Publication | Open Access
Statistical mechanics of polarizable force fields based on classical Drude oscillators with dynamical propagation by the dual-thermostat extended Lagrangian
68
Citations
44
References
2020
Year
Polarizable Force FieldsEngineeringMolecular BiologyClassical SystemComputational ChemistryClassical Drude OscillatorMolecular DynamicsComputational BiophysicsMolecular DesignStatistical Field TheoryClassical Drude OscillatorsMd SimulationsBiophysicsStatistical MechanicsPhysicsMolecular MechanicQuantum ChemistryBiomolecular DynamicsNatural SciencesMolecular BiophysicsNonlinear ResonanceNonlinear OscillationMany-body Problem
Polarizable force fields based on classical Drude oscillators offer a practical and computationally efficient avenue to carry out molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of large biomolecular systems. To treat the polarizable electronic degrees of freedom, the Drude model introduces a virtual charged particle that is attached to its parent nucleus via a harmonic spring. Traditionally, the need to relax the electronic degrees of freedom for each fixed set of nuclear coordinates is achieved by performing an iterative self-consistent field (SCF) calculation to satisfy a selected tolerance. This is a computationally demanding procedure that can increase the computational cost of MD simulations by nearly one order of magnitude. To avoid the costly SCF procedure, a small mass is assigned to the Drude particles, which are then propagated as dynamic variables during the simulations via a dual-thermostat extended Lagrangian algorithm. To help clarify the significance of the dual-thermostat extended Lagrangian propagation in the context of the polarizable force field based on classical Drude oscillators, the statistical mechanics of a dual-temperature canonical ensemble is formulated. The conditions for dynamically maintaining the dual-temperature properties in the case of the classical Drude oscillator are analyzed using the generalized Langevin equation.
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