Predictive multiscale free energy simulations of hybrid transition metal catalysts

Lead Research Organisation: Science and Technology Facilities Council
Department Name: Scientific Computing Department

Abstract

Catalysis is a key area of fundamental science which underpins a high proportion of manufacturing industry. Developments in catalytic science and technology will also be essential in achieving energy and environmental sustainability. Progress in catalytic science requires a detailed understanding of processes at the molecular level, in which computation now plays a vital role. When used in conjunction with experiment, computational modelling is able to characterise structures, properties and processes including active site structures, reaction mechanisms and increasingly reaction rates and product distributions. However, despite the power of computational catalysis, currently available methods have limitations in both accuracy and their ability to model the reaction environment. Also, it is practically difficult to model hybrid catalysts, which combine elements of different types of catalyst (e.g. unnatural metal centres incorporated in natural enzymes). Advances in technique are essential if the goal of catalysis by design is to be achieved.

A powerful, practical approach to modelling catalytic processes is provided by Quantum Mechanical/Molecular Mechanical (QM/MM) methods, in which the reaction and surroundings are described using an accurate quantum mechanical approach, with the surrounding environment modelled by more approximate classical forcefields. QM/MM has been widely and successfully employed in modelling enzymatic reactions (recognised in the 2013 Nobel prize for Chemistry) but has an equally important role in other areas of catalytic science.

The flagship ChemShell code, developed by the STFC team in collaboration with UCL, Bristol and other groups around the world, is a highly flexible and adaptable open source QM/MM software package which allows a range of codes and techniques to be used in the QM and MM regions (www.chemshell.org). The software has been widely and successfully used in modelling enzymatic reactions and catalytic processes in zeolites and on oxide surfaces. It will provide the ideal platform for the developments we are proposing which will take computational catalysis to the next level. These will include the use of high level QM techniques to achieve chemical accuracy, accurate modelling of solvent effects, calculation of spectroscopic signatures allowing direct interaction with experiment, and dynamical approaches for free energy simulations. Crucially, we will bring together methods from different spheres of computational catalysis to enable modelling of hybrid catalytic systems. We will develop flexible and rigorous methods that meet the twin challenges of high-level QM treatment for accuracy with the ability to sample dynamics of the reacting system. Together these methods will allow accurate and predictive modelling of catalytic reactions under realistic conditions. The project will also anticipate the software developments needed to exploit the next generation of exascale high performance computing.

We will apply these new techniques to model the catalytic behaviour of a range of engineered heterogeneous, homogeneous and biomolecular catalysts, currently under study in the UK Catalysis Hub. The Hub supports experimental and computational applications across the whole UK catalysis community. This project will provide method development and software engineering that is not covered by the Hub, and thus will complement EPSRC investment in the Hub. Specific systems include methanol synthesis using homogeneous ruthenium complexes, Cu-based artificial enzymes for enantioselective Friedel-Crafts reactions, fluorophosphite-modified rhodium systems for hydroformylation catalysis of alkenes, and non-canonical substitutions in non-heme iron enzymes for C-H functionalisations. These highly topical and potentially industrially relevant systems will allow us both to test and exploit the new software, which promises a step change in our ability to model catalytic systems and reactions.

Publications

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Guan J (2023) Computational infrared and Raman spectra by hybrid QM/MM techniques: a study on molecular and catalytic material systems. in Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences

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Lu Y (2023) Multiscale QM/MM modelling of catalytic systems with ChemShell. in Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP

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Zhang X (2023) Toward a Consistent Prediction of Defect Chemistry in CeO2. in Chemistry of materials : a publication of the American Chemical Society

 
Title Vastly parallelised vibrational self-consistent field calculations under ChemShell 
Description A vastly parallelised vibrational self-consistent field computation infrastructure has been built and tested against molecular and catalytic material systems under ChemShell. New numerical solutions to vibrational self-consistent field theory have also been developed. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2023 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This new development enables new vibrational spectroscopy scientific studies and allows researchers to study much larger-scaled anharmonic vibrational effects, IR, Raman, and environmental impacts using hybrid QM/MM approaches. 
 
Title Py-ChemShell 2023 release (v23.0) 
Description Py-ChemShell is the python-based version of the ChemShell multiscale computational chemistry environment, a leading package for combined quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical simulations. 
Type Of Technology Software 
Year Produced 2023 
Open Source License? Yes  
Impact The 2023 release of Py-ChemShell contained a number of major new features developed through and in support of the BBSRC "BEORHN" grant, EPSRC "UEMBioMat" and "FEHybCat" grants, InnovateUK "QuPharma" grant, ExCALIBUR "PAX-HPC" and CoSeC support for the Materials Chemistry Consortium. These include improved handling of biomolecular forcefields for QM/MM, of general interest for enzyme modelling, a generic n-layer subtractive embedding scheme, an interface to the basis set exchange, and new interfaces to CASTEP (for periodic QM/MM), TURBOMOLE and PySCF. 
URL https://www.chemshell.org
 
Description ChemShell presentation at MCC Workshop on the Modelling of Point Defects 2024 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact You Lu gave a talk on ChemShell QM/MM simulations for defect calculations at the MCC Workshop on the Modelling of Point Defects , 9-11 January 2024, Lancaster.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://www.mccdefectworkshop.com/
 
Description CoSeC presentation at MCC summer conference 2023 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Tom Keal gave a presentation on CoSeC support for MCC at the MCC summer conference at Daresbury on 30 June 2023.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://mcc.hec.ac.uk/events/mcc-conference-2023/
 
Description MMM Hub Software Spotlight: Chemshell 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact As part of the MMMHub software spotlight online workshop series, Dr You Lu from STFC showcased the capabilities of the ChemShell package from a research perspective, as well as spending time looking at exactly how the code can be efficiently run in practice - in particular multinode jobs on Young. Approx 30 people attended online.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://thomasyoungcentre.org/event/mmm-hub-software-spotlight-chemshell/
 
Description Tom Keal UCL Inaugural Lecture 2023 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Tom Keal gave his inaugural professorial lecture "Scaling up computational chemistry: from small molecules to complex systems
" at UCL Department of Chemistry on 27 April 2023. The event was arranged as a workshop by the Thomas Young Centre with additional speakers Michael Buehl (St Andrews), Kakali Sen (STFC), Xingfan Zhang (UCL) and Keith Butler (QMUL). The inaugural lecture covered a range of topics including the redevelopment of ChemShell and recent work from the EPSRC "UEMBioMat" and "FEHybCat" grants, BBSRC "ENCATS" and "BEORHN" grants, and CoSeC support.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://thomasyoungcentre.org/event/tyc-inaugural-lecture-thomas-keal/