Issue 22, 2014

Multipolar electrostatics

Abstract

Atomistic simulation of chemical systems is currently limited by the elementary description of electrostatics that atomic point-charges offer. Unfortunately, a model of one point-charge for each atom fails to capture the anisotropic nature of electronic features such as lone pairs or π-systems. Higher order electrostatic terms, such as those offered by a multipole moment expansion, naturally recover these important electronic features. The question remains as to why such a description has not yet been widely adopted by popular molecular mechanics force fields. There are two widely-held misconceptions about the more rigorous formalism of multipolar electrostatics: (1) Accuracy: the implementation of multipole moments, compared to point-charges, offers little to no advantage in terms of an accurate representation of a system's energetics, structure and dynamics. (2) Efficiency: atomistic simulation using multipole moments is computationally prohibitive compared to simulation using point-charges. Whilst the second of these may have found some basis when computational power was a limiting factor, the first has no theoretical grounding. In the current work, we disprove the two statements above and systematically demonstrate that multipole moments are not discredited by either. We hope that this perspective will help in catalysing the transition to more realistic electrostatic modelling, to be adopted by popular molecular simulation software.

Graphical abstract: Multipolar electrostatics

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
26 Nov 2013
Accepted
05 Apr 2014
First published
16 Apr 2014

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014,16, 10367-10387

Multipolar electrostatics

S. Cardamone, T. J. Hughes and P. L. A. Popelier, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014, 16, 10367 DOI: 10.1039/C3CP54829E

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