Methods for Classical-Mechanical Molecular Simulation in Chemistry: Achievements, Limitations, Perspectives

More than a half century ago it became feasible to simulate, using classical-mechanical equations of motion, the dynamics of molecular systems on a computer. Since then classical-physical molecular simulation has become an integral part of chemical research. It is widely applied in a variety of bran...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of chemical information and modeling 2024-08, Vol.64 (16), p.6281-6304
Hauptverfasser: van Gunsteren, Wilfred F., Oostenbrink, Chris
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:More than a half century ago it became feasible to simulate, using classical-mechanical equations of motion, the dynamics of molecular systems on a computer. Since then classical-physical molecular simulation has become an integral part of chemical research. It is widely applied in a variety of branches of chemistry and has significantly contributed to the development of chemical knowledge. It offers understanding and interpretation of experimental results, semiquantitative predictions for measurable and nonmeasurable properties of substances, and allows the calculation of properties of molecular systems under conditions that are experimentally inaccessible. Yet, molecular simulation is built on a number of assumptions, approximations, and simplifications which limit its range of applicability and its accuracy. These concern the potential-energy function used, adequate sampling of the vast statistical-mechanical configurational space of a molecular system and the methods used to compute particular properties of chemical systems from statistical-mechanical ensembles. During the past half century various methodological ideas to improve the efficiency and accuracy of classical-physical molecular simulation have been proposed, investigated, evaluated, implemented in general simulation software or were abandoned. The latter because of fundamental flaws or, while being physically sound, computational inefficiency. Some of these methodological ideas are briefly reviewed and the most effective methods are highlighted. Limitations of classical-physical simulation are discussed and perspectives are sketched.
ISSN:1549-9596
1549-960X
1549-960X
DOI:10.1021/acs.jcim.4c00823