Automatic Molecular Fragmentation by Evolutionary Optimisation

06 August 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Molecular fragmentation is an effective suite of approaches to reduce the formal computational complexity of quantum chemistry calculations while enhancing their algorithmic parallelisability. However, the practical applicability of fragmentation techniques remains hindered by a dearth of automation and effective metrics to assess the quality of a fragmentation scheme. In this article, we present the Quick Fragmentation via Automated Genetic Search (QFRAGS), a novel automated fragmentation algorithm that uses a genetic optimisation procedure to generate molecular fragments that yield low energy errors when adopted in Many Body Expansions (MBEs). Benchmark testing of QFRAGS on protein systems with less than 500 atoms, using two-body (MBE2) and three-body (MBE3) MBE calculations at the HF/6-31G* level, reveals mean absolute energy errors (MAEE) of 20.6 and 2.2~kJ~mol$^{-1}$, respectively. For larger protein systems exceeding 500 atoms, MAEEs are 181.5~kJ~mol$^{-1}$ for MBE2 and 24.3~kJ~mol$^{-1}$ for MBE3. Furthermore, when compared to three manual fragmentation schemes on a 40-protein dataset, using both MBE and Fragment Molecular Orbital techniques, QFRAGS achieves comparable or often lower MAEEs. When applied to a 10-lipoglycan/glycolipid dataset, MAEs of 7.9 and 0.3~kJ~mol$^{-1}$ were observed at the MBE2 and MBE3 levels, respectively.

Keywords

Molecular Fragmentation
Quantum Chemistry
FMO
Many Body Expansion
Automation

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