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ARS Home » Southeast Area » New Orleans, Louisiana » Southern Regional Research Center » Cotton Structure and Quality Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #242222

Title: Evaluation of Density Functionals and Basis Sets for Carbohydrates

Author
item CSONKA, GABOR - Budapest University Of Technology
item French, Alfred - Al
item Johnson, Glenn
item STORTZ, CARLOS - Universidad De Buenos Aires

Submitted to: Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 2/10/2009
Publication Date: 3/4/2009
Citation: Csonka, G.I., French, A.D., Johnson, G.P., Stortz, C.A. 2009. Evaluation of Density Functionals and Basis Sets for Carbohydrates. Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation. 5(4):679-682.

Interpretive Summary: Computer models of molecules are valuable tools that can assist interpretation of experimental data and provide information when no experimental data are available. Carbohydrate materials, including cotton cellulose, are difficult to model, however, and very accurate methods are required to obtain reliable answers. The present work compares results from various quantum mechanics methods that are based on Density Functional Theory with those from an extremely intensive method, MP2. The results of this work are primarily of interest to other scientists who are studying small agricultural molecules and those developing rapid empirical modeling methods that are required for typical, larger scale molecular modeling studies of agricultural molecules such as starch or cellulose.

Technical Abstract: Correlated ab initio wave function calculations using MP2/aug-cc-pVTZ model chemistry have been performed for three test sets of gas phase saccharide conformations to provide reference values for their relative energies. The test sets consist of 15 conformers of alpha and beta-D-allopyranose, 15 of 3,6-anhydro-4-O-methyl-D-galactitol, and four of beta-D-glucopyranose. For each set, conformational energies varied by about 7 kcal/mol. Results obtained with the Hartree-Fock method, with pure density functional approximations (DFAs) like LSDA, PBEsol, PBE, and TPSS and with hybrid DFAs like B3PW91, B3LYP, PBEh, and M05-2X, were then compared to the reference and local MP2 relative energies. Basis sets included 6-31G*, 6-31G**, 6-31+G*, 6-31+G**, 6-311+G**, 6-311++G**, cc-pVTZ(-f), cc-pVTZ, and aug-cc-pVTZ(-f). The smallest basis set that gives good DFA relative energies is 6-31+G**, and more converged results can be obtained with 6-311+G**. The optimized geometries obtained from a smaller basis set, 6-31+G*, were useful for subsequent single point energy calculations with larger basis sets. The best agreement with MP2 was shown by M05-2X, but only when using a dense DFT grid. The popular B3LYP functional is not the best for saccharide conformational studies. The B3PW91 functional gives systematically better results, but other hybrid functionals like PBEh or TPSSh are even better. Overall, the nonempirical PBE GGA and TPSS meta-GGA functionals also performed better than B3LYP.