MOPAC was originally developed in
Michael Dewar's research group at the
University of Texas at Austin to consolidate their previous developments of
MINDO/3 and
MNDO models and software and to serve as the software implementation of the
AM1 model. The name
MOPAC was both an
acronym for
Molecular Orbital PACkage and a reference to the
Mopac Expressway that runs alongside parts of the UT Austin campus. The first version of MOPAC was deposited in the Quantum Chemistry Program Exchange (QCPE) in 1983 as QCPE Program #455 with James Stewart as its primary author. and he continued the development of MOPAC after moving to the
United States Air Force Academy in 1984. In 1993, MOPAC was acquired by
Fujitsu and sold as commercial software, while James Stewart continued its development as a consultant. After 2007, new versions of MOPAC were developed and sold by Stewart Computational Chemistry with support from the
Small Business Innovation Research program. Concurrent with its commercial development, there was an effort to continue development of the last pre-commercial version of MOPAC as an open-source software project. In 2022, the commercial development and distribution of MOPAC ended, and it was officially re-released as an open-source software project on GitHub developed by the Molecular Sciences Software Institute. Early versions of MOPAC distributed by the QCPE were considered to be in the public domain and were
forked into several other notable software projects. After James Stewart left, other members of the Dewar group continued to develop a fork of MOPAC called
AMPAC that was originally released on the QCPE before also becoming commercial software. VAMP (Vectorized AMPAC) was a parallel version of AMPAC developed by Timothy Clark's group at the
University of Erlangen–Nuremberg.
Donald Truhlar's group at the
University of Minnesota developed both a fork of AMPAC with
implicit solvent models, AMSOL, and a fork of MOPAC itself. Also, commercial versions of MOPAC distributed by Fujitsu have some proprietary features (e.g. PM5, Tomasi solvation) not available in other versions. MOPAC used different versioning systems throughout its development, sometimes with a version number or year stylized into the name. These alternate names include MOPAC3, MOPAC4, MOPAC5, MOPAC6, MOPAC7, MOPAC93, MOPAC97, MOPAC 2000, MOPAC 2007, MOPAC 2009, MOPAC 2012, and MOPAC 2016. Open-source versions of MOPAC now use
semantic versioning. ==See also==