TY - JOUR
T1 - Chemistry with ADF
AU - Velde, G.te
AU - Bickelhaupt, F.M.
AU - Baerends, E.J.
AU - Fonseca Guerra, C.
AU - van Gisbergen, S.J.A.
AU - Snijders, J.G.
AU - Ziegler, T.
N1 - Journal JUL 15 428BQ J COMPUT CHEM
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - We present the theoretical and technical foundations of the Amsterdam Density Functional (ADF) program with a survey of the characteristics of the code (numerical integration, density fitting for the Coulomb potential, and STO basis functions). Recent developments enhance the efficiency of ADF (e.g., parallelization, near order-N scaling, QM/MM) and its functionality (e.g., NMR chemical shifts, COSMO solvent effects, ZORA relativistic method, excitation energies, frequency-dependent (hyper)polarizabilities, atomic VDD charges). In the Applications section we discuss the physical model of the electronic structure and the chemical bond, i.e., the Kohn–Sham molecular orbital (MO) theory, and illustrate the power of the Kohn–Sham MO model in conjunction with the ADF-typical fragment approach to quantitatively understand and predict chemical phenomena. We review the “Activation-strain TS interaction” (ATS) model of chemical reactivity as a conceptual framework for understanding how activation barriers of various types of (competing) reaction mechanisms arise and how they may be controlled, for example, in organic chemistry or homogeneous catalysis. Finally, we include a brief discussion of exemplary applications in the field of biochemistry (structure and bonding of DNA) and of time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) to indicate how this development further reinforces the ADF tools for the analysis of chemical phenomena. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 22: 931–967, 2001
AB - We present the theoretical and technical foundations of the Amsterdam Density Functional (ADF) program with a survey of the characteristics of the code (numerical integration, density fitting for the Coulomb potential, and STO basis functions). Recent developments enhance the efficiency of ADF (e.g., parallelization, near order-N scaling, QM/MM) and its functionality (e.g., NMR chemical shifts, COSMO solvent effects, ZORA relativistic method, excitation energies, frequency-dependent (hyper)polarizabilities, atomic VDD charges). In the Applications section we discuss the physical model of the electronic structure and the chemical bond, i.e., the Kohn–Sham molecular orbital (MO) theory, and illustrate the power of the Kohn–Sham MO model in conjunction with the ADF-typical fragment approach to quantitatively understand and predict chemical phenomena. We review the “Activation-strain TS interaction” (ATS) model of chemical reactivity as a conceptual framework for understanding how activation barriers of various types of (competing) reaction mechanisms arise and how they may be controlled, for example, in organic chemistry or homogeneous catalysis. Finally, we include a brief discussion of exemplary applications in the field of biochemistry (structure and bonding of DNA) and of time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) to indicate how this development further reinforces the ADF tools for the analysis of chemical phenomena. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 22: 931–967, 2001
KW - ADF program
KW - density functional theory
KW - materials science
KW - chemical bond
KW - reactivity
KW - DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL-THEORY
KW - ORDER REGULAR APPROXIMATION
KW - INCLUDING ATOMIC ORBITALS
KW - GENERALIZED GRADIENT APPROXIMATION
KW - NMR SHIELDING TENSORS
KW - FAST MULTIPOLE METHOD
KW - FREE-BASE PORPHIN
KW - EXCHANGE-CORRELATION POTENTIALS
KW - MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS
KW - CORRECT ASYMPTOTIC-BEHAVIOR
U2 - 10.1002/jcc.1056
DO - 10.1002/jcc.1056
M3 - Article
SN - 0192-8651
VL - 22
SP - 931
EP - 967
JO - Journal of Computational Chemistry
JF - Journal of Computational Chemistry
IS - 9
ER -