A reliable and efficient first principles-based method for predicting pKa values. III. Adding explicit water molecules: Can the theoretical slope be reproduced and pKa values predicted more accurately?

by Zhang, S. M.

A popular method for predicting pKa values for organic molecules in aqueous solution is to establish empirical linear least-squares fits between calculated deprotonation energies and known experimental pKa values. In virtually all such calculations, the empirically observed slope of the pKa vs. ?E fit is significantly less than the theoretical value, 1/(2.303RT) (which is 0.73 mol/kcal at room temperature). In our own continuum solvation calculations (Zhang et al., J Phys Chem A 2010, 114, 432), the empirical slope for carboxylic acids was only 0.23 mol/kcal, despite the excellent fit to the experimental pKa values. There has been much speculation about the reason for this phenomenon. Although the ?E pKa relation neglects entropic effects, these are expected to largely cancel. The most likely cause for the strange behavior of the fitted slope is explicit solutesolvent (water) interactions, especially involving the ions, which cannot be described accurately by continuum solvation models. We used our previously developed pKa protocol (OLYP/6-311+G(d,p)//3-21G(d) with the COSMO solvation model) to investigate the effect of adding one or two explicit water molecules to the system. The slopes for organic acids (especially carboxylic acids) are much closer to the theoretical value when explicit water molecules are added to both the neutral molecule and the anion. However, explicit water molecules have almost no effect on the slopes for organic bases. Adding explicit water molecules to the ions only produces intermediate results. Unfortunately, linear fits involving explicit water molecules have much larger errors than with continuum solvation models alone and are also much more expensive. Consequently, they are not suitable for large-scale pKa calculations. The results compared with literature values showed that our predicted pKas are more accurate.

Journal
Journal of Computational Chemistry
Volume
33
Issue
5
Year
2012
Start Page
517-526
URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcc.22886
ISBN/ISSN
1096-987X; 0192-8651
DOI
10.1002/jcc.22886