which MM is oblivious. MM cannot provide information about the shapes and
energies of molecular orbitals nor about related phenomena such as electronic
spectra.
Because of the severely empirical nature of MM, interpreting MM parameters in
terms of traditional physical concepts is dangerous; for example, the bond-stretching
and angle-bending parameters cannot rigorously be identified with spectroscopic
force constants [ 33 ]; Lipkowitz suggests that the MM proportionality constants
(Section3.2.1) be calledpotential constants. Other dangers in using MM are:
1.Using an inappropriate forcefield: a field parameterized for one class of com-
pounds is not likely to perform well for other classes.
2.Transferring parameters from one forcefield to another. This is usually not
valid.
3.Optimizing to a stationary point that may not really be a minimum(it could be a
“maximum”, a transition state), and certainly may not be aglobalminimum
(Chapter 2 ). If there is reason to be concerned that a structure is not a minimum,
0
04000 3500
3239
1540
1083
689
3000 2500 2000
FREQ_VAL
FREQ_VAL
1500 1000 500
4000 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500
3.1e+002
37
73
1.1e+002
6.1e+002
9.2e+002
IR_INTENS
IR_INTENS
0
4000 3000 2000 1000
20
40
60
80
Benzene 3091 3050 1480
1040
674
1032
3095 1504 699
MMFF
Experimental
MP2 / 6-31G*
Fig. 3.15 Experimental (gas phase), and MM (MMFF) and ab initio (MP2(fc)/6–31G*) calcu-
lated IR spectra of benzene
3.6 Strengths and Weaknesses of Molecular Mechanics 75