Kim Yeonjoon, Choi Sunghwan, Kim Woo Youn
Department of Chemistry, KAIST , 291 Daehak-ro, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-701, Korea.
KAIST Institute for NanoCentury, KAIST , 291 Daehak-ro, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-701, Korea.
J Chem Theory Comput. 2014 Jun 10;10(6):2419-26. doi: 10.1021/ct500136x. Epub 2014 May 22.
Basin-hopping sampling has been widely used for searching local minima on a potential energy surface. Reaction intermediates including reactants and products are also local minima composed of a reaction path, but their brute-force sampling is too demanding because of large degrees of freedom. We developed an efficient Monte Carlo basin-hopping method to sample reaction intermediates through the fragmentation of molecules and a postanalysis scheme using the graph theory with a matrix representation of molecular structures. The former greatly reduces the dimension of a given potential energy surface, while the latter offers not only the effective screening of resulting local minima toward desirable intermediates but also their automatic ordering along a reaction path. We combined it with the density functional tight binding method for rapid calculations and tested its performance for organic reactions.