VDW Radii

VDW (van der Waals) radii are used to show atoms in the sphere representation and, when multiplied by the ball scale factor, the ball-and-stick representation. VDW radii are also used in calculating surfaces, finding close contacts, and rendering atoms with conic and neon.

Chimera assigns default values, but VDW radii can be changed.

Default Assignments

For C, N, O, and S, the default VDW radii depend on whether explicit hydrogen atoms are present:

Due to differences in how the sets were derived, united atom radii are not always larger than the corresponding all atom radii.

Ionic radii from The CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 82nd Edition (2001-2002) are used for ions. If the charge state of an ion differs from that listed in the table, a different radius may be more appropriate.

For P, and for F, Cl, Br, and I in the context of molecules (as opposed to singleton ions), all atom radii derived from the Amber parm99 parameters are used.

The default VDW radii of any remaining atoms are twice the covalent bond radii listed in Table III of:

E.C. Meng and R.A. Lewis, "Determination of Molecular Topology and Atomic Hybridization States from Heavy Atom Coordinates" J Comput Chem 12:891 (1991).

Changing VDW Radii

Ways to change VDW radii directly:

The VDW radius of an atom may also change as a side effect of changing its atom type or number of attached hydrogens.


UCSF Computer Graphics Laboratory / June 2007