Publication | Open Access
Multicanonical methods, molecular dynamics, and Monte Carlo methods: Comparison for Lennard-Jones glasses
44
Citations
38
References
1998
Year
Standard Monte CarloEngineeringGlass-forming LiquidMulticanonical MethodsEffective Monte CarloGlass MaterialComputational ChemistryMolecular DynamicsGlass TransitionSimulated AnnealingNumerical SimulationLennard-jones GlassesBiophysicsPhysicsMonte CarloPhysical ChemistryMonte Carlo SamplingNatural SciencesMonte Carlo MethodApplied PhysicsComputational BiophysicsMultiscale Modeling
We applied a multicanonical algorithm to a two-dimensional and a three-dimensional Lennard-Jones system with quasicrystalline and glassy ground states. Focusing on the ability of the algorithm to locate low-lying energy states, we compared the results of the multicanonical simulations with standard Monte Carlo simulated annealing and molecular-dynamics methods. We find slight benefits to using multicanonical sampling in small systems (less than 80 particles), which disappear with larger systems. This is disappointing as the multicanonical methods are designed to surmount energy barriers to relaxation. We analyze this failure theoretically and show that (i) the multicanonical method is reduced in the thermodynamic limit (large systems) to an effective Monte Carlo simulated annealing with a random temperature vs time and (ii) the multicanonical method gets trapped by unphysical entropy barriers in the same metastable states whose energy barriers trap the traditional quenches. The performance of Monte Carlo and molecular-dynamics quenches were remarkably similar.
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