Abstract
We present a workflow, benchmarks, and applications to provide a roadmap for simulating harmonic IR and Raman spectra for large solute-solvent systems by employing a polarizable-embedding quantum-mechanics (PE-QM) approach. This multiscale modeling scheme divides the system into a central core region described by quantum-mechanical methods and an environment region described through the fragment-based polarizable embedding (PE) model. The workflow involves generating representative structures, calculating properties, and post-processing data. Benchmark calculations quantify errors introduced by some of the key approximations used in our approach and discuss its strengths and weaknesses. Finally, we apply the workflow to acetone in three different solvents, comparing simulated spectra to experimental results to further evaluate our approach and identify potential weaknesses. Accurate simulations of solute-solvent systems are an important step toward modeling more complex molecular systems with a fragment-based PE approach.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
Figure S1 shows the pseudo-translational and pseudo-rotational contributions of a single snapshot of acetone in water for different polarizable inner-region sizes. Tables S1-S4 provide the absolute and relative average window error for step sizes of 1.0, 3.0, 4.0, and 5.0 ps with respect to frequencies, IR intensities, and Raman intensities.
Actions
Supplementary weblinks
Title
Dataset
Description
This dataset contains the data and scripts used in the article "Benchmarks and Workflow for Harmonic IR and Raman Spectra"
Actions
View