Path-integral dynamics of water using curvilinear centroids
Autor: | Trenins, G, Willatt, MJ, Althorpe, SC |
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Přispěvatelé: | Trenins, G [0000-0003-1581-6961], Willatt, MJ [0000-0002-2916-1233], Althorpe, SC [0000-0003-1288-8070], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
spectra
representation physics.chem-ph polymer molecular-dynamics General Physics and Astronomy FOS: Physical sciences formulation 010402 general chemistry Curvature 01 natural sciences initio dipole-moment law.invention quantum relaxation law Physics - Chemical Physics 0103 physical sciences Cartesian coordinate system Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Potential of mean force Adiabatic process Physics Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph) Curvilinear coordinates statistical-mechanics 010304 chemical physics diffusion Equations of motion time-correlation-functions Boltzmann distribution 0104 chemical sciences Computational physics Path integral formulation |
Popis: | We develop a path-integral dynamics method for water that resembles centroid molecular dynamics (CMD), except that the centroids are averages of curvilinear, rather than cartesian, bead coordinates. The curvilinear coordinates are used explicitly only when computing the potential of mean force, the components of which are re-expressed in terms of cartesian 'quasi-centroids' (so-called because they are close to the cartesian centroids). Cartesian equations of motion are obtained by making small approximations to the quantum Boltzmann distribution. Simulations of the infrared spectra of various water models over 150-600 K show these approximations to be justified: for a two-dimensional OH-bond model, the quasi-centroid molecular dynamics (QCMD) spectra lie close to the exact quantum spectra, and almost on top of the Matsubara dynamics spectra; for gas-phase water, the QCMD spectra are close to the exact quantum spectra; for liquid water and ice (using the q-TIP4P/F surface), the QCMD spectra are close to the CMD spectra at 600 K, and line up with the results of thermostatted ring-polymer molecular dynamics and approximate quantum calculations at 300 and 150 K. The QCMD spectra show no sign of the CMD 'curvature problem' (of erroneous red shifts and broadening). In the liquid and ice simulations, the potential of mean force was evaluated on the fly by generalising an adiabatic CMD algorithm to curvilinear coordinates; the full limit of adiabatic separation needed to be taken, which made the QCMD calculations 8 times more expensive than partially adiabatic CMD at 300 K, and 32 times at 150 K (and the intensities may still not be converged at this temperature). The QCMD method is probably generalisable to many other systems, provided collective bead-coordinates can be identified that yield compact mean-field ring-polymer distributions. 16 pages, 11 figures |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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