Department of Chemistry and The PULSE Institute, Stanford University , Stanford, California 94305, United States.
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory , 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, United States.
Acc Chem Res. 2017 Mar 21;50(3):652-656. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.7b00010.
Few would dispute that theoretical chemistry tools can now provide keen insights into chemical phenomena. Yet the holy grail of efficient and reliable prediction of complex reactivity has remained elusive. Fortunately, recent advances in electronic structure theory based on the concepts of both element- and rank-sparsity, coupled with the emergence of new highly parallel computer architectures, have led to a significant increase in the time and length scales which can be simulated using first principles molecular dynamics. This opens the possibility of new discovery-based approaches to chemical reactivity, such as the recently proposed ab initio nanoreactor. We argue that due to these and other recent advances, the holy grail of computational discovery for complex chemical reactivity is rapidly coming within our reach.
几乎没有人会质疑,理论化学工具现在可以为化学现象提供深刻的见解。然而,高效、可靠地预测复杂反应性的圣杯仍然难以捉摸。幸运的是,基于元素和秩稀疏性概念的电子结构理论的最新进展,以及新的高度并行计算机架构的出现,使得使用第一性原理分子动力学模拟的时间和长度尺度都有了显著的提高。这为化学反应性的新发现方法开辟了可能性,例如最近提出的从头算纳米反应器。我们认为,由于这些和其他最近的进展,计算发现复杂化学反应性的圣杯正在迅速成为可能。