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Comparative Study of Three Methods of Calculating Atomic Charge in a Molecule

Comparative Study of Three Methods of Calculating Atomic Charge in a Molecule. Wanda Lew Heather Harding Sharam Emami Shungo Miyabe San Francisco State University Tomekia Simeon Jackson State University Source of Wisdom: Sergio Aragon January 16, 2004.

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Comparative Study of Three Methods of Calculating Atomic Charge in a Molecule

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  1. Comparative Study of Three Methods of Calculating Atomic Charge in a Molecule Wanda Lew Heather Harding Sharam Emami Shungo Miyabe San Francisco State University Tomekia Simeon Jackson State University Source of Wisdom: Sergio Aragon January 16, 2004

  2. Why is assigning charges to various atoms of a molecule of interest? Assigning charge to various atoms allows: • Prediction of reactive sites in a molecule • Charge distribution determines all molecular properties Andrew S. Ichimura SFSU presentation 9/26/03

  3. Why isn’t there just one best method that everyone uses to calculate atomic charge? • No concensus on what criteria to use to judge which method is better i.e. • Do we arbitrarily say that if a method is basis set independent it is “better”?* • Or is the better method one that’s able to account for anticipated changes in charge distribution after various perturbations to the molecule such as: ● varying dihedral angles* in a molecule

  4. We Decided to Examine Three Methods for Assigning Charges to Atoms in a Molecule • Population Analysis (R.S. Mulliken, 1955) • Atoms in Molecule (R.W.F. Bader, 1965) • Electrostatic Potential (Merz-Sing-Kollman)

  5. What is Population Analysis? • This method was proposed by R.S. Mulliken Sample Molecule: A-B • To assign charge on atom A, uses a molecular orbital function represented by a linear combination of the atomic orbitals YMO=CAYA + CBYB N=N(CA 2 + 2CACBSAB+ CB 2) Mulliken Charge on Atom A would be: QA=N(CA2 + CACBSAB) • Weaknesses: • Divides overlap term symmetrically • Atomic orbital term CA2 assigned to atom even if the charge on that atom is polarized/diffuse enough to bleed some e- density into neighboring atom

  6. Electrostatic Potential • Ability to compute the degree to which a positive or negative test charge is attracted to or repelled by the molecule that is being represented by the multipole expansion. • ESP is directly calculated from the electron density using a many electron wavefunction and point charges of the nuclei.

  7. Electrostatic potential is both a molecular property and a spatial property. It depends on what charges exist in the molecule and how they there are distributed. The electrostatic potential created by a system of charges at a particular point in space, (x, y, z), is equal to the change in potential energy that occurs when a +1 ion is introduced at this point. It also depends on what point (x, y, z) we choose to investigate. If we select a point where the +1 charge is attracted by the molecule, the potential will be negative at this point. On the other hand, if we select a point where the +1 charge is repelled, the potential will be positive.

  8. AIM • Let (r) be the electron density • Gradient of (r) is a vector that points in the direction of maximum increase in the density. One makes an infinitesimal step in this direction and then recalculates the gradient to obtain the new direction. By continued repetition of this process, one traces out a trajectory of (r).

  9. AIM (cont.) • A gradient vector map generated for ethene: • Since the density exhibits a maximum at the position of each nucleus, sets of trajectories terminate at each nucleus. The nuclei are the attractors of the gradient vector field of the electron density.

  10. AIM (cont.) • The molecule is disjointly and exhaustively partitioned into basins, a basin being the region of space traversed by the trajectories terminating at a given nucleus or attractor. • An atom is defined as the union of an attractor and its basin

  11. Comparison of 3 Ways to Calculate Charge on Atom in a Molecule (MUL, AIM, ESP) Using 7 Different Molecules • Molecules Studied: Urea, Proprionitrile, 1,2-difluoroethane, Glycine, Serine, Propylaldehyde, propane, propanol • Calculation Methods Used: Hartree-Fock (HF) Density Functional (DFT, specifically B3LYP) • Criteria used to evaluate quality of method: i. independence of basis set (STO-3g, 321g, 631g, 6311g, 6311g*, 6311g**) ii. How charge on atom changes with change in dihedral angles Andrew S. Ichimura SFSU presentation 9/26/03

  12. Basis Set Dependence of MUL, AIM and ESP –HF Method 1 2 8 5 4 3 7 6 Urea

  13. Basis Set Dependence MUL, AIM and ESP -- DFT Methods 1 2 7 5 4 3 8 6 Urea

  14. Dihedral Angle Dependence of MUL, AIM and ESP with HF Methods 1 2 8 6 4 3 7 5 Urea

  15. Dihedral Angle Dependence of MUL, AIM and ESP with DFT Methods

  16. Basis Set Dependence of MUL, AIM and ESP with HF Methods 1 2 8 3 5 7 6 4 9 Proprionitrile

  17. Basis Set Dependence of MUL, AIM and ESP with DFT Methods

  18. Dihedral Angle Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Proprionitrile Using MUL, AIM and ESP with HF Methods

  19. Dihedral Angle Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Proprionitrile Using MUL, AIM and ESP with DFT Methods

  20. Glycine 6 9 8 3 10 5 2 1 7 4

  21. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Glycine Using a Mulliken Population Analysis

  22. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Glycine Using AIM

  23. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Glycine Using ESP

  24. Glycine – Different Dihedral Angles Optimized 45º 90º

  25. Dihedral Angle Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Glycine Using MUL with DFT

  26. Dihedral Angle dependence of Charges on Atoms in Glycine Using AIM with DFT

  27. Dihedral Angle dependence of Charges on Atoms in Glycine Using ESP with DFT

  28. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Serine Using MUL, AIM and ESP with Hartree-Fock Methods

  29. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Serine Using MUL, AIM and ESP with Density Functional Theory Methods

  30. Comparison of methods using 6311-G d basis set using DFT and HF

  31. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Propyl Aldehyde Using MUL, AIM and ESP with Hartree-Fock Methods at theta~2.318

  32. Comparison of Mulliken and AIM using HF and DFT methods

  33. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Propyl Aldehyde Using MUL, AIM and ESP with Density Functional Theory Methods

  34. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Propyl Aldehyde Using MUL, AIM and ESP with Hartree-Fock Methods at theta~127.46

  35. Basis Set Dependence of Charges on Atoms in Propyl Aldehyde Using MUL, AIM and ESP with DFT Methods at theta~127.46

  36. Comparison of Charges on Atoms in Propyl Aldehyde Using MUL and AIM as a function rotating carbonyl group

  37. Charges on Atoms in Propyl Aldehyde Using MUL and AIM with HF and DFT Methods as a function of rotating carbonyl group

  38. Comparison of single and double bonded propyl aldehyde!

  39. Comparison of charges using Mulliken and AIM with HF and DFT @ dihedral angle = 127.46

  40. Comparison of Mulliken and AIM for Butyl Aldehyde using HF and DFT @ dihedral angle ~0.000

  41. Comparison of charge as a function of dihedral angle for butyl aldehyde using HF and DFT with AIM and MUL

  42. Propane Mulliken Charges via HF, Post HF and DFT Methods

  43. Propane Electrostatic Charges via HF, Post HF and DFT Methods

  44. Atoms in Molecules via HF, Post HF and DFT Methods

  45. Conformational Dependence of Charge (Basis Set 6-31gd)

  46. Conformational Dependence of Charge (Basis Set 6-311gd)

  47. Propanol Mulliken Charges via HF, Post HF and DFT Methods

  48. Propanol’s Electrostatic Charges via HF, Post HF and DFT Methods

  49. Propanol’s Atoms in Molecules Charges via HF, Post HF and DFT Methods

  50. A Comparsion of Propanol at Varying Dihedral Angles Conformational Dependence of Charge (Basis Set 6-311gd)

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