Keywords: DFT

A set of possible approximative methods for efficiently recalculating the contribution of coulomb integrals to the elements of the single-electron hamiltonian at SCF iterations to dramatically speed up extremely resource-intensive DFT calculations of giant biomolecules

https://doi.org/10.58224/2619-0575-2025-8-3-3
Abstract
The investigation aims to identify potential approximative methodologies for expediting repeated calculations of Coulomb integral contributions to single-electron Hamiltonian elements during self-consistent field (SCF) iterations, thereby dramatically accelerating computationally intensive density functional theory (DFT) analyses of massive biomolecular structures. The research addressed several challenges: a) evaluating semi-empirical approaches for quantum chemical examination of enormous molecular systems; b) exploring how numerous distant molecular fragments could facilitate faster computation of Coulomb interaction contributions; c) examining contemporary approaches to fixed-geometry single-point molecular calculations; d) developing innovative methodologies for accelerated Coulomb integral contribution computation in DFT analyses of substantial bi-omolecular entities.
We present a novel suite of approximation techniques designed to substantially expedite calculations of Cou-lomb integral contributions to one-electron Hamiltonian elements in conventional DFT methodologies during SCF iterations-typically the rate-limiting phase of these essential yet computationally demanding calculations for exten-sive biomolecular systems, including thousands of docking complexes comprising thousands of atoms.
Our integrated approach features rapid and precise approximation of contribution modifications across innu-merable 4-center Coulomb integrals between successive SCF iterations through auxiliary density function-mediated transformation into linear combinations of 3-center integrals, subsequently converted to combinations of 2-center integrals. Contribution variations from non-multipole short-range components of these 2-center integrals are swiftly determined by modifying pre-computed spline contributions based on inter-atomic separations. The re-maining multipole-based long-range contributions undergo rapid computation for expansive molecular systems using a fast multipole method (FMM) framework, which strategically partitions extensive spatial domains into hi-erarchical regions (a technique originally pioneered for galactic dynamics simulations).
Each SCF iteration employs sophisticated screening to identify exclusively non-negligible integral combina-tions, particularly accounting for the progressively diminishing density matrix increments characteristic of con-verging SCF processes. The framework accommodates the unique characteristics of specific massive molecular systems or extensive collections thereof, such as thousands of docking arrangements between substantial protein structures and diverse small organic ligand molecules.
All bimolecular components-including approximations of two-center basis function overlaps via linear combi-nations of single-center auxiliary density functions-undergo efficient computation utilizing specialized database-stored inter-nuclear distance splines. For novel basis sets, the reference database can be promptly augmented through decomposition into universal exponential components with corresponding database enrichment.
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A set of possible approximative methods for effectively accounting for the contribution of Coulomb integrals to dramatically accelerate the calculations of DFT giant biomolecules: reduction to fast-computable short-range two-center splines plus FMM long-range Coulomb

https://doi.org/10.58224/2619-0575-2024-7-3-49-63
Abstract
A set of approximative methods is proposed to radically accelerate the calculation of the contribution of Coulomb integrals in the calculations of DFT giant biomolecules - the limiting stage of such relevant but extremely resource-intensive calculations, including calculations of thousands of docking complexes of thousands of atoms. The proposed complex includes, through a quick and accurate approximation of the contribution of a huge number of 4-center Coulomb integrals through a linear combination of 3-center integrals, and then through a combination of 2-center integrals. The non-multi-complete short-range components of these 2-center integrals are very quickly considered pre-prepared splines from the center-to-center distances. The remaining long-range multipole contributions are quickly calculated for giant molecules in the FMM style (splitting a huge space into regions and subdomains, was originally developed for the dynamics of galaxies). Calculations are saved as much as possible everywhere due to pre-selected combinations of integrals. All two-center components (including the approximation of two-center overlaps of basic functions through linear combinations of single-center auxiliary density functions) are quickly calculated due to splines from internuclear distances from a specially prepared database. For new bases, the database is easily and quickly replenished by decomposing the new basis into a set of universal ex-ponents and a database with them.
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