Scigress
Scigress | |
Developer(s) | Fujitsu Limited |
---|---|
Stable release |
2.7(3.2)
/ May 2016 |
Development status | Active |
Written in | C++, C, Java, Fortran |
Operating system | Windows XP+, Linux, Mac OS X |
Available in | English |
Type | Computational chemistry, simulation software |
License | Proprietary commercial software |
Website |
www |
Scigress, stylized SCiGRESS, is a software suite for molecular modelling, computational chemistry, drug design, and materials science, a successor to Computer Aided Chemistry (CAChe) software.
About
Scigress is a molecular modeling suite for both experimental and computational chemists and biochemists. It enables researchers to study and design wide range of molecular systems:
Functions
- Intuitive, easy to learn, property driven user interface including molecule editor and batch processing.
- Theory levels: DFT, semi-empirical, molecular mechanics and dynamics.
- Determination of low energy conformations and thermodynamic properties.
- Calculare and 3D-visualize electronic properties: partial charges, orbitals, electron densities, and electrostatic surfaces and more.
- Analysis of chemical reactions: transition states and intrinsic reaction coordinates.
- Spectroscopic properties analysis: IR, UV-VIS, NMR.
- Study of phase transitions, expansion, crystal defects, compressibility, tensile strength, adsorption, absorption, thermal conductivity.
- Protein handling and protein-ligand docking on quantum level.
- Multiple presentation-quality visualizing options and movie creation.
Ability summary
- Molecular mechanics
- MM2, MM3
- Semi-empirical methods
- DFT
- Study of reactivity
- Protein-ligand docking, molecular dynamics
- User-friendly interface
- Presentation quality graphics
- Quantitative structure–activity relationship (QSAR)
- Automated model builders
- Polymers (homopolymers, block polymers, dendrimers), proteins, crystals
- Needleman–Wunsch alignment
See also
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.