Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Nuclear magnetic resonance quantum mechanical description

Besides the classical techniques for structural determination of proteins, namely X-ray diffraction or nuclear magnetic resonance, molecular modelling has become a complementary approach, providing refined structural details [4—7]. This view on the atomic scale paves the way to a comprehensive smdy of the correlations between protein structure and function, but a realistic description relies strongly on the performance of the theoretical tools. Nowadays, a full size protein is treated by force fields models [7-10], and smaller motifs, such as an active site of an enzyme, by multiscale approaches involving both quantum chemistry methods for local description, and molecular mechanics for its environment [11]. However, none of these methods are ab initio force fields require a parameterisation based on experimental data of model systems DPT quantum methods need to be assessed by comparison against high level ab initio calculations on small systems. [Pg.227]


See other pages where Nuclear magnetic resonance quantum mechanical description is mentioned: [Pg.2]    [Pg.406]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.512]   


SEARCH



Mechanical resonance

Mechanical resonators

Mechanism, description

Nuclear magnetic resonance description

Nuclear mechanisms

Quantum Magnetics

Quantum magnetic

Quantum mechanical descriptions

Quantum resonance

Quantum-mechanical nuclear

© 2024 chempedia.info