Ammonia dimer & frustrated hydrogen bonds #111
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This fault was reported over email by Prof. Rafael Soares at UFRGS, and (with his permission) I am moving the report and any subsequent discussions here.
The ammonia dimer is a simple system with a pair of frustrated hydrogen bonds in its equilibrium structure, which leads to a very flat potential energy surface. However, PM6-D3H4 and PM7 both predict a lower-energy structure with a single hydrogen bond:
Focusing on PM7, the frustrated dimer is a metastable state with a binding energy of 4.4 kcal/mol while the single-bond dimer produces a binding energy of 5.8 kcal/mol. A high-level reference calculation (QZ/CCSD(T) energies on TZ/MP2 structures) gives a 3.1 kcal/mol binding for the frustrated dimer and 2.7 kcal/mol binding for the single-bond dimer. This can be interpreted as a limitation of the simple hydrogen-bond corrections used by PM7, which is not a good description of frustrated hydrogen bonds. However, this crossing of energies is also close to the highest level of accuracy (1 kcal/mol) that we can seriously hope for any routine quantum chemistry calculation, which is a problem that can occur in relatively flat potential energy surfaces - small errors in energy can cause large geometric changes to the lowest-energy structure.
MOPAC's historical strategy for dealing with erroneous equilibrium geometries has been to add them as "erratic" structures to the reference data and providing some higher-level theoretical energies since they don't have accompanying experimental data. This hasn't yet been done for weakly-bonded structures, and this example would be a good candidate for an "erratic" structure.
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