posted on 2023-07-29, 13:04authored byMichael
A. Sauer, Matthias Heyden
Low-frequency molecular vibrations at far-infrared frequencies
are thermally excited at room temperature. As a consequence, thermal
fluctuations are not limited to the immediate vicinity of local minima
on the potential energy surface, and anharmonic properties cannot
be ignored. The latter is particularly relevant in molecules with
multiple conformations, such as proteins and other biomolecules. However,
existing theoretical and computational frameworks for the analysis
of molecular vibrations have so far been limited by harmonic or quasi-harmonic
approximations, which are ill-suited to describe anharmonic low-frequency
vibrations. Here, we introduce a fully anharmonic analysis of molecular
vibrations based on a time correlation formalism that eliminates the
need for harmonic or quasi-harmonic approximations. We use molecular
dynamics simulations of a small protein to demonstrate that this new
approach, in contrast to harmonic and quasi-harmonic normal modes,
correctly identifies the collective degrees of freedom associated
with molecular vibrations at any given frequency. This allows us to
unambiguously characterize the anharmonic character of low-frequency
vibrations in the far-infrared spectrum.