Henschel, Henning’s team published research in Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation in 2020-05-12 | CAS: 123-39-7

Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation published new progress about Alcohols Role: PRP (Properties). 123-39-7 belongs to class amides-buliding-blocks, name is N-Methylformamide, and the molecular formula is C2H5NO, SDS of cas: 123-39-7.

Henschel, Henning published the artcileTheoretical Infrared Spectra: Quantitative Similarity Measures and Force Fields, SDS of cas: 123-39-7, the main research area is IR spectrum similarity force field database.

IR spectroscopy can provide significant insight into the structures and dynamics of mols. of all sizes. The information that is contained in the spectrum is, however, often not easily extracted without the aid of theor. calculations or simulations. We present here the calculation of the IR spectra of a database of 703 gas phase compounds with four different force fields (CGenFF, GAFF-BCC, GAFF-ESP, and OPLS) using normal-mode anal. Modern force fields increasingly use virtual sites to describe, e.g., lone-pair electrons or the σ-holes on halogen atoms. This requires some adaptation of code to perform normal-mode anal. of such compounds,the implementation of which into the GROMACS software is briefly described as well. For the quant. comparison of the obtained spectra with exptl. reference data, we discuss the application of two different statistical correlation coefficients, Pearson and Spearman. The advantages and drawbacks of the different methods of comparison are discussed, and we find that both methods of comparison give the same overall picture, showing that present force field methods cannot match the performance of quantum chem. methods for the calculation of IR spectra.

Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation published new progress about Alcohols Role: PRP (Properties). 123-39-7 belongs to class amides-buliding-blocks, name is N-Methylformamide, and the molecular formula is C2H5NO, SDS of cas: 123-39-7.

Referemce:
Amide – Wikipedia,
Amide – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics