I am performing DFT calculations using ORCA 4.0.1 on an enzyme active site model. The model contains 89 atoms including the substrate (see Animation 1), five of which are fixed in space (the spherical atoms in Animation 1). I am using dispersion-corrected B3LYP with 6-31g(d,p) basis set, with the "RIJCOSX" approximation, and with a CPCM model for the solvent (dielectric constant $\epsilon = 4)$. From what I have seen in the literature, this method is often applied to enzyme models with success, and this is the reason for using it. Once I start computing reaction paths, I plan to try different functionals and basis sets to see if this give drastically different results. My geometry optimization tolerances are
Energy change: 5e-6;
Max gradient: 2e-3;
MRS gradient: 5e-4;
Max displacement: 4e-3;
RMS displacement: 2e-3
The two gradient tolerances have been loosened slightly in order to converge the calculations. By using the default gradient tolerances, the calculations simply do not, I have found (especially the maximum gradient). Additionally, it has been absolutely necessary to compute a better guess for the initial Hessian for the optimization, done at the B3LYP/3-21G-rijcosx level.
The fixed atoms are kept fixed to maintain the orientation of the active site residues. Only atoms where the side chain or backbone has been truncated are kept fixed. Without fixing these atoms, the residues will most likely deviate way too much from the crystal structure, and no longer represent the enzyme environment we try to simulate.
Now, due to the constrained atoms, I expected imaginary frequencies to occur. However, for one of my presumably converged structures, I have quite strong imaginary frequencies. The list of frequencies start as follows: -220.645934
, -69.117105
, -65.597557
, -61.314719
, -48.720497
, -40.439949
, -32.562415
, -21.395791
, -16.637113
, 6.126145
. The two strongest negative frequencies are mainly a sigma bond rotation of a methyl group (of which the carbon is fixed in space during the optimization).
It is difficult to find any good literature on what to do with and how to interpret such negative frequencies in constrained optimizations. Is it "safe" to disregard the frequencies that mainly involved fixed atoms? Should I converge my geometry tighter to come closer to the true minimum? That's not so easy, I find, as the molecule is quite flexible. It took me quite some time to come up with a method that converges, which involve computing a good guess for the initial Hessian used in the optimization (computed at the B3lYP/3-21G level). I hope the imaginary frequencies are artefacts of the constraints, and that I can safely disregard them. However, they seem to have quite higher frequencies than what other people report in the literature (many say that their imaginary frequencies are around 20 cm-1).
This has to be a common challenge for people doing electronic structure calculations on large and constrained systems, but very few address this issue specifically in their publications.
I did read through this question, but it addresses not quite the same issue that I face.
Animation 1. The active site model. A total of 89 atoms.
Animation 2. Imaginary mode with frequency -220.645934 cm$^{-1}$.
What I am trying right now
I have three jobs waiting in the queue right now:
I have made a small rotation of the methyl groups strongly involved in the strong imaginary mode
I have started another geometry optimization of the structure given above (exhibiting the imaginary frequencies), but by reading the computed Hessian (the "exact" one, from same level of theory as optimization)
I have restarted an identical optimization, but by computing the "exact" Hessian from the start, giving a much better guess of which direction to go in.
I can add here later what these attempts result in.