat the photochemistry of organic and biochemical systems that involve several low-lying excited states-particularly those with both low-lying ππ* and nπ* states where inclusion of dynamic correlation is essential to describe the relative energetics. In contrast to the existing literature on pp-TDA and pp-RPA, we employ a functional-dependent choice for the response kernel in pp- and hh-TDA, which closely resembles the response kernels occurring in linear response and collinear spin-flip TDDFT.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/5.0003985

    View details for PubMedID 32668944

  • TeraChem: Accelerating electronic structure and ab initio molecular dynamics with graphical processing units. The Journal of chemical physics Seritan, S. n., Bannwarth, C. n., Fales, B. S., Hohenstein, E. G., Kokkila-Schumacher, S. I., Luehr, N. n., Snyder, J. W., Song, C. n., Titov, A. V., Ufimtsev, I. S., Martínez, T. J. 2020; 152 (22): 224110

    Abstract

    Developed over the past decade, TeraChem is an electronic structure and ab initio molecular dynamics software package designed from the ground up to leverage graphics processing units (GPUs) to perform large-scale ground and excited state quantum chemistry calculations in the gas and the condensed phase. TeraChem's speed stems from the reformulation of conventional electronic structure theories in terms of a set of individually optimized high-performance electronic structure operations (e.g., Coulomb and exchange matrix builds, one- and two-particle density matrix builds) and rank-reduction techniques (e.g., tensor hypercontraction). Recent efforts have encapsulated these core operations and provided language-agnostic interfaces. This greatly increases the accessibility and flexibility of TeraChem as a platform to develop new electronic structure methods on GPUs and provides clear optimization targets for emerging parallel computing architectures.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/5.0007615

    View details for PubMedID 32534542

  • Nonadiabatic Dynamics of Photoexcited cis-Stilbene Using Ab Initio Multiple Spawning. The journal of physical chemistry. B Weir, H. n., Williams, M. n., Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Martínez, T. J. 2020

    Abstract

    The photochemistry of cis-stilbene proceeds through two pathways: cis-trans isomerization and ring closure to 4a,4b-dihydrophenanthrene (DHP). Despite serving for many decades as a model system for photoisomerization, the photodynamics of cis-stilbene is still not fully understood. We use ab initio multiple spawning on a SA-2-CASSCF(2,2) potential energy surface to simulate the nonadiabatic dynamics of isolated cis-stilbene. We find the cyclization (to DHP and cis-stilbene) and isomerization (to trans- and cis-stilbene) reaction coordinates to be orthogonal; branching between the two pathways is determined on the S1 excited state within 150 fs of photoexcitation. Trajectory basis functions (TBFs) undergoing cyclization decay rapidly to the ground state in 250 fs, while TBFs moving along the isomerization coordinate remain on the excited state longer, with the majority decaying between 300 and 500 fs. We observe three avoided crossing regions in the dynamics: two along the isomerization coordinate (displaying pyramidalization and migration of an ethylenic hydrogen or phenyl group), and one DHP-like conical intersection along the cyclization coordinate. The isomeric form of the vibrationally hot photoproducts (as determined by measurement 2 ps after photoexcitation) is determined within less than 50 fs of decay to the ground state mediated by passage through a conical intersection. Excess vibrational energy of ground state cis- and trans-stilbene is channelled into phenyl torsions (with mostly opposing directionality). Our simulations are validated by direct comparison to experiment for the absorption spectrum, branching ratio of the three photoproducts (44:52:4 cis-stilbene:trans-stilbene:DHP), and excited state lifetime (520 ± 40 fs).

    View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c03344

    View details for PubMedID 32428407

  • Rank reduced coupled cluster theory. II. Equation-of-motion coupled-cluster singles and doubles. The Journal of chemical physics Hohenstein, E. G., Zhao, Y., Parrish, R. M., Martinez, T. J. 2019; 151 (16): 164121

    Abstract

    Equation-of-motion coupled-cluster singles and doubles (EOM-CCSD) is a reliable and popular approach to the determination of electronic excitation energies. Recently, we have developed a rank-reduced CCSD (RR-CCSD) method that allows the ground-state coupled-cluster energy to be determined with low-rank cluster amplitudes. Here, we extend this approach to excited-state energies through a RR-EOM-CCSD method. We start from the EOM-CCSD energy functional and insert low-rank approximations to the doubles amplitudes. The result is an approximate EOM-CCSD method with only a quadratic number (in the molecular size) of free parameters in the wavefunction. Importantly, our formulation of RR-EOM-CCSD preserves the size intensivity of the excitation energy and size extensivity of the total energy. Numerical tests of the method suggest that accuracy on the order of 0.05-0.01 eV in the excitation energy is possible with 1% or less of the original number of wavefunction coefficients; accuracy of better than 0.01 eV can be achieved with about 4% or less of the free parameters. The amount of compression at a given accuracy level is expected to increase with the size of the molecule. The RR-EOM-CCSD method is a new path toward the efficient determination of accurate electronic excitation energies.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.5121867

    View details for PubMedID 31675873

  • Quantum Computation of Electronic Transitions Using a Variational Quantum Eigensolver. Physical review letters Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., McMahon, P. L., Martínez, T. J. 2019; 122 (23): 230401

    Abstract

    We develop an extension of the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) algorithm-multistate contracted VQE (MC-VQE)-that allows for the efficient computation of the transition energies between the ground state and several low-lying excited states of a molecule, as well as the oscillator strengths associated with these transitions. We numerically simulate MC-VQE by computing the absorption spectrum of an ab initio exciton model of an 18-chromophore light-harvesting complex from purple photosynthetic bacteria.

    View details for DOI 10.1103/PhysRevLett.122.230401

    View details for PubMedID 31298869

  • Stereoisomer specific reaction of hexabromocyclododecane with reduced sulfur species in aqueous solutions. Chemosphere Zhang, X., Wilson, J. H., Lawson, A. J., Hohenstein, E. G., Jans, U. 2019; 226: 238-245

    Abstract

    The individual degradation rates of the three dominant stereoisomers (α, β, γ) of hexabromocyclododecane (HBCDD) with bisulfide and polysulfides were investigated at pH 9 in methanol/water solutions at two different temperatures (25 °C and 40 °C). Under all conditions investigated, α-HBCDD reacts 10 to 20 times slower with bisulfide than β-HBCDD and γ-HBCDD. The difference in reactivity of HBCDD isomers can be explained by the different populations of stable conformers with large dihedral angle between the vicinal bromine atoms. It was also observed that the reaction of HBCDD with polysulfides is about six times faster than with bisulfide. The experiments performed in solvent mixtures with increased water content at 40 °C indicated that the reaction of HBCDD with bisulfide is faster with higher percentage of water. The much slower abiotic reaction of α-HBCDD compared to β-HBCDD and γ-HBCDD could potentially contribute to the fact that α-HBCDD is more persistent in the environment than γ-HBCDD. Only one isomer of tetrabromocyclododecene (TBCDe-5) was identified as a degradation product of the reaction of HBCDD with reduced sulfur species. TBCDe-5 itself reacts about ten times slower with bisulfide and twenty times slower with polysulfide than HBCDD. The study demonstrates that polysulfides and bisulfides can reduce HBCDD sufficiently in natural anoxic environments and the dominant pathway for the degradation of HBCDD by reduced sulfur species is very likely to be the reductive debromination of vicinal dibromides via concerted anti-elimination.

    View details for DOI 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.03.134

    View details for PubMedID 30928716

  • Rank reduced coupled cluster theory. I. Ground state energies and wavefunctions. The Journal of chemical physics Parrish, R. M., Zhao, Y. n., Hohenstein, E. G., Martínez, T. J. 2019; 150 (16): 164118

    Abstract

    We propose a compression of the opposite-spin coupled cluster doubles amplitudes of the form τijab≡UiaVTVWUjbW, where UiaV are the nV-highest magnitude eigenvectors of the MP2 or MP3 doubles amplitudes. Together with a corresponding parameterization of the opposite-spin coupled cluster Lagrange multipliers of the form λabij≡UiaVLVWUjbW, this yields a fully self-consistent parameterization of reduced-rank coupled cluster equations in terms of the Lagrangian L0TVW,LVW. Making this Lagrangian stationary with respect to the LVW parameters yields a perfectly determined set of equations for the TVW equations and coupled cluster energy. These equations can be solved using a Lyapunov equation for the first-order amplitude updates. We test this "rank-reduced coupled cluster" method for coupled cluster singles and doubles in medium sized molecules and find that substantial compression of the T^2 amplitudes is possible with acceptable accuracy.

    View details for PubMedID 31042891

  • Effect of Nonplanarity on Excited-State Proton Transfer and Internal Conversion in Salicylideneaniline JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A Pijeau, S., Foster, D., Hohenstein, E. G. 2018; 122 (25): 5555–62

    Abstract

    Salicylideneaniline (SA) is a prototype for excited-state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) reactions in nonplanar molecules. It is generally understood that the dominant photochemical pathway in this molecule is ESIPT followed by nonradiative decay due to twisting about its phenolic bond. However, the presence of a secondary internal conversion pathway resulting from frustrated proton transfer remains a matter of contention. We perform a detailed nonadiabatic dynamics simulation of SA and definitively identify the existence of both reaction pathways, thereby showing the presence of a secondary photochemical pathway and providing insight into the nature of ESIPT dynamics in molecules with nonplanar ground-state geometries.

    View details for PubMedID 29851483

  • Nonadiabatic Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics with the Floating Occupation Molecular Orbital-Complete Active Space Configuration Interaction Method JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Hollas, D., Sistik, L., Hohenstein, E. G., Martinez, T. J., Slavicek, P. 2018; 14 (1): 339–50

    Abstract

    We show that the floating occupation molecular orbital complete active space configuration interaction (FOMO-CASCI) method is a promising alternative to the widely used complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) method in direct nonadiabatic dynamics simulations. We have simulated photodynamics of three archetypal molecules in photodynamics: ethylene, methaniminium cation, and malonaldehyde. We compared the time evolution of electronic populations and reaction mechanisms as revealed by the FOMO-CASCI and CASSCF approaches. Generally, the two approaches provide similar results. Some dynamical differences are observed, but these can be traced back to energetically minor differences in the potential energy surfaces. We suggest that the FOMO-CASCI method represents, due to its efficiency and stability, a promising approach for direct ab initio dynamics in the excited state.

    View details for PubMedID 29207238

  • Complete active space configuration interaction from state-averaged configuration interaction singles natural orbitals: Analytic first derivatives and derivative coupling vectors JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Fales, B., Shu, Y., Levine, B. G., Hohenstein, E. G. 2017; 147 (9): 094104

    Abstract

    A new complete active space configuration interaction (CASCI) method was recently introduced that uses state-averaged natural orbitals from the configuration interaction singles method (configuration interaction singles natural orbital CASCI, CISNO-CASCI). This method has been shown to perform as well or better than state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field for a variety of systems. However, further development and testing of this method have been limited by the lack of available analytic first derivatives of the CISNO-CASCI energy as well as the derivative coupling between electronic states. In the present work, we present a Lagrangian-based formulation of these derivatives as well as a highly efficient implementation of the resulting equations accelerated with graphical processing units. We demonstrate that the CISNO-CASCI method is practical for dynamical simulations of photochemical processes in molecular systems containing hundreds of atoms.

    View details for PubMedID 28886625

  • Robust and Efficient Spin Purification for Determinantal Configuration Interaction JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Fales, B., Hohenstein, E. G., Levine, B. G. 2017; 13 (9): 4162–72

    Abstract

    The limited precision of floating point arithmetic can lead to the qualitative and even catastrophic failure of quantum chemical algorithms, especially when high accuracy solutions are sought. For example, numerical errors accumulated while solving for determinantal configuration interaction wave functions via Davidson diagonalization may lead to spin contamination in the trial subspace. This spin contamination may cause the procedure to converge to roots with undesired ⟨Ŝ2⟩, wasting computer time in the best case and leading to incorrect conclusions in the worst. In hopes of finding a suitable remedy, we investigate five purification schemes for ensuring that the eigenvectors have the desired ⟨Ŝ2⟩. These schemes are based on projection, penalty, and iterative approaches. All of these schemes rely on a direct, graphics processing unit-accelerated algorithm for calculating the S2c matrix-vector product. We assess the computational cost and convergence behavior of these methods by application to several benchmark systems and find that the first-order spin penalty method is the optimal choice, though first-order and Löwdin projection approaches also provide fast convergence to the desired spin state. Finally, to demonstrate the utility of these approaches, we computed the lowest several excited states of an open-shell silver cluster (Ag19) using the state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field method, where spin purification was required to ensure spin stability of the CI vector coefficients. Several low-lying states with significant multiply excited character are predicted, suggesting the value of a multireference approach for modeling plasmonic nanomaterials.

    View details for PubMedID 28772070

  • Excited-State Dynamics of a Benzotriazole Photostabilizer: 2-(2'Hydroxy-5'-methylphenyl)benzotriazole JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A Pijeau, S., Foster, D., Hohenstein, E. G. 2017; 121 (34): 6377–87

    Abstract

    A large number of common photostabilizers are based on the 2-(2'-hydroxyphenyl)benzotriazole structure. One common example is 2-(2'-hydroxy-5'-methylphenyl)benzotriazole, or TINUVIN-P. The excited-state dynamics of this molecule have been extensively characterized by ultrafast spectroscopies. These experiments have established that upon photoexcitation TINUVIN-P exhibits excited-state proton transfer followed by a remarkably fast internal conversion. We simulate the excited-state dynamics using ab initio multiple spawning (AIMS) and a complete active space configuration interaction (CASCI) wave function with a correction from density functional theory (DFT) to generate the potential energy surfaces. We predict ultrafast proton transfer on the order of 20 fs followed by simultaneous twisting and pyramidalization until a seam of conical intersection is reached. Near the intersection seam population transfer to the ground state is highly efficient. The process is best described as ballistic wavepacket motion from the Franck-Condon point along a barrierless coordinate leading to the seam of intersection. Internal conversion is primarily mediated by a minimum-energy conical intersection (MECI) with a high degree of pyramidalization. We posit that the presence of a nitrogen atom in the bond linking the phenyl to the benzotriazole allows for the rapid pyramidalization and the short excited-state lifetime.

    View details for PubMedID 28783946

  • PSI4 1.1: An Open-Source Electronic Structure Program Emphasizing Automation, Advanced Libraries, and Interoperability JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Parrish, R. M., Burns, L. A., Smith, D. A., Simmonett, A. C., DePrince, A., Hohenstein, E. G., Bozkaya, U., Sokolov, A., Di Remigio, R., Richard, R. M., Gonthier, J. F., James, A. M., McAlexander, H. R., Kumar, A., Saitow, M., Wang, X., Pritchard, B. P., Prakash, V., Schaefer, H. F., Patkowski, K., King, R. A., Valeev, E. F., Evangelista, F. A., Turney, J. M., Crawford, T., Sherrill, C. 2017; 13 (7): 3185–97

    Abstract

    Psi4 is an ab initio electronic structure program providing methods such as Hartree-Fock, density functional theory, configuration interaction, and coupled-cluster theory. The 1.1 release represents a major update meant to automate complex tasks, such as geometry optimization using complete-basis-set extrapolation or focal-point methods. Conversion of the top-level code to a Python module means that Psi4 can now be used in complex workflows alongside other Python tools. Several new features have been added with the aid of libraries providing easy access to techniques such as density fitting, Cholesky decomposition, and Laplace denominators. The build system has been completely rewritten to simplify interoperability with independent, reusable software components for quantum chemistry. Finally, a wide range of new theoretical methods and analyses have been added to the code base, including functional-group and open-shell symmetry adapted perturbation theory, density-fitted coupled cluster with frozen natural orbitals, orbital-optimized perturbation and coupled-cluster methods (e.g., OO-MP2 and OO-LCCD), density-fitted multiconfigurational self-consistent field, density cumulant functional theory, algebraic-diagrammatic construction excited states, improvements to the geometry optimizer, and the "X2C" approach to relativistic corrections, among many other improvements.

    View details for PubMedID 28489372

  • Excited-State Dynamics of 2-(2 '-Hydroxyphenyl)benzothiazole: Ultrafast Proton Transfer and Internal Conversion JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A Pijeau, S., Foster, D., Hohenstein, E. G. 2017; 121 (24): 4595–4605

    Abstract

    One of the most widely studied model systems for excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) is the 2-(2'-hydroxyphenyl)benzothiazole (HBT) molecule. This compound undergoes ultrafast ESPT followed by internal conversion to return to the ground state. In the present work, we simulate the nonadiabatic photochemistry of HBT using ab initio multiple spawning (AIMS) nuclear dynamics and a complete active space configuration interaction (CASCI) method in conjunction with wave function-in-DFT embedding to obtain ground- and excited-state potential surfaces on-the-fly. Our simulation predicts ultrafast ESPT with a time constant of 48-54 fs and an excited-state lifetime of 1.7-1.8 ps. Following proton transfer, HBT becomes trapped in a metastable keto structure on the S1 state. Eventually, the molecule begins to twist and proceeds toward a seam of intersection with the ground state where internal conversion is highly efficient.

    View details for PubMedID 28558210

  • A direct-compatible formulation of the coupled perturbed complete active space self-consistent field equations on graphical processing units JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Snyder, J. W., Fales, B. S., Hohenstein, E. G., Levine, B. G., Martinez, T. J. 2017; 146 (17)

    Abstract

    We recently developed an algorithm to compute response properties for the state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field method (SA-CASSCF) that capitalized on sparsity in the atomic orbital basis. Our original algorithm was limited to treating small to moderate sized active spaces, but the recent development of graphical processing unit (GPU) based direct-configuration interaction algorithms provides an opportunity to extend this to large active spaces. We present here a direct-compatible version of the coupled perturbed equations, enabling us to compute response properties for systems treated with arbitrary active spaces (subject to available memory and computation time). This work demonstrates that the computationally demanding portions of the SA-CASSCF method can be formulated in terms of seven fundamental operations, including Coulomb and exchange matrix builds and their derivatives, as well as, generalized one- and two-particle density matrix and σ vector constructions. As in our previous work, this algorithm exhibits low computational scaling and is accelerated by the use of GPUs, making possible optimizations and nonadiabatic dynamics on systems with O(1000) basis functions and O(100) atoms, respectively.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4979844

    View details for Web of Science ID 000400625800014

    View details for PubMedID 28477593

  • Atomistic non-adiabatic dynamics of the LH2 complex with a GPU-accelerated ab initio exciton model. Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP Sisto, A., Stross, C., van der Kamp, M. W., O'Connor, M., McIntosh-Smith, S., Johnson, G. T., Hohenstein, E. G., Manby, F. R., Glowacki, D. R., Martinez, T. J. 2017

    Abstract

    We recently outlined an efficient multi-tiered parallel ab initio excitonic framework that utilizes time dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) to calculate ground and excited state energies and gradients of large supramolecular complexes in atomistic detail - enabling us to undertake non-adiabatic simulations which explicitly account for the coupled anharmonic vibrational motion of all the constituent atoms in a supramolecular system. Here we apply that framework to the 27 coupled bacterio-chlorophyll-a chromophores which make up the LH2 complex, using it to compute an on-the-fly nonadiabatic surface-hopping (SH) trajectory of electronically excited LH2. Part one of this article is focussed on calibrating our ab initio exciton Hamiltonian using two key parameters: a shift δ, which corrects for the error in TDDFT vertical excitation energies; and an effective dielectric constant ε, which describes the average screening of the transition-dipole coupling between chromophores. Using snapshots obtained from equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations (MD) of LH2, we tune the values of both δ and ε through fitting to the thermally broadened experimental absorption spectrum, giving a linear absorption spectrum that agrees reasonably well with experiment. In part two of this article, we construct a time-resolved picture of the coupled vibrational and excitation energy transfer (EET) dynamics in the sub-picosecond regime following photo-excitation. Assuming Franck-Condon excitation of a narrow eigenstate band centred at 800 nm, we use surface hopping to follow a single nonadiabatic dynamics trajectory within the full eigenstate manifold. Consistent with experimental data, this trajectory gives timescales for B800→B850 population transfer (τB800→B850) between 650-1050 fs, and B800 population decay (τ800→) between 10-50 fs. The dynamical picture that emerges is one of rapidly fluctuating LH2 eigenstates that are delocalized over multiple chromophores and undergo frequent crossing on a femtosecond timescale as a result of the atomic vibrations of the constituent chromophores. The eigenstate fluctuations arise from disorder that is driven by vibrational dynamics with multiple characteristic timescales. The scalability of our ab initio excitonic computational framework across massively parallel architectures opens up the possibility of addressing a wide range of questions, including how specific dynamical motions impact both the pathways and efficiency of electronic energy-transfer within large supramolecular systems.

    View details for DOI 10.1039/c7cp00492c

    View details for PubMedID 28430270

  • Improved Complete Active Space Configuration Interaction Energies with a Simple Correction from Density Functional Theory JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Pijeau, S., Hohenstein, E. G. 2017; 13 (3): 1130–46

    Abstract

    Recent algorithmic advances have extended the applicability of complete active space configuration interaction (CASCI) methods to molecular systems with hundreds of atoms. While this enables simulation of photochemical dynamics in the condensed phase, the underlying CASCI method has some well-known problems resulting from a severe neglect of dynamic electron correlation. Vertical excitation energies, vibrational frequencies, and reaction barriers are systematically overestimated; these errors limit the applicability of CASCI. We develop a correction for the CASCI energy using density functional theory (DFT). The DFT correction incorporates the effect of dynamic electron correlation among the core electrons into the CASCI Hamiltonian. We show that the resulting DFT-corrected CASCI approach is applicable in situations where the usual single-reference DFT methods fail, such as the description of systems with biradicaloid electronic structure and conical intersections between ground and excited electronic states. Finally, we apply this DFT-corrected CASCI approach to ultrafast excited-state proton transfer dynamics. Without the DFT correction, CASCI predicts spurious reaction barriers to these processes, and, as a result, a qualitatively correct description of the dynamics is not possible. With the DFT-corrected CASCI method, we demonstrate qualitative and quantitative agreement with both theory and experiment for two model systems for excited-state intramolecular proton transfer. Finally, we apply the DFT-corrected CASCI method to excited-state proton transfer dynamics in a system with more than 150 atoms.

    View details for PubMedID 28157312

  • Analytic formulation of derivative coupling vectors for complete active space configuration interaction wavefunctions with floating occupation molecular orbitals JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G. 2016; 145 (17): 174110

    Abstract

    The floating occupation molecular orbital complete active space configuration interaction (FOMO-CASCI) method is quite promising for the study of nonadiabatic processes. Use of this method directly in nonadiabatic dynamics simulations has been limited by the lack of available first-order nonadiabatic coupling vectors. Here, an analytic formulation of these derivative coupling vectors is presented for FOMO-CASCI wavefunctions using a simple Lagrangian-based approach. The derivative coupling vectors are applied in the optimization of minimum energy conical intersections of an aqueously solvated model compound for the chromophore of the green fluorescent protein (including 100 water molecules). The computational cost of the FOMO-CASCI derivative coupling vector is shown to scale quadratically, O(N2), with system size and is applied to systems with up to 1000 atoms.

    View details for PubMedID 27825203

  • Comment on "Positive semidefinite tensor factorizations of the two-electron integral matrix for low-scaling ab initio electronic structure" [J. Chem. Phys. 143, 064103 (2015)]. journal of chemical physics Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Martínez, T. J. 2016; 145 (2): 027101-?

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4955316

    View details for PubMedID 27421428

  • "Balancing" the Block Davidson-Liu Algorithm JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Martinez, T. J. 2016; 12 (7): 3003-3007

    Abstract

    We describe a simple modification ("balancing") of the block Davidson-Liu eigenvalue algorithm which allows the norms of the Krylov search directions to decrease naturally as convergence is approached. In the context of integral-direct configuration interaction singles and time-dependent density functional theory, this provides for efficient utilization of density-based screening. Tests within the TeraChem GPGPU code exhibit speedups of ∼2× on systems with up to 1500 atoms, with negligible loss in accuracy.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.jctc.6b00459

    View details for Web of Science ID 000379703800001

    View details for PubMedID 27253494

  • Mechanism for the Enhanced Excited-State Lewis Acidity of Methyl Viologen JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Hohenstein, E. G. 2016; 138 (6): 1868–76

    Abstract

    Aqueous solutions of methyl viologen (MV(2+)) exhibit anomalous fluorescence behavior. Although it has long fluorescence lifetimes in polar solvents such as acetonitrile, MV(2+) has a short fluorescence lifetime in water. Recent experiments by Kohler and co-workers (Henrich et al. J. Phys. Chem. B 2015, 119, 2737-2748) have implicated an excited-state acid/base reaction as the source of the nonradiative decay pathway. While many chemical species exhibit enhanced Brønsted acidity in their excited state, MV(2+) is the first example of a species with enhanced Lewis acidity. Using a complete active space configuration interaction (CASCI) approach, excited-state molecular dynamics simulations of aqueous MV(2+) are performed in order to test the hypothesis that MV(2+) acts as a Lewis photoacid and to elucidate a mechanism for this behavior. These simulations show that the Lewis acidity of MV(2+) is indeed enhanced by photoexcitation. On its S1 excited state, MV(2+) reacts with water to generate a hydronium ion approximately 1.5 ps after excitation. After the hydronium ion is produced, the corresponding hydroxide ion adds to MV(2+) to form a covalently bound photoproduct and, subsequently, evolves toward a conical intersection.

    View details for PubMedID 26725644

  • Competition Between pi-pi and C-H/pi Interactions: A Comparison of the Structural and Electronic Properties of Alkoxy-Substituted 1,8-Bis((propyloxyphenyl)ethynyl)naphthalenes CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL Carson, B. E., Parker, T. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Brizius, G. L., Komorner, W., King, R. A., Collard, D. M., Sherrill, C. 2015; 21 (52): 19168–75

    Abstract

    The structural and electronic consequences of π-π and C-H/π interactions in two alkoxy-substituted 1,8-bis- ((propyloxyphenyl)ethynyl)naphthalenes are explored by using X-ray crystallography and electronic structure computations. The crystal structure of analogue 4, bearing an alkoxy side chain in the 4-position of each of the phenyl rings, adopts a π-stacked geometry, whereas analogue 8, bearing alkoxy groups at both the 2- and the 5-positions of each ring, has a geometry in which the rings are splayed away from a π-stacked arrangement. Symmetry-adapted perturbation theory analysis was performed on the two analogues to evaluate the interactions between the phenylethynyl arms in each molecule in terms of electrostatic, steric, polarization, and London dispersion components. The computations support the expectation that the π-stacked geometry of the alkoxyphenyl units in 4 is simply a consequence of maximizing π-π interactions. However, the splayed geometry of 8 results from a more subtle competition between different noncovalent interactions: this geometry provides a favorable anti-alignment of C-O bond dipoles, and two C-H/π interactions in which hydrogen atoms of the alkyl side chains interact favorably with the π electrons of the other phenyl ring. These favorable interactions overcome competing π-π interactions to give rise to a geometry in which the phenylethynyl substituents are in an offset, unstacked arrangement.

    View details for DOI 10.1002/chem.201502363

    View details for Web of Science ID 000368282100041

    View details for PubMedID 26568396

  • An atomic orbital-based formulation of analytical gradients and nonadiabatic coupling vector elements for the state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field method on graphical processing units JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Snyder, J. W., Hohenstein, E. G., Luehr, N., Martinez, T. J. 2015; 143 (15)

    Abstract

    We recently presented an algorithm for state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field (SA-CASSCF) orbital optimization that capitalizes on sparsity in the atomic orbital basis set to reduce the scaling of computational effort with respect to molecular size. Here, we extend those algorithms to calculate the analytic gradient and nonadiabatic coupling vectors for SA-CASSCF. Combining the low computational scaling with acceleration from graphical processing units allows us to perform SA-CASSCF geometry optimizations for molecules with more than 1000 atoms. The new approach will make minimal energy conical intersection searches and nonadiabatic dynamics routine for molecular systems with O(10(2)) atoms.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4932613

    View details for Web of Science ID 000363418400008

    View details for PubMedID 26493897

  • Tensor Hypercontraction Second-Order Møller-Plesset Perturbation Theory: Grid Optimization and Reaction Energies. Journal of chemical theory and computation Schumacher, S. I., Hohenstein, E. G., Parrish, R. M., Wang, L. P., Martínez, T. J. 2015; 11 (7): 3042-52

    Abstract

    We have recently introduced the tensor hypercontraction (THC) method for electronic structure, including MP2. Here, we present an algorithm for THC-MP2 that lowers the memory requirements as well as the prefactor while maintaining the formal quartic scaling that we demonstrated previously. We also describe a procedure to optimize quadrature grids used in grid-based least-squares (LS) THC-MP2. We apply this algorithm to generate grids for first-row atoms with less than 100 points/atom while incurring negligible errors in the computed energies. We benchmark the LS-THC-MP2 method using optimized grids for a wide variety of tests sets including conformational energies and reaction barriers in both the cc-pVDZ and cc-pVTZ basis sets. These tests demonstrate that the THC methodology is not limited to small basis sets and that it incurs negligible errors in both absolute and relative energies.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.jctc.5b00272

    View details for PubMedID 26575741

  • Analytic first derivatives of floating occupation molecular orbital-complete active space configuration interaction on graphical processing units. journal of chemical physics Hohenstein, E. G., Bouduban, M. E., Song, C., Luehr, N., Ufimtsev, I. S., Martínez, T. J. 2015; 143 (1): 014111-?

    Abstract

    The floating occupation molecular orbital-complete active space configuration interaction (FOMO-CASCI) method is a promising alternative to the state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field (SA-CASSCF) method. We have formulated the analytic first derivative of FOMO-CASCI in a manner that is well-suited for a highly efficient implementation using graphical processing units (GPUs). Using this implementation, we demonstrate that FOMO-CASCI gradients are of similar computational expense to configuration interaction singles (CIS) or time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT). In contrast to CIS and TDDFT, FOMO-CASCI can describe multireference character of the electronic wavefunction. We show that FOMO-CASCI compares very favorably to SA-CASSCF in its ability to describe molecular geometries and potential energy surfaces around minimum energy conical intersections. Finally, we apply FOMO-CASCI to the excited state hydrogen transfer reaction in methyl salicylate.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4923259

    View details for PubMedID 26156469

  • Analytic first derivatives of floating occupation molecular orbital-complete active space configuration interaction on graphical processing units. journal of chemical physics Hohenstein, E. G., Bouduban, M. E., Song, C., Luehr, N., Ufimtsev, I. S., Martínez, T. J. 2015; 143 (1): 014111-?

    Abstract

    The floating occupation molecular orbital-complete active space configuration interaction (FOMO-CASCI) method is a promising alternative to the state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field (SA-CASSCF) method. We have formulated the analytic first derivative of FOMO-CASCI in a manner that is well-suited for a highly efficient implementation using graphical processing units (GPUs). Using this implementation, we demonstrate that FOMO-CASCI gradients are of similar computational expense to configuration interaction singles (CIS) or time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT). In contrast to CIS and TDDFT, FOMO-CASCI can describe multireference character of the electronic wavefunction. We show that FOMO-CASCI compares very favorably to SA-CASSCF in its ability to describe molecular geometries and potential energy surfaces around minimum energy conical intersections. Finally, we apply FOMO-CASCI to the excited state hydrogen transfer reaction in methyl salicylate.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4923259

    View details for PubMedID 26156469

  • Tensor Hypercontraction Second-Order Moller-Plesset Perturbation Theory: Grid Optimization and Reaction Energies JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Schumacher, S. I., Hohenstein, E. G., Parrish, R. M., Wang, L., Martinez, T. J. 2015; 11 (7): 3042-3052

    Abstract

    We have recently introduced the tensor hypercontraction (THC) method for electronic structure, including MP2. Here, we present an algorithm for THC-MP2 that lowers the memory requirements as well as the prefactor while maintaining the formal quartic scaling that we demonstrated previously. We also describe a procedure to optimize quadrature grids used in grid-based least-squares (LS) THC-MP2. We apply this algorithm to generate grids for first-row atoms with less than 100 points/atom while incurring negligible errors in the computed energies. We benchmark the LS-THC-MP2 method using optimized grids for a wide variety of tests sets including conformational energies and reaction barriers in both the cc-pVDZ and cc-pVTZ basis sets. These tests demonstrate that the THC methodology is not limited to small basis sets and that it incurs negligible errors in both absolute and relative energies.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.jctc.5b00272

    View details for Web of Science ID 000358104800015

  • An atomic orbital-based formulation of the complete active space self-consistent field method on graphical processing units. journal of chemical physics Hohenstein, E. G., Luehr, N., Ufimtsev, I. S., Martínez, T. J. 2015; 142 (22): 224103-?

    Abstract

    Despite its importance, state-of-the-art algorithms for performing complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) computations have lagged far behind those for single reference methods. We develop an algorithm for the CASSCF orbital optimization that uses sparsity in the atomic orbital (AO) basis set to increase the applicability of CASSCF. Our implementation of this algorithm uses graphical processing units (GPUs) and has allowed us to perform CASSCF computations on molecular systems containing more than one thousand atoms. Additionally, we have implemented analytic gradients of the CASSCF energy; the gradients also benefit from GPU acceleration as well as sparsity in the AO basis.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4921956

    View details for PubMedID 26071697

  • An atomic orbital-based formulation of the complete active space self-consistent field method on graphical processing units JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Luehr, N., Ufimtsev, I. S., Martinez, T. J. 2015; 142 (22)

    Abstract

    Despite its importance, state-of-the-art algorithms for performing complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) computations have lagged far behind those for single reference methods. We develop an algorithm for the CASSCF orbital optimization that uses sparsity in the atomic orbital (AO) basis set to increase the applicability of CASSCF. Our implementation of this algorithm uses graphical processing units (GPUs) and has allowed us to perform CASSCF computations on molecular systems containing more than one thousand atoms. Additionally, we have implemented analytic gradients of the CASSCF energy; the gradients also benefit from GPU acceleration as well as sparsity in the AO basis.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4921956

    View details for Web of Science ID 000356176600005

    View details for PubMedID 26071697

  • Determination of Hydrogen Bond Structure in Water versus Aprotic Environments To Test the Relationship Between Length and Stability JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Sigala, P. A., Ruben, E. A., Liu, C. W., Piccoli, P. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Martinez, T. J., Schultz, A. J., Herschlag, D. 2015; 137 (17): 5730-5740

    Abstract

    Hydrogen bonds profoundly influence the architecture and activity of biological macromolecules. Deep appreciation of hydrogen bond contributions to biomolecular function thus requires a detailed understanding of hydrogen bond structure and energetics and the relationship between these properties. Hydrogen bond formation energies (ΔGf) are enormously more favorable in aprotic solvents than in water, and two classes of contributing factors have been proposed to explain this energetic difference, focusing respectively on the isolated and hydrogen-bonded species: (I) water stabilizes the dissociated donor and acceptor groups much better than aprotic solvents, thereby reducing the driving force for hydrogen bond formation; and (II) water lengthens hydrogen bonds compared to aprotic environments, thereby decreasing the potential energy within the hydrogen bond. Each model has been proposed to provide a dominant contribution to ΔGf, but incisive tests that distinguish the importance of these contributions are lacking. Here we directly test the structural basis of model II. Neutron crystallography, NMR spectroscopy, and quantum mechanical calculations demonstrate that O-H···O hydrogen bonds in crystals, chloroform, acetone, and water have nearly identical lengths and very similar potential energy surfaces despite ΔGf differences >8 kcal/mol across these solvents. These results rule out a substantial contribution from solvent-dependent differences in hydrogen bond structure and potential energy after association (model II) and thus support the conclusion that differences in hydrogen bond ΔGf are predominantly determined by solvent interactions with the dissociated groups (model I). These findings advance our understanding of universal hydrogen-bonding interactions and have important implications for biology and engineering.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/ja512980h

    View details for Web of Science ID 000354338500017

    View details for PubMedID 25871450

  • Advances in molecular quantum chemistry contained in the Q-Chem 4 program package MOLECULAR PHYSICS Shao, Y., Gan, Z., Epifanovsky, E., Gilbert, A. T., Wormit, M., Kussmann, J., Lange, A. W., Behn, A., Deng, J., Feng, X., Ghosh, D., Goldey, M., Horn, P. R., Jacobson, L. D., Kaliman, I., Khaliullin, R. Z., Kus, T., Landau, A., Liu, J., Proynov, E. I., Rhee, Y. M., Richard, R. M., Rohrdanz, M. A., Steele, R. P., Sundstrom, E. J., Woodcock, H. L., Zimmerman, P. M., Zuev, D., Albrecht, B., Alguire, E., Austin, B., Beran, G. J., Bernard, Y. A., Berquist, E., Brandhorst, K., Bravaya, K. B., Brown, S. T., Casanova, D., Chang, C., Chen, Y., Chien, S. H., Closser, K. D., Crittenden, D. L., Diedenhofen, M., Distasio, R. A., Do, H., Dutoi, A. D., Edgar, R. G., Fatehi, S., Fusti-Molnar, L., Ghysels, A., Golubeva-Zadorozhnaya, A., Gomes, J., Hanson-Heine, M. W., Harbach, P. H., Hauser, A. W., Hohenstein, E. G., Holden, Z. C., Jagau, T., Ji, H., Kaduk, B., Khistyaev, K., Kim, J., Kim, J., King, R. A., Klunzinger, P., Kosenkov, D., Kowalczyk, T., Krauter, C. M., Lao, K. U., Laurent, A. D., Lawler, K. V., Levchenko, S. V., Lin, C. Y., Liu, F., Livshits, E., Lochan, R. C., Luenser, A., Manohar, P., Manzer, S. F., Mao, S., Mardirossian, N., Marenich, A. V., Maurer, S. A., Mayhall, N. J., Neuscamman, E., Oana, C. M., Olivares-Amaya, R., O'Neill, D. P., Parkhill, J. A., Perrine, T. M., Peverati, R., Prociuk, A., Rehn, D. R., Rosta, E., Russ, N. J., Sharada, S. M., Sharma, S., Small, D. W., Sodt, A., Stein, T., Stueck, D., Su, Y., Thom, A. J., Tsuchimochi, T., Vanovschi, V., Vogt, L., Vydrov, O., Wang, T., Watson, M. A., Wenzel, J., White, A., Williams, C. F., Yang, J., Yeganeh, S., Yost, S. R., You, Z., Zhang, I. Y., Zhang, X., Zhao, Y., Brooks, B. R., Chan, G. K., Chipman, D. M., Cramer, C. J., Goddard, W. A., Gordon, M. S., Hehre, W. J., Klamt, A., Schaefer, H. F., Schmidt, M. W., Sherrill, C. D., Truhlar, D. G., Warshel, A., Xu, X., Aspuru-Guzik, A., Baer, R., Bell, A. T., Besley, N. A., Chai, J., Dreuw, A., Dunietz, B. D., Furlani, T. R., Gwaltney, S. R., Hsu, C., Jung, Y., Kong, J., Lambrecht, D. S., Liang, W., Ochsenfeld, C., Rassolov, V. A., Slipchenko, L. V., Subotnik, J. E., Van Voorhis, T., Herbert, J. M., Krylov, A. I., Gill, P. M., Head-Gordon, M. 2015; 113 (2): 184-215
  • Configuration interaction singles natural orbitals: An orbital basis for an efficient and size intensive multireference description of electronic excited states JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Shu, Y., Hohenstein, E. G., Levine, B. G. 2015; 142 (2): 024102

    Abstract

    Multireference quantum chemical methods, such as the complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) method, have long been the state of the art for computing regions of potential energy surfaces (PESs) where complex, multiconfigurational wavefunctions are required, such as near conical intersections. Herein, we present a computationally efficient alternative to the widely used CASSCF method based on a complete active space configuration interaction (CASCI) expansion built from the state-averaged natural orbitals of configuration interaction singles calculations (CISNOs). This CISNO-CASCI approach is shown to predict vertical excitation energies of molecules with closed-shell ground states similar to those predicted by state averaged (SA)-CASSCF in many cases and to provide an excellent reference for a perturbative treatment of dynamic electron correlation. Absolute energies computed at the CISNO-CASCI level are found to be variationally superior, on average, to other CASCI methods. Unlike SA-CASSCF, CISNO-CASCI provides vertical excitation energies which are both size intensive and size consistent, thus suggesting that CISNO-CASCI would be preferable to SA-CASSCF for the study of systems with multiple excitable centers. The fact that SA-CASSCF and some other CASCI methods do not provide a size intensive/consistent description of excited states is attributed to changes in the orbitals that occur upon introduction of non-interacting subsystems. Finally, CISNO-CASCI is found to provide a suitable description of the PES surrounding a biradicaloid conical intersection in ethylene.

    View details for PubMedID 25591333

  • Rotational state analysis of AIH(+) by two-photon dissociation JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SPECTROSCOPY Seck, C. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Lien, C., Stollenwerk, P. R., Odom, B. C. 2014; 300: 108-111
  • Communication: Acceleration of coupled cluster singles and doubles via orbital-weighted least-squares tensor hypercontraction. journal of chemical physics Parrish, R. M., Sherrill, C. D., Hohenstein, E. G., Kokkila, S. I., Martínez, T. J. 2014; 140 (18): 181102-?

    Abstract

    We apply orbital-weighted least-squares tensor hypercontraction decomposition of the electron repulsion integrals to accelerate the coupled cluster singles and doubles (CCSD) method. Using accurate and flexible low-rank factorizations of the electron repulsion integral tensor, we are able to reduce the scaling of the most vexing particle-particle ladder term in CCSD from [Formula: see text] to [Formula: see text], with remarkably low error. Combined with a T1-transformed Hamiltonian, this leads to substantial practical accelerations against an optimized density-fitted CCSD implementation.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4876016

    View details for PubMedID 24832246

  • Tractability gains in symmetry-adapted perturbation theory including coupled double excitations: CCD plus ST(CCD) dispersion with natural orbital truncations JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2013; 139 (17)

    Abstract

    This work focuses on efficient and accurate treatment of the intermolecular dispersion interaction using the CCD+ST(CCD) dispersion approach formulated by Williams et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 103, 4586 (1995)]. We apply natural orbital truncation techniques to the solution of the monomer coupled-cluster double (CCD) equations, yielding substantial accelerations in this computationally demanding portion of the SAPT2+(CCD), SAPT2+(3)(CCD), and SAPT2+3(CCD) analyses. It is shown that the wholly rate-limiting dimer-basis particle-particle ladder term can be computed in a reduced natural virtual space which is essentially the same size as the monomer-basis virtual space, with an error on the order of a few thousandths of 1 kcal mol(-1). Coupled with our existing natural orbital techniques for the perturbative triple excitation contributions [E. G. Hohenstein and C. D. Sherrill, J. Chem. Phys. 133, 104107 (2010)], this technique provides speedups of greater than an order of magnitude for the evaluation of the complete SAPT2+3(CCD) decomposition, with a total error of a few hundredths of 1 kcal mol(-1). The combined approach yields tractability gains of almost 2× in the system size, allowing for SAPT2+3(CCD)/aug-cc-pVTZ analysis to be performed for systems such as adenine-thymine for the first time. Natural orbital based SAPT2+3(CCD)/aug-cc-pVTZ results are presented for stacked and hydrogen-bonded configurations of uracil dimer and the adenine-thymine dimer.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4826520

    View details for Web of Science ID 000326922300005

    View details for PubMedID 24206282

  • Tensor Hypercontraction Equation-of-Motion Second-Order Approximate Coupled Cluster: Electronic Excitation Energies in O(N-4) Time JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B Hohenstein, E. G., Kokkila, S. I., Parrish, R. M., Martinez, T. J. 2013; 117 (42): 12972-12978

    Abstract

    The tensor hypercontraction (THC) formalism is applied to equation-of-motion second-order approximate coupled cluster singles and doubles (EOM-CC2). The resulting method, THC-EOM-CC2, is shown to scale as [Formula: see text], a reduction of one order from the formal [Formula: see text] scaling of conventional EOM-CC2. Numerical tests for a variety of molecules show that errors of less than 0.02 eV are introduced into the excitation energies.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/jp4021905

    View details for Web of Science ID 000326259800032

  • Exact tensor hypercontraction: a universal technique for the resolution of matrix elements of local finite-range N-body potentials in many-body quantum problems. Physical review letters Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Schunck, N. F., Sherrill, C. D., Martínez, T. J. 2013; 111 (13): 132505-?

    Abstract

    Configuration-space matrix elements of N-body potentials arise naturally and ubiquitously in the Ritz-Galerkin solution of many-body quantum problems. For the common specialization of local, finite-range potentials, we develop the exact tensor hypercontraction method, which provides a quantized renormalization of the coordinate-space form of the N-body potential, allowing for a highly separable tensor factorization of the configuration-space matrix elements. This representation allows for substantial computational savings in chemical, atomic, and nuclear physics simulations, particularly with respect to difficult "exchangelike" contractions.

    View details for PubMedID 24116775

  • Discrete variable representation in electronic structure theory: Quadrature grids for least-squares tensor hypercontraction JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Martinez, T. J., Sherrill, C. D. 2013; 138 (19)

    Abstract

    We investigate the application of molecular quadratures obtained from either standard Becke-type grids or discrete variable representation (DVR) techniques to the recently developed least-squares tensor hypercontraction (LS-THC) representation of the electron repulsion integral (ERI) tensor. LS-THC uses least-squares fitting to renormalize a two-sided pseudospectral decomposition of the ERI, over a physical-space quadrature grid. While this procedure is technically applicable with any choice of grid, the best efficiency is obtained when the quadrature is tuned to accurately reproduce the overlap metric for quadratic products of the primary orbital basis. Properly selected Becke DFT grids can roughly attain this property. Additionally, we provide algorithms for adopting the DVR techniques of the dynamics community to produce two different classes of grids which approximately attain this property. The simplest algorithm is radial discrete variable representation (R-DVR), which diagonalizes the finite auxiliary-basis representation of the radial coordinate for each atom, and then combines Lebedev-Laikov spherical quadratures and Becke atomic partitioning to produce the full molecular quadrature grid. The other algorithm is full discrete variable representation (F-DVR), which uses approximate simultaneous diagonalization of the finite auxiliary-basis representation of the full position operator to produce non-direct-product quadrature grids. The qualitative features of all three grid classes are discussed, and then the relative efficiencies of these grids are compared in the context of LS-THC-DF-MP2. Coarse Becke grids are found to give essentially the same accuracy and efficiency as R-DVR grids; however, the latter are built from explicit knowledge of the basis set and may guide future development of atom-centered grids. F-DVR is found to provide reasonable accuracy with markedly fewer points than either Becke or R-DVR schemes.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4802773

    View details for Web of Science ID 000319291600009

    View details for PubMedID 23697409

  • Quartic scaling second-order approximate coupled cluster singles and doubles via tensor hypercontraction: THC-CC2 JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Kokkila, S. I., Parrish, R. M., Martinez, T. J. 2013; 138 (12)

    Abstract

    The second-order approximate coupled cluster singles and doubles method (CC2) is a valuable tool in electronic structure theory. Although the density fitting approximation has been successful in extending CC2 to larger molecules, it cannot address the steep O(N(5)) scaling with the number of basis functions, N. Here, we introduce the tensor hypercontraction (THC) approximation to CC2 (THC-CC2), which reduces the scaling to O(N(4)) and the storage requirements to O(N(2)). We present an algorithm to efficiently evaluate the THC-CC2 correlation energy and demonstrate its quartic scaling. This implementation of THC-CC2 uses a grid-based least-squares THC (LS-THC) approximation to the density-fitted electron repulsion integrals. The accuracy of the CC2 correlation energy under these approximations is shown to be suitable for most practical applications.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4795514

    View details for Web of Science ID 000316969500064

    View details for PubMedID 23556713

  • Quantum-Mechanical Analysis of the Energetic Contributions to pi Stacking in Nucleic Acids versus Rise, Twist, and Slide JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Parker, T. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Parrish, R. M., Hud, N. V., Sherrill, C. D. 2013; 135 (4): 1306-1316

    Abstract

    Symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) is applied to pairs of hydrogen-bonded nucleobases to obtain the energetic components of base stacking (electrostatic, exchange-repulsion, induction/polarization, and London dispersion interactions) and how they vary as a function of the helical parameters Rise, Twist, and Slide. Computed average values of Rise and Twist agree well with experimental data for B-form DNA from the Nucleic Acids Database, even though the model computations omitted the backbone atoms (suggesting that the backbone in B-form DNA is compatible with having the bases adopt their ideal stacking geometries). London dispersion forces are the most important attractive component in base stacking, followed by electrostatic interactions. At values of Rise typical of those in DNA (3.36 Å), the electrostatic contribution is nearly always attractive, providing further evidence for the importance of charge-penetration effects in ?-? interactions (a term neglected in classical force fields). Comparison of the computed stacking energies with those from model complexes made of the "parent" nucleobases purine and 2-pyrimidone indicates that chemical substituents in DNA and RNA account for 20-40% of the base-stacking energy. A lack of correspondence between the SAPT results and experiment for Slide in RNA base-pair steps suggests that the backbone plays a larger role in determining stacking geometries in RNA than in B-form DNA. In comparisons of base-pair steps with thymine versus uracil, the thymine methyl group tends to enhance the strength of the stacking interaction through a combination of dispersion and electrosatic interactions.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/ja30633091

    View details for Web of Science ID 000314492500032

    View details for PubMedID 23265256

  • Communication: Tensor hypercontraction. III. Least-squares tensor hypercontraction for the determination of correlated wavefunctions JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Parrish, R. M., Sherrill, C. D., Martinez, T. J. 2012; 137 (22)

    Abstract

    The manipulation of the rank-four tensor of double excitation amplitudes represents a challenge to the efficient implementation of many electronic structure methods. We present a proof of concept for the approximation of doubles amplitudes in the tensor hypercontraction (THC) representation. In particular, we show how THC can be used to both reduce the scaling with respect to molecular size of coupled cluster singles and doubles (CCSD) (and related methods) by two orders [from O(N(6)) to O(N(4))] and remove the memory bottleneck associated with storage of the doubles amplitudes. The accuracy of correlated methods as integral and amplitude approximations are introduced is examined. For a set of 20 small molecules, single and double-excitation configuration interaction (CISD), quadratic CISD (QCISD), and CCSD correlation energies could be reproduced with millihartree accuracy after the introduction of these approximations. Our approach exploits otherwise hidden factorizable tensor structure in both the electron repulsion integrals and the wavefunction coefficients and should be applicable with suitable modifications to many methods in electronic structure theory.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4768241

    View details for Web of Science ID 000312491400055

    View details for PubMedID 23248980

  • Tensor hypercontraction. II. Least-squares renormalization JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Martinez, T. J., Sherrill, C. D. 2012; 137 (22)

    Abstract

    The least-squares tensor hypercontraction (LS-THC) representation for the electron repulsion integral (ERI) tensor is presented. Recently, we developed the generic tensor hypercontraction (THC) ansatz, which represents the fourth-order ERI tensor as a product of five second-order tensors [E. G. Hohenstein, R. M. Parrish, and T. J. Martínez, J. Chem. Phys. 137, 044103 (2012)]. Our initial algorithm for the generation of the THC factors involved a two-sided invocation of overlap-metric density fitting, followed by a PARAFAC decomposition, and is denoted PARAFAC tensor hypercontraction (PF-THC). LS-THC supersedes PF-THC by producing the THC factors through a least-squares renormalization of a spatial quadrature over the otherwise singular 1∕r(12) operator. Remarkably, an analytical and simple formula for the LS-THC factors exists. Using this formula, the factors may be generated with O(N(5)) effort if exact integrals are decomposed, or O(N(4)) effort if the decomposition is applied to density-fitted integrals, using any choice of density fitting metric. The accuracy of LS-THC is explored for a range of systems using both conventional and density-fitted integrals in the context of MP2. The grid fitting error is found to be negligible even for extremely sparse spatial quadrature grids. For the case of density-fitted integrals, the additional error incurred by the grid fitting step is generally markedly smaller than the underlying Coulomb-metric density fitting error. The present results, coupled with our previously published factorizations of MP2 and MP3, provide an efficient, robust O(N(4)) approach to both methods. Moreover, LS-THC is generally applicable to many other methods in quantum chemistry.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4768233

    View details for Web of Science ID 000312491400061

    View details for PubMedID 23248986

  • Accurate Prediction of Noncovalent Interaction Energies with the Effective Fragment Potential Method: Comparison of Energy Components to Symmetry-Adapted Perturbation Theory for the S22 Test Set JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Flick, J. C., Kosenkov, D., Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C., Slipchenko, L. V. 2012; 8 (8): 2835–43

    Abstract

    Noncovalent interactions play an important role in the stabilization of biological molecules. The effective fragment potential (EFP) is a computationally inexpensive ab initio-based method for modeling intermolecular interactions in noncovalently bound systems. The accuracy of EFP is benchmarked against the S22 and S66 data sets for noncovalent interactions [Jurečka, P.; Šponer, J.; Černý, J.; Hobza, P. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.2006, 8, 1985; Řezáč, J.; Riley, K. E.; Hobza, P. J. Chem. Theory Comput.2011, 7, 2427]. The mean unsigned error (MUE) of EFP interaction energies with respect to coupled-cluster singles, doubles, and perturbative triples in the complete basis set limit [CCSD(T)/CBS] is 0.9 and 0.6 kcal/mol for S22 and S66, respectively, which is similar to the MUE of MP2 and SCS-MP2 for the same data sets, but with a greatly reduced computational expense. Moreover, EFP outperforms classical force fields and popular DFT functionals such as B3LYP and PBE, while newer dispersion-corrected functionals provide a more accurate description of noncovalent interactions. Comparison of EFP energy components with the symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) energies for the S22 data set shows that the main source of errors in EFP comes from Coulomb and polarization terms and provides a valuable benchmark for further improvements in the accuracy of EFP and force fields in general.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/ct200673a

    View details for Web of Science ID 000307478800032

    View details for PubMedID 26592124

  • Tensor hypercontraction density fitting. I. Quartic scaling second- and third-order Moller-Plesset perturbation theory JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Parrish, R. M., Martinez, T. J. 2012; 137 (4)

    Abstract

    Many approximations have been developed to help deal with the O(N(4)) growth of the electron repulsion integral (ERI) tensor, where N is the number of one-electron basis functions used to represent the electronic wavefunction. Of these, the density fitting (DF) approximation is currently the most widely used despite the fact that it is often incapable of altering the underlying scaling of computational effort with respect to molecular size. We present a method for exploiting sparsity in three-center overlap integrals through tensor decomposition to obtain a low-rank approximation to density fitting (tensor hypercontraction density fitting or THC-DF). This new approximation reduces the 4th-order ERI tensor to a product of five matrices, simultaneously reducing the storage requirement as well as increasing the flexibility to regroup terms and reduce scaling behavior. As an example, we demonstrate such a scaling reduction for second- and third-order perturbation theory (MP2 and MP3), showing that both can be carried out in O(N(4)) operations. This should be compared to the usual scaling behavior of O(N(5)) and O(N(6)) for MP2 and MP3, respectively. The THC-DF technique can also be applied to other methods in electronic structure theory, such as coupled-cluster and configuration interaction, promising significant gains in computational efficiency and storage reduction.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.4732310

    View details for Web of Science ID 000307611500004

    View details for PubMedID 22852593

  • PSI4: an open-source ab initio electronic structure program WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-COMPUTATIONAL MOLECULAR SCIENCE Turney, J. M., Simmonett, A. C., Parrish, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Evangelista, F. A., Fermann, J. T., Mintz, B. J., Burns, L. A., Wilke, J. J., Abrams, M. L., Russ, N. J., Leininger, M. L., Janssen, C. L., Seidl, E. T., Allen, W. D., Schaefer, H. F., King, R. A., Valeev, E. F., Sherrill, C., Crawford, T. 2012; 2 (4): 556–65

    View details for DOI 10.1002/wcms.93

    View details for Web of Science ID 000305393700004

  • Wavefunction methods for noncovalent interactions WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-COMPUTATIONAL MOLECULAR SCIENCE Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2012; 2 (2): 304-326

    View details for DOI 10.1002/wcms.84

    View details for Web of Science ID 000300668800008

  • Role of Long-Range Intermolecular Forces in the Formation of Inorganic Nanoparticle Clusters JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A Gibbs, G. V., Crawford, T. D., Wallace, A. F., Cox, D. F., PARRISH, R. M., Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2011; 115 (45): 12933-12940

    Abstract

    An understanding of the role played by intermolecular forces in terms of the electron density distribution is fundamental to the understanding of the self-assembly of molecules in the formation of a molecular crystal. Using ab initio methods capable of describing both short-range intramolecular interactions and long-range London dispersion interactions arising from electron correlation, analyses of inorganic dimers of As(4)S(4) and As(4)O(6) molecules cut from the structures of realgar and arsenolite, respectively, reveal that the molecules adopt a configuration that closely matches that observed for the crystal. Decomposition of the interaction energies using symmetry-adapted perturbation theory reveals that both model dimers feature significant stabilization from electrostatic forces as anticipated by a Lewis acid/Lewis base picture of the interaction. London dispersion forces also contribute significantly to the interaction, although they play a greater role in the realgar structure near equilibrium than in arsenolite.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/jp204044k

    View details for Web of Science ID 000296685500051

    View details for PubMedID 21939256

  • Large-scale symmetry-adapted perturbation theory computations via density fitting and Laplace transformation techniques: Investigating the fundamental forces of DNA-intercalator interactions JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Parrish, R. M., Sherrill, C. D., Turney, J. M., Schaefer, H. F. 2011; 135 (17)

    Abstract

    Symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) provides a means of probing the fundamental nature of intermolecular interactions. Low-orders of SAPT (here, SAPT0) are especially attractive since they provide qualitative (sometimes quantitative) results while remaining tractable for large systems. The application of density fitting and Laplace transformation techniques to SAPT0 can significantly reduce the expense associated with these computations and make even larger systems accessible. We present new factorizations of the SAPT0 equations with density-fitted two-electron integrals and the first application of Laplace transformations of energy denominators to SAPT. The improved scalability of the DF-SAPT0 implementation allows it to be applied to systems with more than 200 atoms and 2800 basis functions. The Laplace-transformed energy denominators are compared to analogous partial Cholesky decompositions of the energy denominator tensor. Application of our new DF-SAPT0 program to the intercalation of DNA by proflavine has allowed us to determine the nature of the proflavine-DNA interaction. Overall, the proflavine-DNA interaction contains important contributions from both electrostatics and dispersion. The energetics of the intercalator interaction are are dominated by the stacking interactions (two-thirds of the total), but contain important contributions from the intercalator-backbone interactions. It is hypothesized that the geometry of the complex will be determined by the interactions of the intercalator with the backbone, because by shifting toward one side of the backbone, the intercalator can form two long hydrogen-bonding type interactions. The long-range interactions between the intercalator and the next-nearest base pairs appear to be negligible, justifying the use of truncated DNA models in computational studies of intercalation interaction energies.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.3656681

    View details for Web of Science ID 000296733300007

    View details for PubMedID 22070292

  • Structures of protonated benzene dimer and intermolecular interaction decomposition via symmetry-adapted perturbation theory COMPUTATIONAL AND THEORETICAL CHEMISTRY Jaeger, H. M., Schaefer, H. F., Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. 2011; 973 (1-3): 47–52
  • Accurate Interaction Energies for Problematic Dispersion-Bound Complexes: Homogeneous Dimers of NCCN, P-2, and PCCP JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Hohenstein, E. G., Jaeger, H. M., Carrell, E. J., Tschumper, G. S., Sherrill, C. 2011; 7 (9): 2842–51

    Abstract

    All intermolecular interactions involve London dispersion forces. The accurate treatment of dispersion is essential for the computation of realistic interaction potentials. In general, the most reliable method for computing intermolecular interactions is coupled-cluster singles and doubles with perturbative triples [CCSD(T)] in conjunction with a sufficiently flexible Gaussian atomic orbital basis set, a combination which is not routinely applicable due to its excessive computational demands (CPU time, memory, storage). Recently, many theoretical methods have been developed that attempt to account for dispersion in a more efficient manner. It is well-known that dispersion interactions are more difficult to compute in some systems than others; for example, π-π dispersion is notoriously difficult, while alkane-alkane dispersion is relatively simple to compute. In this work, numerous theoretical methods are tested for their ability to compute reliable interaction energies in particularly challenging systems, namely, the P2, PCCP, and NCCN dimers. Symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) is applied to these dimers to demonstrate their sensitivity to the treatment of dispersion. Due to the small size of these systems, highly accurate CCSD(T) potential energy curves could be estimated at the complete basis set limit. Numerous theoretical methods are tested against the reliable CCSD(T) benchmarks. Methods using a treatment of dispersion that relies on time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) response functions are found to be the most reliable.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/ct200374m

    View details for Web of Science ID 000294790400021

    View details for PubMedID 26605475

  • Origin of the Surprising Enhancement of Electrostatic Energies by Electron-Donating Substituents in Substituted Sandwich Benzene Dimers JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Hohenstein, E. G., Duan, J., Sherrill, C. D. 2011; 133 (34): 13244-13247

    Abstract

    A recent study of substituted face-to-face benzene dimers by Lewis and co-workers [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 3854-3862] indicated a surprising enhancement of electrostatic interactions for both electron-withdrawing and electron-donating substituents. Here we demonstrate that charge penetration (an attractive electrostatic interaction arising from the overlap of the electron densities on the two monomers) is the cause of this counterintuitive effect. These charge penetration effects are significant at typical ?-? interaction distances, and they are not easily described by multipole models. A simple measure of a substituent's electron-donating or electron-withdrawing character, such as the Hammett parameter ?(m), is unlikely to capture subtle charge penetration effects. Indeed, correlation of the relative total energies or relative electrostatic energies with ??(m) breaks down for multiply substituted face-to-face benzene dimers.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/ja204294q

    View details for Web of Science ID 000295551600010

    View details for PubMedID 21815686

  • Challenges of laser-cooling molecular ions NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS Nguyen, J. V., Viteri, C., Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C., Brown, K. R., Odom, B. 2011; 13
  • Assessment of the Performance of DFT and DFT-D Methods for Describing Distance Dependence of Hydrogen-Bonded Interactions JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Thanthiriwatte, K. S., Hohenstein, E. G., Burns, L. A., Sherrill, C. 2011; 7 (1): 88–96

    Abstract

    Noncovalent interactions such as hydrogen bonds, van der Waals forces, and π-π interactions play important roles influencing the structure, stability, and dynamic properties of biomolecules including DNA and RNA base pairs. In an effort to better understand the fundamental physics of hydrogen bonding (H-bonding), we investigate the distance dependence of interaction energies in the prototype bimolecular complexes of formic acid, formamide, and formamidine. Potential energy curves along the H-bonding dissociation coordinate are examined both by establishing reference CCSD(T) interaction energies extrapolated to the complete basis set limit and by assessing the performance of the density functional methods B3LYP, PBE, PBE0, B970, PB86, M05-2X, and M06-2X and empirical dispersion corrected methods B3LYP-D3, PBE-D3, PBE0-D3, B970-D2, BP86-D3, and ωB97X-D, with basis sets 6-311++G(3df,3pd), aug-cc-pVDZ, and aug-cc-pVTZ. Although H-bonding interactions are dominated by electrostatics, it is necessary to properly account for dispersion interactions to obtain accurate energetics. In order to quantitatively probe the nature of hydrogen bonding interactions as a function of distance, we decompose the interaction energy curves into physically meaningful components with symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT). The SAPT results confirm that the contribution of dispersion and induction are significant at and near equilibrium, although electrostatics dominate. Among the DFT/DFT-D techniques, the best overall results are obtained utilizing counterpoise-corrected ωB97X-D with the aug-cc-pVDZ basis set.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/ct100469b

    View details for Web of Science ID 000285990300010

    View details for PubMedID 26606221

  • Efficient evaluation of triple excitations in symmetry-adapted perturbation theory via second-order Moller-Plesset perturbation theory natural orbitals JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2010; 133 (10)

    Abstract

    An accurate description of dispersion interactions is required for reliable theoretical studies of many noncovalent complexes. This can be obtained with the wave function-based formulation of symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) provided that the contribution of triple excitations to dispersion is included. Unfortunately, this triples dispersion correction limits the applicability of SAPT due to its O(N(7)) scaling. The efficiency of the evaluation of this correction can be greatly improved by removing virtual orbitals from the computation. The error incurred from truncating the virtual space is reduced if second-order Mo?ller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2) natural orbitals are used in place of the canonical Hartree-Fock molecular orbitals that are typically used. This approximation is further improved if the triples correction to dispersion is scaled to account for the smaller virtual space. If virtual MP2 natural orbitals are removed according to their occupation numbers, in practice, roughly half of the virtual orbitals can be removed (with the aug-cc-pVDZ basis set) with negligible errors if the remaining triples dispersion contribution is scaled. This typically leads to speedups of 15-20 times for the cases considered here. By combining the truncated virtual space with the frozen core approximation, the triples correction can be evaluated approximately 50 times faster than the canonical computation. These approximations cause less than 1% error (or at most 0.02?kcal?mol(-1)) for the cases considered. Truncation of greater fractions of the virtual space is possible for larger basis sets (leading to speedups of over 40 times before additional speedups from the frozen core approximation).

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.3479400

    View details for Web of Science ID 000282475400013

    View details for PubMedID 20849164

  • Density fitting of intramonomer correlation effects in symmetry-adapted perturbation theory JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2010; 133 (1)

    Abstract

    Symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) offers insight into the nature of intermolecular interactions. In addition, accurate energies can be obtained from the wave function-based variant of SAPT provided that intramonomer electron correlation effects are included. We apply density-fitting (DF) approximations to the intramonomer correlation corrections in SAPT. The introduction of this approximation leads to an improvement in the computational cost of SAPT by reducing the scaling of certain SAPT terms, reducing the amount of disk I/O, and avoiding the explicit computation of certain types of MO integrals. We have implemented all the intramonomer correlation corrections to SAPT through second-order under the DF approximation. Additionally, leading third-order terms are also implemented. The accuracy of this truncation of SAPT is tested against the S22 test set of Hobza and co-workers [Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 8, 1985 (2006)]. When the intramonomer corrections to dispersion are included in SAPT, a mean absolute deviation of 0.3-0.4 kcal mol(-1) is observed for the S22 test set when using an aug-cc-pVDZ basis. The computations on the adenine-thymine complexes in the S22 test set with an aug-cc-pVDZ basis represent the largest SAPT computations to date that include this degree of intramonomer correlation. Computations of this size can now be performed routinely with our newly developed DF-SAPT program.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.3451077

    View details for Web of Science ID 000279640600002

    View details for PubMedID 20614953

  • Density fitting and Cholesky decomposition approximations in symmetry-adapted perturbation theory: Implementation and application to probe the nature of pi-pi interactions in linear acenes JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2010; 132 (18)

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.3426316

    View details for Web of Science ID 000277756500012

  • Basis set consistent revision of the S22 test set of noncovalent interaction energies JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Takatani, T., Hohenstein, E. G., Malagoli, M., Marshall, M. S., Sherrill, C. D. 2010; 132 (14)

    Abstract

    The S22 test set of interaction energies for small model complexes [Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 8, 1985 (2006)] has been very valuable for benchmarking new and existing methods for noncovalent interactions. However, the basis sets utilized to compute the CCSD(T) interaction energies for some of the dimers are insufficient to obtain converged results. Here we consistently extrapolate all CCSD(T)/complete basis set (CBS) interaction energies using larger basis sets for the CCSD(T) component of the computation. The revised values, which we designate S22A, represent the most accurate results to date for this set of dimers. The new values appear to be within a few hundredths of 1 kcal mol(-1) of the true CCSD(T)/CBS limit at the given geometries, but the former S22 values are off by as much as 0.6 kcal mol(-1) compared to the revised values. Because some of the most promising methods for noncovalent interactions are already achieving this level of agreement (or better) compared to the S22 data, more accurate benchmark values would clearly be helpful. The MP2, SCS-MP2, SCS-CCSD, SCS(MI)-MP2, and B2PLYP-D methods have been tested against the more accurate benchmark set. The B2PLYP-D method outperforms all other methods tested here, with a mean average deviation of only 0.12 kcal mol(-1). However, the consistent, slight underestimation of the interaction energies computed by the SCS-CCSD method (an overall mean absolute deviation and mean deviation of 0.24 and -0.23 kcal mol(-1), respectively) suggests that the SCS-CCSD method has the potential to become even more accurate with a reoptimization of its parameters for noncovalent interactions.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.3378024

    View details for Web of Science ID 000276973500006

    View details for PubMedID 20405982

  • Accurately Characterizing the pi-pi Interaction Energies of Indole-Benzene Complexes JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A Geng, Y., Takatani, T., Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2010; 114 (10): 3576-3582

    Abstract

    Noncovalent interactions play a significant role in determining the structures of DNA, RNA, and proteins. Among the most prevalent are pi-pi interactions, which occur as favorable forces between the aromatic subunits of biochemical molecules. The aromatic side chains of amino acids tryptophan and phenylalanine are commonly modeled with indole and benzene, respectively. We have utilized the MP2 and SCS-MP2 methods with the aug-cc-pVDZ basis set to compute several T-shaped interaction energies and parallel displaced (PD) three-dimensional potential energy surfaces (PESs) at 3.4, 3.6, and 3.8 A vertical separations. At selected minima, CCSD(T) results extrapolated to the complete-basis-set (CBS) limit were obtained. The trend of the T-shaped interactions has been rationalized by considering electrostatic potential maps and symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) results. The global minimum has been verified to be the N-H/pi T-shaped configuration with a CCSD(T)/CBS interaction energy of -5.62 kcal mol(-1). For the PD PESs, the MP2 and SCS-MP2 methods predict different minimum configurations. The CCSD(T) method favors the SCS-MP2 PD configuration over the MP2 PD configuration by 0.18 kcal mol(-1). Among the approximate methods considered here, the SCS-CCSD method extrapolated to the CBS limit incurs only around 2% error compared to CCSD(T)/CBS results and is the most reliable for the interaction energies of the indole-benzene complex. Overall, the extension of aromaticity and the highly positive hydrogen of the N-H bond, both exhibited by indole, enhance the strength of nonbonded interactions with benzene compared to those in the benzene dimer or in the pyridine-benzene complex.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/jp9099495

    View details for Web of Science ID 000275327600026

    View details for PubMedID 20175508

  • Assessment of Standard Force Field Models Against High-Quality Ab Initio Potential Curves for Prototypes of pi-pi, CH/pi, and SH/pi Interactions JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY Sherrill, C. D., Sumpter, B. G., Sinnokrot, M. O., Marshall, M. S., Hohenstein, E. G., Walker, R. C., Gould, I. R. 2009; 30 (14): 2187-2193

    Abstract

    Several popular force fields, namely, CHARMM, AMBER, OPLS-AA, and MM3, have been tested for their ability to reproduce highly accurate quantum mechanical potential energy curves for noncovalent interactions in the benzene dimer, the benzene-CH(4) complex, and the benzene-H(2)S complex. All of the force fields are semi-quantitatively correct, but none of them is consistently reliable quantitatively. Re-optimization of Lennard-Jones parameters and symmetry-adapted perturbation theory analysis for the benzene dimer suggests that better agreement cannot be expected unless more flexible functional forms (particularly for the electrostatic contributions) are employed for the empirical force fields.

    View details for DOI 10.1002/jcc.21226

    View details for Web of Science ID 000269939600004

    View details for PubMedID 19242959

  • An Assessment of Theoretical Methods for Nonbonded Interactions: Comparison to Complete Basis Set Limit Coupled-Cluster Potential Energy Curves for the Benzene Dimer, the Methane Dimer, Benzene-Methane, and Benzene-H2S JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A Sherrill, C. D., Takatani, T., Hohenstein, E. G. 2009; 113 (38): 10146-10159

    Abstract

    Large, correlation-consistent basis sets have been used to very closely approximate the coupled-cluster singles, doubles, and perturbative triples [CCSD(T)] complete basis set potential energy curves of several prototype nonbonded complexes, the sandwich, T-shaped, and parallel-displaced benzene dimers, the methane-benzene complex, the H2S-benzene complex, and the methane dimer. These benchmark potential energy curves are used to assess the performance of several methods for nonbonded interactions, including various spin-component-scaled second-order perturbation theory (SCS-MP2) methods, the spin-component-scaled coupled-cluster singles and doubles method (SCS-CCSD), density functional theory empirically corrected for dispersion (DFT-D), and the meta-generalized-gradient approximation functionals M05-2X and M06-2X. These approaches generally provide good results for the test set, with the SCS methods being somewhat more robust. M05-2X underbinds for the test cases considered, while the performances of DFT-D and M06-2X are similar. Density fitting, dual basis, and local correlation approximations all introduce only small errors in the interaction energies but can speed up the computations significantly, particulary when used in combination.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/jp9034375

    View details for Web of Science ID 000269746200002

    View details for PubMedID 19689152

  • Reactive desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (DESI-MS) of natural products of a marine alga ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY Nyadong, L., Hohenstein, E. G., Galhena, A., Lane, A. L., Kubanek, J., Sherrill, C. D., Fernandez, F. M. 2009; 394 (1): 245-254

    Abstract

    Presented here is the optimization and development of a desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (DESI-MS) method for detecting natural products on tissue surfaces. Bromophycolides are algal diterpene-benzoate macrolide natural products that have been shown to inhibit growth of the marine fungal pathogen Lindra thalassiae. As such, they have been implicated in antimicrobial chemical defense. However, the defense mechanisms are not yet completely understood. Precise detection of these compounds on algal tissue surfaces under ambient conditions without any disruptive sample processing could shed more light onto the processes involved in chemical defense of marine organisms. Conventional DESI-MS directly on algal tissue showed relatively low sensitivity for bromophycolide detection. Sensitivity was greatly improved by the addition of various anions including Cl(-), Br(-), and CF(3)COO(-) into the DESI spray solvent. Chloride adduction gave the highest sensitivity for all assayed anions. Density functional optimization of the bromophycolide anionic complexes produced during DESI supported this observation by showing that the chloride complex has the most favorable binding energy. Optimized DESI protocols allowed the direct and unambiguous detection of bromophycolides, including A, B, and E, from the surface of untreated algal tissue.

    View details for DOI 10.1007/s00216-009-2674-3

    View details for Web of Science ID 000265035700025

    View details for PubMedID 19277616

  • Effects of Heteroatoms on Aromatic pi-pi Interactions: Benzene-Pyridine and Pyridine Dimer JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2009; 113 (5): 878-886

    Abstract

    Heteroatoms are found in many noncovalent complexes which are of biological importance. The effect of heteroatoms on pi-pi interactions is assessed via highly accurate quantum chemical computations for the two simplest cases of interactions between aromatic molecules containing heteroatoms, namely, benzene-pyridine and pyridine dimer. Benchmark quality estimated coupled-cluster through perturbative triples [CCSD(T)] binding energies are computed near the complete basis set limit. Comparisons to the benzene dimer are made to determine the contributions from heteroatoms. The presence of a heteroatom reduces the spatial extent of the pi-electron cloud and polarizability of pyridine as compared to benzene. As a result, the magnitude of the dispersion, exchange, and induction interactions in benzene-pyridine and pyridine dimer is generally reduced as compared to those for the benzene dimer. Benzene-pyridine and pyridine dimer bind more strongly than the benzene dimer in several configurations, and in contrast to the benzene dimer, parallel-displaced configurations can be significantly preferred over T-shaped configurations. Hydrogens para to a heteroatom are more effective "pi-hydrogen bond" donors, but aromatic rings with heteroatoms are worse "pi-hydrogen bond" acceptors.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/jp809062x

    View details for Web of Science ID 000262902500014

    View details for PubMedID 19132847

  • Assessment of the Performance of the M05-2X and M06-2X Exchange-Correlation Functionals for Noncovalent Interactions in Biomolecules JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION Hohenstein, E. G., Chill, S. T., Sherrill, C. 2008; 4 (12): 1996–2000

    Abstract

    The highly parametrized, empirical exchange-correlation functionals, M05-2X and M06-2X, developed by Zhao and Truhlar have been shown to describe noncovalent interactions better than density functionals which are currently in common use. However, these methods have yet to be fully benchmarked for the types of interactions important in biomolecules. M05-2X and M06-2X are claimed to capture "medium-range" electron correlation; however, the "long-range" electron correlation neglected by these functionals can also be important in the binding of noncovalent complexes. Here we test M05-2X and M06-2X for the nucleic acid base pairs in the JSCH-2005 database. Using the CCSD(T) binding energies as a benchmark, the performance of these functionals is compared to that of a nonempirical density functional, PBE, and also to that of PBE plus Grimme's empirical dispersion correction, PBE-D. Due to the importance of "long-range" electron correlation in hydrogen-bonded and interstrand base pairs, PBE-D provides more accurate interaction energies on average for the JSCH-2005 database when compared to M05-2X or M06-2X. M06-2X does, however, perform somewhat better than PBE-D for interactions between stacked base pairs.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/ct800308k

    View details for Web of Science ID 000261613800002

    View details for PubMedID 26620472

  • Improvement of the coupled-cluster singles and doubles method via scaling same- and opposite-spin components of the double excitation correlation energy JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS Takatani, T., Hohenstein, E. G., Sherrill, C. D. 2008; 128 (12)

    Abstract

    There has been much interest in cost-free improvements to second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2) via scaling the same- and opposite-spin components of the correlation energy (spin-component scaled MP2). By scaling the same- and opposite-spin components of the double excitation correlation energy from the coupled-cluster of single and double excitations (CCSD) method, similar improvements can be achieved. Optimized for a set of 48 reaction energies, scaling factors were determined to be 1.13 and 1.27 for the same- and opposite-spin components, respectively. Preliminary results suggest that the spin-component scaled CCSD (SCS-CCSD) method will outperform all MP2 type methods considered for describing intermolecular interactions. Potential energy curves computed with the SCS-CCSD method for the sandwich benzene dimer and methane dimer reproduce the benchmark CCSD(T) potential curves with errors of only a few hundredths of 1 kcal mol(-1) for the minima. The performance of the SCS-CCSD method suggests that it is a reliable, lower cost alternative to the CCSD(T) method.

    View details for DOI 10.1063/1.2883974

    View details for Web of Science ID 000254537200013

    View details for PubMedID 18376912

  • Desorption electrospray ionization reactions between host crown ethers and the influenza neuraminidase inhibitor oseltamivir for the rapid screening of Tamiflu (R) ANALYST Nyadong, L., Hohenstein, E. G., Johnson, K., Sherrill, C. D., Green, M. D., Fernandez, F. M. 2008; 133 (11): 1513-1522

    Abstract

    Competitive host-guest chemistry on a desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (DESI MS) platform is presented here as the basis for a rapid and quantitative screening method for assessing the quality of Tamiflu capsules with minimal sample preparation. Oseltamivir, the active ingredient in Tamiflu, is an orally active neuraminidase inhibitor antiviral. The high cost and demand for this drug has made it a target for counterfeiters, and reports of counterfeit Tamiflu capsules have already appeared. This urges the development of rapid and sensitive tools for Tamiflu authentication. The method presented here is based on the selective recognition of oseltamivir by crown ethers added to the DESI spray solvent. Crown ethers with various ring sizes were evaluated, all being observed to form stable host-guest complexes with protonated oseltamivir. The relative gas phase stability of each of the host-guest complexes was assessed and the results compared with dispersion-corrected density functional theory. Competive experiments with various pairs of crown ethers were used to assess the relative binding selectivities for oseltamivir. The abundance ratio of the formed complexes was observed to be dependent on the amount of analyte present on the surface of the sample, and independent of DESI geometric factors. These competitive reactions were then successfully tested as a means for the rapid quantitation of oseltamivir by reactive DESI MS without the need for an internal standard.

    View details for DOI 10.1039/b809471c

    View details for Web of Science ID 000260198100007

    View details for PubMedID 18936828