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Daniel S. Lambrecht

Researcher at University of Pittsburgh

Publications -  49
Citations -  5532

Daniel S. Lambrecht is an academic researcher from University of Pittsburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Density functional theory & Perturbation theory. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 49 publications receiving 4493 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel S. Lambrecht include Florida Gulf Coast University & University of California, Berkeley.

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Advances in molecular quantum chemistry contained in the Q-Chem 4 program package

Yihan Shao, +156 more
- 17 Jan 2015 - 
TL;DR: A summary of the technical advances that are incorporated in the fourth major release of the Q-Chem quantum chemistry program is provided in this paper, covering approximately the last seven years, including developments in density functional theory and algorithms, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) property evaluation, coupled cluster and perturbation theories, methods for electronically excited and open-shell species, tools for treating extended environments, algorithms for walking on potential surfaces, analysis tools, energy and electron transfer modelling, parallel computing capabilities, and graphical user interfaces.
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Current Status of the AMOEBA Polarizable Force Field

TL;DR: It is shown that the AMOEBA force field is in fact a significant improvement over fixed charge models for small molecule structural and thermodynamic observables in particular, although further fine-tuning is necessary to describe solvation free energies of drug-like small molecules, dynamical properties away from ambient conditions, and possible improvements in aromatic interactions.
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Software for the frontiers of quantum chemistry: An overview of developments in the Q-Chem 5 package

Evgeny Epifanovsky, +238 more
TL;DR: The Q-Chem quantum chemistry program package as discussed by the authors provides a suite of tools for modeling core-level spectroscopy, methods for describing metastable resonances, and methods for computing vibronic spectra, the nuclear-electronic orbital method, and several different energy decomposition analysis techniques.
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Ligand–Substrate Dispersion Facilitates the Copper-Catalyzed Hydroamination of Unactivated Olefins

TL;DR: It is shown that in the copper(I) hydride (CuH)-catalyzed hydroamination of unactivated olefins, the substantially enhanced reactivity of copper catalysts based on bulky bidentate phosphine ligands originates from the attractive ligand-substrate dispersion interaction.
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Linear-scaling atomic orbital-based second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory by rigorous integral screening criteria.

TL;DR: A Laplace-transformed second-order Moller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2) method is presented, which allows to achieve linear scaling of the computational effort with molecular size for electronically local structures and makes it for the first time possible to compute wave function-based correlation energies for systems containing more than 1000 atoms.