The effective fragment potential (EFP) method is an ab initio based polarizable classical method in which the intermolecular interaction parameters are obtained from preparative ab initiocalculations on isolated molecules. The polarization energy in the EFP method is modeled with asymmetric anisotropic dipole polarizabilitytensors located at the centroids of localized bond and lone pair orbitals of the molecules. Analytic expressions for the translational and rotational gradients (forces and torques) of the EFP polarization energy have been derived and implemented. Periodic boundary conditions (the minimum image convention) and switching functions have also been implemented for the polarization energy, as well as for other EFP interaction t...
The simplest variational method for treating electronic excited states, configuration interaction wi...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2008. Major: Chemistry. Advisors: Prof. Jiali G...
Polarization is the ability of a molecule’s electron density to respond to and influence its environ...
A method that combines quantum mechanics (QM), typically a solute, the effective fragment potential ...
The effective fragment potential (EFP) method, a model potential for treating solvent effects and ot...
The effective fragment potential (EFP) method for the efficient inclusion of solvation effects is co...
Noncovalent interactions play an important role in the stabilization of biological molecules. The ef...
A method for calculating the dispersion energy between molecules modeled with the general effective ...
An approximate formula is derived and implemented in the general effective fragment potential (EFP2)...
The effective fragment potential (EFP) method is introduced as a way to model the effect of intermol...
The R–7 term (E7) in the dispersion expansion is developed in the framework of the general effective...
Solvent effects on a potential energy surface crossing are investigated by optimizing a conical inte...
Three novel fragmentation methods that are available in the electronic structure program GAMESS (gen...
The implementation of the effective fragment potential (EFP) method within the Q-CHEM electronic str...
The systematic fragmentation method fragments a large molecular system into smaller pieces, in such ...
The simplest variational method for treating electronic excited states, configuration interaction wi...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2008. Major: Chemistry. Advisors: Prof. Jiali G...
Polarization is the ability of a molecule’s electron density to respond to and influence its environ...
A method that combines quantum mechanics (QM), typically a solute, the effective fragment potential ...
The effective fragment potential (EFP) method, a model potential for treating solvent effects and ot...
The effective fragment potential (EFP) method for the efficient inclusion of solvation effects is co...
Noncovalent interactions play an important role in the stabilization of biological molecules. The ef...
A method for calculating the dispersion energy between molecules modeled with the general effective ...
An approximate formula is derived and implemented in the general effective fragment potential (EFP2)...
The effective fragment potential (EFP) method is introduced as a way to model the effect of intermol...
The R–7 term (E7) in the dispersion expansion is developed in the framework of the general effective...
Solvent effects on a potential energy surface crossing are investigated by optimizing a conical inte...
Three novel fragmentation methods that are available in the electronic structure program GAMESS (gen...
The implementation of the effective fragment potential (EFP) method within the Q-CHEM electronic str...
The systematic fragmentation method fragments a large molecular system into smaller pieces, in such ...
The simplest variational method for treating electronic excited states, configuration interaction wi...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2008. Major: Chemistry. Advisors: Prof. Jiali G...
Polarization is the ability of a molecule’s electron density to respond to and influence its environ...