Benchmark Assessment of Molecular Geometries and Energies from Small Molecule Force Fields

13 August 2020, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Force fields are used in a wide variety of contexts for classical molecular simulation, including studies on protein-ligand binding, membrane permeation, and thermophysical property prediction. The quality of these studies relies on the quality of the force fields used to represent the systems.
Focusing on small molecules of fewer than 50 heavy atoms, our aim in this work is to compare nine force fields: GAFF, GAFF2, MMFF94, MMFF94S, OPLS3e, SMIRNOFF99Frosst, and the Open Force Field Parsley, versions 1.0, 1.1 and 1.2. On a dataset comprising 22,675 molecular structures of 3,271 molecules, we analyzed force field-optimized geometries and conformer energies compared these to reference quantum mechanical (QM) data. We show that while OPLS3e performs best, the latest Open Force Field Parsley release is approaching a comparable level of accuracy in reproducing QM geometries and energetics for this set of molecules. Meanwhile, the performance of established force fields such as MMFF94s and GAFF2 is generally somewhat worse. We also find that the series of recent Open Force Field versions provide significant increases in accuracy. Our molecule set and results are available for other researchers to use in testing.

Keywords

force field
conformer energies
RMSD
TFD
azetidine
nitrogen-nitrogen bond
GAFF
GAFF2
MMFF94
Parsley
Open Force Field
OpenFF
SMIRNOFF99Frosst

Supplementary materials

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