AMBER forcefield: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Carl McBride (talk | contribs) m (AMBER moved to AMBER forcefield) |
m (Placed external links at foot of page.) |
||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcc.1065 Piotr Cieplak, James Caldwell and Peter Kollman "Molecular mechanical models for organic and biological systems going beyond the atom centered two body additive approximation: aqueous solution free energies of methanol and N-methyl acetamide, nucleic acid base, and amide hydrogen bonding and chloroform/water partition coefficients of the nucleic acid bases", Journal of Computational Chemistry '''22''' pp. 1048-1057 (2001)] | *[http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcc.1065 Piotr Cieplak, James Caldwell and Peter Kollman "Molecular mechanical models for organic and biological systems going beyond the atom centered two body additive approximation: aqueous solution free energies of methanol and N-methyl acetamide, nucleic acid base, and amide hydrogen bonding and chloroform/water partition coefficients of the nucleic acid bases", Journal of Computational Chemistry '''22''' pp. 1048-1057 (2001)] | ||
====ff02EP==== | ====ff02EP==== | ||
==References== | |||
#[http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0010-4655(95)00041-D David A. Pearlman, David A. Case, James W. Caldwell, Wilson S. Ross, Thomas E. Cheatham, Steve DeBolt, David Ferguson, George Seibel and Peter Kollman "AMBER, a package of computer programs for applying molecular mechanics, normal mode analysis, molecular dynamics and free energy calculations to simulate the structural and energetic properties of molecules", Computer Physics Communications '''91''' pp. 1-41 (1995)] | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*[http://amber.scripps.edu/dbase.html AMBER parameters] | *[http://amber.scripps.edu/dbase.html AMBER parameters] | ||
[[category:Force fields]] | [[category:Force fields]] |
Revision as of 19:02, 11 December 2008
- This page contains information about the AMBER forcefield. See the AMBER package for information about the computer code.
Force field
Parameters
ff94
ff96
ff98
ff99
Param99 was developed for organic and biological molecules using the restrained electrostatic potential (RESP) approach to derive the partial charges:
ff02
The ff02 force field is a polarisable variant of ff99. The charges were determined at the B3LYP/cc- pVTZ//HF/6-31g* level, and hence are more like "gas-phase" charges.