The results of the sixth blind test of organic crystal structure prediction methods are presented and discussed, highlighting progress for salts, hydrates and bulky flexible molecules, as well as on-going challenges.
Currently, organic crystal structure prediction (CSP) methods are based on searching for the most thermodynamically stable crystal structure, making various approximations in evaluating the crystal energy. The most stable (global minimum) structure provides a prediction of an experimental crystal structure. However, depending on the specific molecule, there may be other structures which are very close in energy. In this case, the other structures on the crystal energy landscape may be polymorphs, components of static or dynamic disorder in observed structures, or there may be no route to nucleating and growing these structures. A major reason for performing CSP studies is as a complement to solid form screening to see which alternative packings to the known polymorphs are thermodynamically feasible.
The effect of using a realistic model for the electrostatic forces
on the calculated structures of molecular
crystals is explored by using atomic multipoles derived from an SCF
6-31G** wave function. This was
tested on a wide ranging database of 40 rigid organic molecules
containing C, H, N, and O atoms, including
nucleic acid bases, nonlinear optic materials, azabenzenes,
nitrobenzenes, and simpler molecules. The
distributed multipole electrostatic model, plus an empirical
repulsion-dispersion potential, was able to
successfully reproduce the lattice vectors and available heats of
sublimation of the experimental room
temperature structure in almost all cases. Scaling the
electrostatic energy to allow for the effect of electron
correlation on the molecular charge density generally improved the
lattice energies and the calculated structures
to a lesser extent. However, omitting the anisotropic multipole
moments usually gave very poor, sometimes
qualitatively wrong structures, emphasizing the sensitivity of these
crystal structures to the electrostatic forces.
We also investigated the sensitivity of the structures to the
empirical repulsion-dispersion potential parameters
by attempting to optimize these. Since the experimental structures
are mainly reproduced to within the errors
that could be attributed to the use of static minimization and rigid
molecules, it appears that going beyond the
atomic charge model to a realistic electrostatic model is a key
development in the modeling of the crystal
structures of polar and hydrogen-bonded molecules.
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