4.7 Article

An Imbalance in the Force: The Need for Standardized Benchmarks for Molecular Simulation

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Force fields (FFs) for molecular simulation have been developed for more than half a century. The availability of standardized data sets and benchmarks is crucial for rigorous testing and comparisons of FF models. Currently, there are limited benchmarks for evaluating FFs, and development teams mostly rely on their own sets. This article discusses the potential reuse of quantum chemistry benchmarks for evaluating FFs, the need for new data, and the importance of utilizing experimental data in automated tools for condensed phases.
Force fields (FFs) for molecular simulation have been under development for more than half a century. As with any predictive model, rigorous testing and comparisons of models critically depends on the availability of standardized data sets and benchmarks. While such benchmarks are rather common in the fields of quantum chemistry, this is not the case for empirical FFs. That is, few benchmarks are reused to evaluate FFs, and development teams rather use their own training and test sets. Here we present an overview of currently available tests and benchmarks for computational chemistry, focusing on organic compounds, including halogens and common ions, as FFs for these are the most common ones. We argue that many of the benchmark data sets from quantum chemistry can in fact be reused for evaluating FFs, but new gas phase data is still needed for compounds containing phosphorus and sulfur in different valence states. In addition, more nonequilibrium interaction energies and forces, as well as molecular properties such as electrostatic potentials around compounds, would be beneficial. For the condensed phases there is a large body of experimental data available, and tools to utilize these data in an automated fashion are under development. If FF developers, as well as researchers in artificial intelligence, would adopt a number of these data sets, it would become easier to compare the relative strengths and weaknesses of different models and to, eventually, restore the balance in the force.

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