The contributions collected in this volume complement volume 1 of this series, disclosing results of current developments in methodologies and applications of computational chemistry methods. The covered topics include fundamentals and applications of propagator calculations, as well as recent developments in the computationally efficient and accurate SAC-CI method, which allows calculation of various electronic states at the same time. SAC-CI studies of excited states of large molecular systems like porphyrins are reviewed, and its application to investigations of surface phenomena is discussed. The book also features a review of recent work on quantum Monte Carlo simulations.Furthermore, the book discusses the application of computational methods to biomolecules and, in particular, the application of the DFT methods to prediction of molecular structures and the IR spectrum of the DNA bases, as well as currently developed force field parameters and their application in molecular dynamics calculations of biologically important molecules. Lastly, there is a review of a quantum chemistry course which prepares students at the Department of Chemistry of ETH Zurich to perform their own ab initio studies.
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-981-02-2843-9 (9789810228439)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
A guide to practical propagator calculations, J.V. Ortiz; SAC-CI study - current trends, H. Nakatsuji; nonrandom walk quantum Monte Carlo for atoms and molecules, R.N. Barnett and W.A. Lester, Jr.; model core potential methods - developments and applications, S. Huzinaga and M. Klobukowski; aspects of Stone-Wales rearrangements - a new enigma in fullerene chemistry, E. Osawa and K. Honda; molecular structures and infrared spectra of the DNA bases and their derivatives - theory and experiment, M.J. Nowak et al; ab initio force field for simulations of biological molecules, M. Aida; a course in "ab initio" quantum chemistry for masters students in chemistry, W. Klopper et al.