ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | View Changeset | Root Listing
root/group/trunk/chrisDissertation/Conclusion.tex
Revision: 3028
Committed: Tue Sep 26 23:15:24 2006 UTC (18 years, 7 months ago) by chrisfen
Content type: application/x-tex
File size: 5180 byte(s)
Log Message:
down to proofing the appendix...

File Contents

# Content
1 \chapter{\label{chap:conclusion}CONCLUSION}
2
3 The preceding chapters and included appendices discuss the primary
4 aspects of the research I have performed and been involved with over
5 the last several years. Rather than presenting the topics in a
6 chronological fashion, they were arranged to form a series where the
7 later topics apply and extend the findings of the former topics. This
8 layout is more instructive and provides a more cohesive progression of
9 research efforts.
10
11 The first chapter laid out the foundation from which the research in
12 the later chapters is built upon, primarily the technique of molecular
13 dynamics. This chapter also introduces {\sc oopse}, the object
14 oriented parallel simulation engine, the unified code-base developed in
15 our lab for performing molecular simulations. Starting out as a
16 collection of separate programs written by different group members,
17 {\sc oopse} has developed into one of the few parallel molecular
18 dynamics packages capable of accurately integrating rigid bodies,
19 point multipoles, and metallic potentials.\cite{Meineke05}
20
21 The second chapter discussed correction techniques for handling the
22 long-ranged electrostatic interactions common in molecular
23 simulations, in particular our shifted-force ({\sc sf}) modification
24 of the damped shifted Coulombic summation method developed by Wolf
25 {\it et al.}\cite{Wolf99} In the work outlined here, we showed {\sc
26 sf} to be nearly equivalent to the more prevalent Ewald summation in
27 simulations of condensed phases, and since it is pairwise, it scales
28 as $\mathcal{O}(N)$ and lacks periodicity artifacts introduced through
29 heavy reliance on the reciprocal-space portion of the Ewald sum. We
30 extended the electrostatic damping technique used with {\sc sf} beyond
31 simple charge-charge interactions to include point-multipoles, and we
32 also identified optimal damping parameter settings to ensure proper
33 depiction of the dielectric behavior of molecular systems. Presenting
34 this technique early enables us to apply it in the systems discussed
35 in the later chapters and show how it can improve the quality of
36 various molecular simulations.
37
38 The third chapter focused on simple water models, specifically the
39 single-point soft sticky dipole (SSD) model for water. We implemented
40 this model and realized that we need to reparametrize it in order to
41 use it in our simulations. This lead to the development of SSD/RF and
42 SSD/E, new variants of the SSD model optimized for simulations with
43 and without a reaction field correction. These new single-point models
44 are more efficient than the common multi-point partial charge models
45 and better capture the dynamic properties of water. We also showed
46 that SSD/RF can be successfully used with damped {\sc sf} through our
47 multipolar extension of the technique. For the sake of completeness,
48 we also developed the two-point tetrahedrally restructured elongated
49 dipole (TRED) water model, which is optimized for use with the damped
50 {\sc sf} technique. Though there remain some algorithmic complexities
51 that need to be addressed (logic for neglecting charge-quadrupole
52 interactions between other TRED molecules) to use this model in
53 general simulations, it is approximately twice as efficient as the
54 commonly used three-point charge water models (i.e. TIP3P and
55 SPC/E). This work succeeds in extending the limits of the
56 computational efficiency of water models that can capture the
57 thermodynamic and dynamic properties of liquid water.
58
59 The final chapter deals with a unique polymorph of ice that we
60 discovered while performing water simulations with the fast simple
61 water models discussed in chapter \ref{chap:water}. This form of ice,
62 which we called ``imaginary ice'' (Ice-$i$), has a low-density
63 structure which is different from any known polymorph from either
64 experiment or other simulations. The free energy analysis performed
65 here shows that this structure is in fact the thermodynamically
66 preferred form of ice for both the single-point and commonly used
67 multi-point water models under the chosen simulation conditions. We
68 then showed that inclusion of electrostatic corrections is necessary
69 to obtain more realistic results; however, the free energies of the
70 various polymorphs (both imaginary and real) in many of these models
71 was shown to be so similar that choice of system properties, like the
72 volume in $NVT$ simulations, will directly influence the expressed ice
73 polymorph. This work shows that researchers ought to be wary of using
74 these simplistic water models in the study of complex phase behavior
75 where the choice of a water model that includes many-body effects,
76 such as polarizability, might be more appropriate.
77
78 The work presented in this dissertation includes advancements in
79 simulation techniques, improved molecular models, and applications of
80 both in simulations of novel molecular systems. In addition to
81 answering interesting questions related to these topics, this work
82 opens up new routes which other researchers can utilize to extend and
83 improve their own work. Though specific in focus, through pathways
84 such as these, this work can gain wider utility and expand our
85 understanding of natural physical and chemical processes.