obminimize(1) | General Commands Manual (urm) | obminimize(1) |
NAME¶
obminimize
—
optimize the geometry, minimize the energy for a
molecule
SYNOPSIS¶
obminimize |
[OPTIONS] filename |
DESCRIPTION¶
The obminimize tool can be used to minimize the energy for molecules inside (multi-)molecule files (e.g., MOL2, etc.)
OPTIONS¶
If no filename is given, obminimize will give all options including the available forcefields.
EXAMPLES¶
View the possible options, including available forcefields:
obminimize
Minimize the energy for the molecule(s) in file test.mol2:
obminimize test.mol2
Minimize the energy for the molecule(s) in file test.mol2 using the Ghemical forcefield:
obminimize -ff Ghemical
test.mol2
Minimize the energy for the molecule(s) in file test.mol2 by taking at most 300 geometry optimization steps
obminimize -n 300
test.mol2
Minimize the energy for the molecule(s) in file test.mol2 using the steepest descent algorithm and convergence criteria 1e-5:
obminimize -sd -c 1e-5
test.mol2
SEE ALSO¶
obabel(1), obenergy(1), obrotamer(1).
The web pages for Open Babel can be found at: <http://openbabel.org/>
The web pages for Open Babel Molecular Mechanics can be found at: <http://openbabel.org/wiki/Molecular_mechanics>
AUTHORS¶
The minimize program was contributed by Tim Vandermeersch.
Open Babel is developed by a cast of many, including currrent maintainers Geoff Hutchison, Chris Morley, Michael Banck, and innumerable others who have contributed fixes and additions. For more contributors to Open Babel, see <http://openbabel.org/wiki/THANKS>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2007 by Tim Vandermeersch.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation version 2 of the License.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
October 10, 2019 | Open Babel 3.1 |