| 1 | chrisfen | 2973 | \chapter{\label{chap:electrostatics}ELECTROSTATIC INTERACTION CORRECTION | 
| 2 |  |  | TECHNIQUES} | 
| 3 |  |  |  | 
| 4 |  |  | In molecular simulations, proper accumulation of the electrostatic | 
| 5 |  |  | interactions is essential and is one of the most | 
| 6 |  |  | computationally-demanding tasks.  The common molecular mechanics force | 
| 7 |  |  | fields represent atomic sites with full or partial charges protected | 
| 8 |  |  | by Lennard-Jones (short range) interactions.  This means that nearly | 
| 9 |  |  | every pair interaction involves a calculation of charge-charge forces. | 
| 10 |  |  | Coupled with relatively long-ranged $r^{-1}$ decay, the monopole | 
| 11 |  |  | interactions quickly become the most expensive part of molecular | 
| 12 |  |  | simulations.  Historically, the electrostatic pair interaction would | 
| 13 |  |  | not have decayed appreciably within the typical box lengths that could | 
| 14 |  |  | be feasibly simulated.  In the larger systems that are more typical of | 
| 15 |  |  | modern simulations, large cutoffs should be used to incorporate | 
| 16 |  |  | electrostatics correctly. | 
| 17 |  |  |  | 
| 18 |  |  | There have been many efforts to address the proper and practical | 
| 19 |  |  | handling of electrostatic interactions, and these have resulted in a | 
| 20 |  |  | variety of techniques.\cite{Roux99,Sagui99,Tobias01} These are | 
| 21 |  |  | typically classified as implicit methods (i.e., continuum dielectrics, | 
| 22 |  |  | static dipolar fields),\cite{Born20,Grossfield00} explicit methods | 
| 23 |  |  | (i.e., Ewald summations, interaction shifting or | 
| 24 |  |  | truncation),\cite{Ewald21,Steinbach94} or a mixture of the two (i.e., | 
| 25 |  |  | reaction field type methods, fast multipole | 
| 26 |  |  | methods).\cite{Onsager36,Rokhlin85} The explicit or mixed methods are | 
| 27 |  |  | often preferred because they physically incorporate solvent molecules | 
| 28 |  |  | in the system of interest, but these methods are sometimes difficult | 
| 29 |  |  | to utilize because of their high computational cost.\cite{Roux99} In | 
| 30 |  |  | addition to the computational cost, there have been some questions | 
| 31 |  |  | regarding possible artifacts caused by the inherent periodicity of the | 
| 32 |  |  | explicit Ewald summation.\cite{Tobias01} | 
| 33 |  |  |  | 
| 34 |  |  | In this chapter, we focus on a new set of pairwise methods devised by | 
| 35 |  |  | Wolf {\it et al.},\cite{Wolf99} which we further extend.  These | 
| 36 |  |  | methods along with a few other mixed methods (i.e. reaction field) are | 
| 37 |  |  | compared with the smooth particle mesh Ewald | 
| 38 |  |  | sum,\cite{Onsager36,Essmann99} which is our reference method for | 
| 39 |  |  | handling long-range electrostatic interactions. The new methods for | 
| 40 |  |  | handling electrostatics have the potential to scale linearly with | 
| 41 |  |  | increasing system size since they involve only a simple modification | 
| 42 |  |  | to the direct pairwise sum.  They also lack the added periodicity of | 
| 43 |  |  | the Ewald sum, so they can be used for systems which are non-periodic | 
| 44 |  |  | or which have one- or two-dimensional periodicity.  Below, these | 
| 45 |  |  | methods are evaluated using a variety of model systems to | 
| 46 |  |  | establish their usability in molecular simulations. | 
| 47 |  |  |  | 
| 48 |  |  | \section{The Ewald Sum} | 
| 49 |  |  |  | 
| 50 |  |  | The complete accumulation of the electrostatic interactions in a system with | 
| 51 |  |  | periodic boundary conditions (PBC) requires the consideration of the | 
| 52 |  |  | effect of all charges within a (cubic) simulation box as well as those | 
| 53 |  |  | in the periodic replicas, | 
| 54 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 55 |  |  | V_\textrm{elec} = \frac{1}{2} {\sum_{\mathbf{n}}}^\prime | 
| 56 |  |  | \left[ \sum_{i=1}^N\sum_{j=1}^N \phi | 
| 57 |  |  | \left( \mathbf{r}_{ij} + L\mathbf{n},\bm{\Omega}_i,\bm{\Omega}_j\right) | 
| 58 |  |  | \right], | 
| 59 |  |  | \label{eq:PBCSum} | 
| 60 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 61 |  |  | where the sum over $\mathbf{n}$ is a sum over all periodic box | 
| 62 |  |  | replicas with integer coordinates $\mathbf{n} = (l,m,n)$, and the | 
| 63 |  |  | prime indicates $i = j$ are neglected for $\mathbf{n} = | 
| 64 |  |  | 0$.\cite{deLeeuw80} Within the sum, $N$ is the number of electrostatic | 
| 65 |  |  | particles, $\mathbf{r}_{ij}$ is $\mathbf{r}_j - \mathbf{r}_i$, $L$ is | 
| 66 |  |  | the cell length, $\bm{\Omega}_{i,j}$ are the Euler angles for $i$ and | 
| 67 |  |  | $j$, and $\phi$ is the solution to Poisson's equation | 
| 68 |  |  | ($\phi(\mathbf{r}_{ij}) = q_i q_j |\mathbf{r}_{ij}|^{-1}$ for | 
| 69 |  |  | charge-charge interactions). In the case of monopole electrostatics, | 
| 70 |  |  | equation (\ref{eq:PBCSum}) is conditionally convergent and is divergent for | 
| 71 |  |  | non-neutral systems. | 
| 72 |  |  |  | 
| 73 |  |  | The electrostatic summation problem was originally studied by Ewald | 
| 74 |  |  | for the case of an infinite crystal.\cite{Ewald21}. The approach he | 
| 75 |  |  | took was to convert this conditionally convergent sum into two | 
| 76 |  |  | absolutely convergent summations: a short-ranged real-space summation | 
| 77 |  |  | and a long-ranged reciprocal-space summation, | 
| 78 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 79 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 80 |  |  | V_\textrm{elec} = \frac{1}{2}& | 
| 81 |  |  | \sum_{i=1}^N\sum_{j=1}^N \Biggr[ q_i q_j\Biggr( {\sum_{\mathbf{n}}}^\prime | 
| 82 |  |  | \frac{\textrm{erfc}\left( \alpha|\mathbf{r}_{ij}+\mathbf{n}|\right)} | 
| 83 |  |  | {|\mathbf{r}_{ij}+\mathbf{n}|} \\ | 
| 84 |  |  | &+ \frac{1}{\pi L^3}\sum_{\mathbf{k}\ne 0}\frac{4\pi^2}{|\mathbf{k}|^2} | 
| 85 |  |  | \exp{\left(-\frac{\pi^2|\mathbf{k}|^2}{\alpha^2}\right) | 
| 86 |  |  | \cos\left(\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}\right)}\Biggr)\Biggr] \\ | 
| 87 |  |  | &- \frac{\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}}\sum_{i=1}^N q_i^2 | 
| 88 |  |  | + \frac{2\pi}{(2\epsilon_\textrm{S}+1)L^3} | 
| 89 |  |  | \left|\sum_{i=1}^N q_i\mathbf{r}_i\right|^2, | 
| 90 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 91 |  |  | \label{eq:EwaldSum} | 
| 92 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 93 |  |  | where $\alpha$ is the damping or convergence parameter with units of | 
| 94 |  |  | \AA$^{-1}$, $\mathbf{k}$ are the reciprocal vectors and are equal to | 
| 95 |  |  | $2\pi\mathbf{n}/L^2$, and $\epsilon_\textrm{S}$ is the dielectric | 
| 96 |  |  | constant of the surrounding medium. The final two terms of | 
| 97 |  |  | equation (\ref{eq:EwaldSum}) are a particle-self term and a dipolar term | 
| 98 |  |  | for interacting with a surrounding dielectric.\cite{Allen87} This | 
| 99 |  |  | dipolar term was neglected in early applications in molecular | 
| 100 |  |  | simulations,\cite{Brush66,Woodcock71} until it was introduced by de | 
| 101 |  |  | Leeuw {\it et al.} to address situations where the unit cell has a | 
| 102 |  |  | dipole moment which is magnified through replication of the periodic | 
| 103 |  |  | images.\cite{deLeeuw80,Smith81} If this term is taken to be zero, the | 
| 104 |  |  | system is said to be using conducting (or ``tin-foil'') boundary | 
| 105 |  |  | conditions, $\epsilon_{\rm S} = \infty$. Figure | 
| 106 |  |  | \ref{fig:ewaldTime} shows how the Ewald sum has been applied over | 
| 107 |  |  | time.  Initially, due to the small system sizes that could be | 
| 108 |  |  | simulated feasibly, the entire simulation box was replicated to | 
| 109 |  |  | convergence.  In more modern simulations, the systems have grown large | 
| 110 |  |  | enough that a real-space cutoff could potentially give convergent | 
| 111 |  |  | behavior.  Indeed, it has been observed that with the choice of a | 
| 112 |  |  | small $\alpha$, the reciprocal-space portion of the Ewald sum can be | 
| 113 |  |  | rapidly convergent and small relative to the real-space | 
| 114 |  |  | portion.\cite{Karasawa89,Kolafa92} | 
| 115 |  |  |  | 
| 116 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 117 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/ewaldProgression.pdf} | 
| 118 |  |  | \caption{The change in the need for the Ewald sum with | 
| 119 |  |  | increasing computational power.  A:~Initially, only small systems | 
| 120 |  |  | could be studied, and the Ewald sum replicated the simulation box to | 
| 121 |  |  | convergence.  B:~Now, radial cutoff methods should be able to reach | 
| 122 |  |  | convergence for the larger systems of charges that are common today.} | 
| 123 |  |  | \label{fig:ewaldTime} | 
| 124 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 125 |  |  |  | 
| 126 |  |  | The original Ewald summation is an $\mathscr{O}(N^2)$ algorithm.  The | 
| 127 |  |  | convergence parameter $(\alpha)$ plays an important role in balancing | 
| 128 |  |  | the computational cost between the direct and reciprocal-space | 
| 129 |  |  | portions of the summation.  The choice of this value allows one to | 
| 130 |  |  | select whether the real-space or reciprocal space portion of the | 
| 131 |  |  | summation is an $\mathscr{O}(N^2)$ calculation (with the other being | 
| 132 |  |  | $\mathscr{O}(N)$).\cite{Sagui99} With the appropriate choice of | 
| 133 |  |  | $\alpha$ and thoughtful algorithm development, this cost can be | 
| 134 |  |  | reduced to $\mathscr{O}(N^{3/2})$.\cite{Perram88} The typical route | 
| 135 |  |  | taken to reduce the cost of the Ewald summation even further is to set | 
| 136 |  |  | $\alpha$ such that the real-space interactions decay rapidly, allowing | 
| 137 |  |  | for a short spherical cutoff. Then the reciprocal space summation is | 
| 138 |  |  | optimized.  These optimizations usually involve utilization of the | 
| 139 |  |  | fast Fourier transform (FFT),\cite{Hockney81} leading to the | 
| 140 |  |  | particle-particle particle-mesh (P3M) and particle mesh Ewald (PME) | 
| 141 |  |  | methods.\cite{Shimada93,Luty94,Luty95,Darden93,Essmann95} In these | 
| 142 |  |  | methods, the cost of the reciprocal-space portion of the Ewald | 
| 143 |  |  | summation is reduced from $\mathscr{O}(N^2)$ down to $\mathscr{O}(N | 
| 144 |  |  | \log N)$. | 
| 145 |  |  |  | 
| 146 |  |  | These developments and optimizations have made the use of the Ewald | 
| 147 |  |  | summation routine in simulations with periodic boundary | 
| 148 |  |  | conditions. However, in certain systems, such as vapor-liquid | 
| 149 |  |  | interfaces and membranes, the intrinsic three-dimensional periodicity | 
| 150 |  |  | can prove problematic.  The Ewald sum has been reformulated to handle | 
| 151 |  |  | 2-D systems,\cite{Parry75,Parry76,Heyes77,deLeeuw79,Rhee89} but these | 
| 152 |  |  | methods are computationally expensive.\cite{Spohr97,Yeh99} More | 
| 153 |  |  | recently, there have been several successful efforts toward reducing | 
| 154 |  |  | the computational cost of 2-D lattice | 
| 155 |  |  | summations,\cite{Yeh99,Kawata01,Arnold02,deJoannis02,Brodka04} | 
| 156 |  |  | bringing them more in line with the cost of the full 3-D summation. | 
| 157 |  |  |  | 
| 158 |  |  | Several studies have recognized that the inherent periodicity in the | 
| 159 |  |  | Ewald sum can also have an effect on three-dimensional | 
| 160 |  |  | systems.\cite{Roberts94,Roberts95,Luty96,Hunenberger99a,Hunenberger99b,Weber00} | 
| 161 |  |  | Solvated proteins are essentially kept at high concentration due to | 
| 162 |  |  | the periodicity of the electrostatic summation method.  In these | 
| 163 |  |  | systems, the more compact folded states of a protein can be | 
| 164 |  |  | artificially stabilized by the periodic replicas introduced by the | 
| 165 |  |  | Ewald summation.\cite{Weber00} Thus, care must be taken when | 
| 166 |  |  | considering the use of the Ewald summation where the assumed | 
| 167 |  |  | periodicity would introduce spurious effects in the system dynamics. | 
| 168 |  |  |  | 
| 169 |  |  |  | 
| 170 |  |  | \section{The Wolf and Zahn Methods} | 
| 171 |  |  |  | 
| 172 |  |  | In a recent paper by Wolf \textit{et al.}, a procedure was outlined | 
| 173 |  |  | for the accurate accumulation of electrostatic interactions in an | 
| 174 |  |  | efficient pairwise fashion.  This procedure lacks the inherent | 
| 175 |  |  | periodicity of the Ewald summation.\cite{Wolf99} Wolf \textit{et al.} | 
| 176 |  |  | observed that the electrostatic interaction is effectively | 
| 177 |  |  | short-ranged in condensed phase systems and that neutralization of the | 
| 178 |  |  | charge contained within the cutoff radius is crucial for potential | 
| 179 |  |  | stability. They devised a pairwise summation method that ensures | 
| 180 |  |  | charge neutrality and gives results similar to those obtained with the | 
| 181 |  |  | Ewald summation.  The resulting shifted Coulomb potential includes | 
| 182 |  |  | image-charges subtracted out through placement on the cutoff sphere | 
| 183 |  |  | and a distance-dependent damping function (identical to that seen in | 
| 184 |  |  | the real-space portion of the Ewald sum) to aid convergence | 
| 185 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 186 |  |  | V_{\textrm{Wolf}}(r_{ij})= \frac{q_i q_j \textrm{erfc}(\alpha r_{ij})}{r_{ij}} | 
| 187 |  |  | - \lim_{r_{ij}\rightarrow R_\textrm{c}} | 
| 188 |  |  | \left\{\frac{q_iq_j \textrm{erfc}(\alpha r_{ij})}{r_{ij}}\right\}. | 
| 189 |  |  | \label{eq:WolfPot} | 
| 190 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 191 |  |  | Equation (\ref{eq:WolfPot}) is essentially the common form of a shifted | 
| 192 |  |  | potential.  However, neutralizing the charge contained within each | 
| 193 |  |  | cutoff sphere requires the placement of a self-image charge on the | 
| 194 |  |  | surface of the cutoff sphere.  This additional self-term in the total | 
| 195 |  |  | potential enabled Wolf {\it et al.}  to obtain excellent estimates of | 
| 196 |  |  | Madelung energies for many crystals. | 
| 197 |  |  |  | 
| 198 |  |  | In order to use their charge-neutralized potential in molecular | 
| 199 |  |  | dynamics simulations, Wolf \textit{et al.} suggested taking the | 
| 200 |  |  | derivative of this potential prior to evaluation of the limit.  This | 
| 201 |  |  | procedure gives an expression for the forces, | 
| 202 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 203 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 204 |  |  | F_{\textrm{Wolf}}(r_{ij}) = q_i q_j \Biggr\{& | 
| 205 |  |  | \Biggr[\frac{\textrm{erfc}\left(\alpha r_{ij}\right)}{r^2_{ij}} | 
| 206 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}}\frac{\exp{\left(-\alpha^2r_{ij}^2\right)}}{r_{ij}} | 
| 207 |  |  | \Biggr]\\ | 
| 208 |  |  | &-\Biggr[ | 
| 209 |  |  | \frac{\textrm{erfc}\left(\alpha R_{\textrm{c}}\right)}{R_{\textrm{c}}^2} | 
| 210 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}} | 
| 211 |  |  | \frac{\exp{\left(-\alpha^2R_{\textrm{c}}^2\right)}}{R_{\textrm{c}}} | 
| 212 |  |  | \Biggr]\Biggr\}, | 
| 213 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 214 |  |  | \label{eq:WolfForces} | 
| 215 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 216 |  |  | that incorporates both image charges and damping of the electrostatic | 
| 217 |  |  | interaction. | 
| 218 |  |  |  | 
| 219 |  |  | More recently, Zahn \textit{et al.} investigated these potential and | 
| 220 |  |  | force expressions for use in simulations involving water.\cite{Zahn02} | 
| 221 |  |  | In their work, they pointed out that the forces and derivative of | 
| 222 |  |  | the potential are not commensurate.  Attempts to use both | 
| 223 |  |  | equations (\ref{eq:WolfPot}) and (\ref{eq:WolfForces}) together will lead | 
| 224 |  |  | to poor energy conservation.  They correctly observed that taking the | 
| 225 |  |  | limit shown in equation (\ref{eq:WolfPot}) {\it after} calculating the | 
| 226 |  |  | derivatives gives forces for a different potential energy function | 
| 227 |  |  | than the one shown in equation (\ref{eq:WolfPot}). | 
| 228 |  |  |  | 
| 229 |  |  | Zahn \textit{et al.} introduced a modified form of this summation | 
| 230 |  |  | method as a way to use the technique in Molecular Dynamics | 
| 231 |  |  | simulations.  They proposed a new damped Coulomb potential, | 
| 232 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 233 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 234 |  |  | V_{\textrm{Zahn}}(r_{ij}) = q_iq_j\Biggr\{& | 
| 235 |  |  | \frac{\mathrm{erfc}\left(\alpha r_{ij}\right)}{r_{ij}} \\ | 
| 236 |  |  | &- \left[\frac{\mathrm{erfc}\left(\alpha R_\mathrm{c}\right)}{R_\mathrm{c}^2} | 
| 237 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}} | 
| 238 |  |  | \frac{\exp\left(-\alpha^2R_\mathrm{c}^2\right)}{R_\mathrm{c}} | 
| 239 |  |  | \right]\left(r_{ij}-R_\mathrm{c}\right)\Biggr\}, | 
| 240 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 241 |  |  | \label{eq:ZahnPot} | 
| 242 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 243 |  |  | and showed that this potential does fairly well at capturing the | 
| 244 |  |  | structural and dynamic properties of water compared the same | 
| 245 |  |  | properties obtained using the Ewald sum. | 
| 246 |  |  |  | 
| 247 |  |  | \section{Simple Forms for Pairwise Electrostatics}\label{sec:PairwiseDerivation} | 
| 248 |  |  |  | 
| 249 |  |  | The potentials proposed by Wolf \textit{et al.} and Zahn \textit{et | 
| 250 |  |  | al.} are constructed using two different (and separable) computational | 
| 251 |  |  | tricks: | 
| 252 |  |  |  | 
| 253 |  |  | \begin{enumerate}[itemsep=0pt] | 
| 254 |  |  | \item shifting through the use of image charges, and | 
| 255 |  |  | \item damping the electrostatic interaction. | 
| 256 |  |  | \end{enumerate} | 
| 257 |  |  | Wolf \textit{et al.} treated the development of their summation method | 
| 258 |  |  | as a progressive application of these techniques,\cite{Wolf99} while | 
| 259 |  |  | Zahn \textit{et al.} founded their damped Coulomb modification | 
| 260 |  |  | (Eq. (\ref{eq:ZahnPot})) on the post-limit forces | 
| 261 |  |  | (Eq. (\ref{eq:WolfForces})) which were derived using both techniques. | 
| 262 |  |  | It is possible, however, to separate these tricks and study their | 
| 263 |  |  | effects independently. | 
| 264 |  |  |  | 
| 265 |  |  | Starting with the original observation that the effective range of the | 
| 266 |  |  | electrostatic interaction in condensed phases is considerably less | 
| 267 |  |  | than $r^{-1}$, either the cutoff sphere neutralization or the | 
| 268 |  |  | distance-dependent damping technique could be used as a foundation for | 
| 269 |  |  | a new pairwise summation method.  Wolf \textit{et al.} made the | 
| 270 |  |  | observation that charge neutralization within the cutoff sphere plays | 
| 271 |  |  | a significant role in energy convergence; therefore we will begin our | 
| 272 |  |  | analysis with the various shifted forms that maintain this charge | 
| 273 |  |  | neutralization.  We can evaluate the methods of Wolf {\it et al.} and | 
| 274 |  |  | Zahn {\it et al.} by considering the standard shifted potential, | 
| 275 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 276 |  |  | V_\textrm{SP}(r) =      \begin{cases} | 
| 277 |  |  | v(r)-v_\textrm{c} &\quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c} \\ 0 &\quad r > | 
| 278 |  |  | R_\textrm{c} | 
| 279 |  |  | \end{cases}, | 
| 280 |  |  | \label{eq:shiftingPotForm} | 
| 281 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 282 |  |  | and shifted force, | 
| 283 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 284 |  |  | V_\textrm{SF}(r) = \begin{cases} | 
| 285 |  |  | v(r) - v_\textrm{c} | 
| 286 |  |  | - \left(\frac{d v(r)}{d r}\right)_{r=R_\textrm{c}}(r-R_\textrm{c}) | 
| 287 |  |  | &\quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c} \\ 0 &\quad r > R_\textrm{c} | 
| 288 |  |  | \end{cases}, | 
| 289 |  |  | \label{eq:shiftingForm} | 
| 290 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 291 |  |  | functions where $v(r)$ is the unshifted form of the potential, and | 
| 292 |  |  | $v_c$ is $v(R_\textrm{c})$.  The Shifted Force ({\sc sf}) form ensures | 
| 293 |  |  | that both the potential and the forces goes to zero at the cutoff | 
| 294 |  |  | radius, while the Shifted Potential ({\sc sp}) form only ensures the | 
| 295 |  |  | potential is smooth at the cutoff radius | 
| 296 |  |  | ($R_\textrm{c}$).\cite{Allen87} | 
| 297 |  |  |  | 
| 298 |  |  | The forces associated with the shifted potential are simply the forces | 
| 299 |  |  | of the unshifted potential itself (when inside the cutoff sphere), | 
| 300 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 301 |  |  | F_{\textrm{SP}} = -\left( \frac{d v(r)}{dr} \right), | 
| 302 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 303 |  |  | and are zero outside.  Inside the cutoff sphere, the forces associated | 
| 304 |  |  | with the shifted force form can be written, | 
| 305 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 306 |  |  | F_{\textrm{SF}} = -\left( \frac{d v(r)}{dr} \right) + \left(\frac{d | 
| 307 |  |  | v(r)}{dr} \right)_{r=R_\textrm{c}}. | 
| 308 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 309 |  |  |  | 
| 310 |  |  | If the potential, $v(r)$, is taken to be the normal Coulomb potential, | 
| 311 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 312 |  |  | v(r) = \frac{q_i q_j}{r}, | 
| 313 |  |  | \label{eq:Coulomb} | 
| 314 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 315 |  |  | then the Shifted Potential ({\sc sp}) forms will give Wolf {\it et | 
| 316 |  |  | al.}'s undamped prescription: | 
| 317 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 318 |  |  | V_\textrm{SP}(r) = | 
| 319 |  |  | q_iq_j\left(\frac{1}{r}-\frac{1}{R_\textrm{c}}\right) \quad | 
| 320 |  |  | r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}, | 
| 321 |  |  | \label{eq:SPPot} | 
| 322 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 323 |  |  | with associated forces, | 
| 324 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 325 |  |  | F_\textrm{SP}(r) = q_iq_j\left(\frac{1}{r^2}\right) | 
| 326 |  |  | \quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}. | 
| 327 |  |  | \label{eq:SPForces} | 
| 328 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 329 |  |  | These forces are identical to the forces of the standard Coulomb | 
| 330 |  |  | interaction, and cutting these off at $R_c$ was addressed by Wolf | 
| 331 |  |  | \textit{et al.} as undesirable.  They pointed out that the effect of | 
| 332 |  |  | the image charges is neglected in the forces when this form is | 
| 333 |  |  | used,\cite{Wolf99} thereby eliminating any benefit from the method in | 
| 334 |  |  | molecular dynamics.  Additionally, there is a discontinuity in the | 
| 335 |  |  | forces at the cutoff radius which results in energy drift during MD | 
| 336 |  |  | simulations. | 
| 337 |  |  |  | 
| 338 |  |  | The shifted force ({\sc sf}) form using the normal Coulomb potential | 
| 339 |  |  | will give, | 
| 340 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 341 |  |  | V_\textrm{SF}(r) = q_iq_j\left[\frac{1}{r}-\frac{1}{R_\textrm{c}} | 
| 342 |  |  | + \left(\frac{1}{R_\textrm{c}^2}\right)(r-R_\textrm{c})\right] | 
| 343 |  |  | \quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}. | 
| 344 |  |  | \label{eq:SFPot} | 
| 345 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 346 |  |  | with associated forces, | 
| 347 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 348 |  |  | F_\textrm{SF}(r) =  q_iq_j\left(\frac{1}{r^2}-\frac{1}{R_\textrm{c}^2}\right) | 
| 349 |  |  | \quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}. | 
| 350 |  |  | \label{eq:SFForces} | 
| 351 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 352 |  |  | This formulation has the benefits that there are no discontinuities at | 
| 353 |  |  | the cutoff radius, while the neutralizing image charges are present in | 
| 354 |  |  | both the energy and force expressions.  It would be simple to add the | 
| 355 |  |  | self-neutralizing term back when computing the total energy of the | 
| 356 |  |  | system, thereby maintaining the agreement with the Madelung energies. | 
| 357 |  |  | A side effect of this treatment is the alteration in the shape of the | 
| 358 |  |  | potential that comes from the derivative term.  Thus, a degree of | 
| 359 |  |  | clarity about agreement with the empirical potential is lost in order | 
| 360 |  |  | to gain functionality in dynamics simulations. | 
| 361 |  |  |  | 
| 362 |  |  | Wolf \textit{et al.} originally discussed the energetics of the | 
| 363 |  |  | shifted Coulomb potential (Eq. \ref{eq:SPPot}) and found that it was | 
| 364 |  |  | insufficient for accurate determination of the energy with reasonable | 
| 365 |  |  | cutoff distances.  The calculated Madelung energies fluctuated around | 
| 366 |  |  | the expected value as the cutoff radius was increased, but the | 
| 367 |  |  | oscillations converged toward the correct value.\cite{Wolf99} A | 
| 368 |  |  | damping function was incorporated to accelerate the convergence; and | 
| 369 |  |  | though alternative forms for the damping function could be | 
| 370 |  |  | used,\cite{Jones56,Heyes81} the complimentary error function was | 
| 371 |  |  | chosen to mirror the effective screening used in the Ewald summation. | 
| 372 |  |  | Incorporating this error function damping into the simple Coulomb | 
| 373 |  |  | potential, | 
| 374 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 375 |  |  | v(r) = \frac{\mathrm{erfc}\left(\alpha r\right)}{r}, | 
| 376 |  |  | \label{eq:dampCoulomb} | 
| 377 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 378 |  |  | the shifted potential (Eq. (\ref{eq:SPPot})) becomes | 
| 379 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 380 |  |  | V_{\textrm{DSP}}(r) = q_iq_j\left(\frac{\textrm{erfc}\left(\alpha r\right)}{r} | 
| 381 |  |  | - \frac{\textrm{erfc}\left(\alpha R_\textrm{c}\right)}{R_\textrm{c}}\right) | 
| 382 |  |  | \quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}, | 
| 383 |  |  | \label{eq:DSPPot} | 
| 384 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 385 |  |  | with associated forces, | 
| 386 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 387 |  |  | F_{\textrm{DSP}}(r) = q_iq_j | 
| 388 |  |  | \left(\frac{\textrm{erfc}\left(\alpha r\right)}{r^2} | 
| 389 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}}\frac{\exp{\left(-\alpha^2r^2\right)}}{r}\right) | 
| 390 |  |  | \quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}. | 
| 391 |  |  | \label{eq:DSPForces} | 
| 392 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 393 |  |  | Again, this damped shifted potential suffers from a | 
| 394 |  |  | force-discontinuity at the cutoff radius, and the image charges play | 
| 395 |  |  | no role in the forces.  To remedy these concerns, one may derive a | 
| 396 |  |  | {\sc sf} variant by including the derivative term in | 
| 397 |  |  | equation (\ref{eq:shiftingForm}), | 
| 398 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 399 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 400 |  |  | V_\mathrm{DSF}(r) = q_iq_j\Biggr{[}& | 
| 401 |  |  | \frac{\mathrm{erfc}\left(\alpha r\right)}{r} | 
| 402 |  |  | - \frac{\mathrm{erfc}\left(\alpha R_\mathrm{c}\right)}{R_\mathrm{c}} \\ | 
| 403 |  |  | &+ \left(\frac{\mathrm{erfc}\left(\alpha R_\mathrm{c}\right)}{R_\mathrm{c}^2} | 
| 404 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}} | 
| 405 |  |  | \frac{\exp\left(-\alpha^2R_\mathrm{c}^2\right)}{R_\mathrm{c}} | 
| 406 |  |  | \right)\left(r-R_\mathrm{c}\right)\ \Biggr{]} | 
| 407 |  |  | \quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}. | 
| 408 |  |  | \label{eq:DSFPot} | 
| 409 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 410 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 411 |  |  | The derivative of the above potential will lead to the following forces, | 
| 412 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 413 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 414 |  |  | F_\mathrm{DSF}(r) = q_iq_j\Biggr{[}& | 
| 415 |  |  | \left(\frac{\textrm{erfc}\left(\alpha r\right)}{r^2} | 
| 416 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}}\frac{\exp{\left(-\alpha^2r^2\right)}}{r}\right) \\ | 
| 417 |  |  | &- \left(\frac{\textrm{erfc}\left(\alpha R_{\textrm{c}}\right)} | 
| 418 |  |  | {R_{\textrm{c}}^2} | 
| 419 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha}{\pi^{1/2}} | 
| 420 |  |  | \frac{\exp{\left(-\alpha^2R_{\textrm{c}}^2\right)}}{R_{\textrm{c}}} | 
| 421 |  |  | \right)\Biggr{]} | 
| 422 |  |  | \quad r\leqslant R_\textrm{c}. | 
| 423 |  |  | \label{eq:DSFForces} | 
| 424 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 425 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 426 |  |  | If the damping parameter $(\alpha)$ is set to zero, the undamped case, | 
| 427 |  |  | equations (\ref{eq:SPPot} through \ref{eq:SFForces}) are correctly | 
| 428 |  |  | recovered from equations (\ref{eq:DSPPot} through \ref{eq:DSFForces}). | 
| 429 |  |  |  | 
| 430 |  |  | This new {\sc sf} potential is similar to equation \ref{eq:ZahnPot} | 
| 431 |  |  | derived by Zahn \textit{et al.}; however, there are two important | 
| 432 |  |  | differences.\cite{Zahn02} First, the $v_\textrm{c}$ term from equation | 
| 433 |  |  | (\ref{eq:shiftingForm}) is equal to equation (\ref{eq:dampCoulomb}) | 
| 434 |  |  | with $r$ replaced by $R_\textrm{c}$.  This term is {\it not} present | 
| 435 |  |  | in the Zahn potential, resulting in a potential discontinuity as | 
| 436 |  |  | particles cross $R_\textrm{c}$.  Second, the sign of the derivative | 
| 437 |  |  | portion is different.  The missing $v_\textrm{c}$ term would not | 
| 438 |  |  | affect molecular dynamics simulations (although the computed energy | 
| 439 |  |  | would be expected to have sudden jumps as particle distances crossed | 
| 440 |  |  | $R_c$).  The sign problem is a potential source of errors, however. | 
| 441 |  |  | In fact, it introduces a discontinuity in the forces at the cutoff, | 
| 442 |  |  | because the force function is shifted in the wrong direction and | 
| 443 |  |  | doesn't cross zero at $R_\textrm{c}$. | 
| 444 |  |  |  | 
| 445 |  |  | Equations (\ref{eq:DSFPot}) and (\ref{eq:DSFForces}) result in an | 
| 446 |  |  | electrostatic summation method in which the potential and forces are | 
| 447 |  |  | continuous at the cutoff radius and which incorporates the damping | 
| 448 |  |  | function proposed by Wolf \textit{et al.}\cite{Wolf99} In the rest of | 
| 449 |  |  | this paper, we will evaluate exactly how good these methods ({\sc sp}, | 
| 450 |  |  | {\sc sf}, damping) are at reproducing the correct electrostatic | 
| 451 |  |  | summation performed by the Ewald sum. | 
| 452 |  |  |  | 
| 453 |  |  |  | 
| 454 |  |  | \section{Evaluating Pairwise Summation Techniques} | 
| 455 |  |  |  | 
| 456 |  |  | In classical molecular mechanics simulations, there are two primary | 
| 457 |  |  | techniques utilized to obtain information about the system of | 
| 458 |  |  | interest: Monte Carlo (MC) and Molecular Dynamics (MD).  Both of these | 
| 459 |  |  | techniques utilize pairwise summations of interactions between | 
| 460 |  |  | particle sites, but they use these summations in different ways. | 
| 461 |  |  |  | 
| 462 |  |  | In MC, the potential energy difference between configurations dictates | 
| 463 |  |  | the progression of MC sampling.  Going back to the origins of this | 
| 464 |  |  | method, the acceptance criterion for the canonical ensemble laid out | 
| 465 |  |  | by Metropolis \textit{et al.} states that a subsequent configuration | 
| 466 |  |  | is accepted if $\Delta E < 0$ or if $\xi < \exp(-\Delta E/kT)$, where | 
| 467 |  |  | $\xi$ is a random number between 0 and 1.\cite{Metropolis53} | 
| 468 |  |  | Maintaining the correct $\Delta E$ when using an alternate method for | 
| 469 |  |  | handling the long-range electrostatics will ensure proper sampling | 
| 470 |  |  | from the ensemble. | 
| 471 |  |  |  | 
| 472 |  |  | In MD, the derivative of the potential governs how the system will | 
| 473 |  |  | progress in time.  Consequently, the force and torque vectors on each | 
| 474 |  |  | body in the system dictate how the system evolves.  If the magnitude | 
| 475 |  |  | and direction of these vectors are similar when using alternate | 
| 476 |  |  | electrostatic summation techniques, the dynamics in the short term | 
| 477 |  |  | will be indistinguishable.  Because error in MD calculations is | 
| 478 |  |  | cumulative, one should expect greater deviation at longer times, | 
| 479 |  |  | although methods which have large differences in the force and torque | 
| 480 |  |  | vectors will diverge from each other more rapidly. | 
| 481 |  |  |  | 
| 482 |  |  | \subsection{Monte Carlo and the Energy Gap}\label{sec:MCMethods} | 
| 483 |  |  |  | 
| 484 |  |  | The pairwise summation techniques (outlined in section | 
| 485 |  |  | \ref{sec:ESMethods}) were evaluated for use in MC simulations by | 
| 486 |  |  | studying the energy differences between conformations.  We took the | 
| 487 |  |  | {\sc spme}-computed energy difference between two conformations to be the | 
| 488 |  |  | correct behavior. An ideal performance by an alternative method would | 
| 489 |  |  | reproduce these energy differences exactly (even if the absolute | 
| 490 |  |  | energies calculated by the methods are different).  Since none of the | 
| 491 |  |  | methods provide exact energy differences, we used linear least squares | 
| 492 |  |  | regressions of energy gap data to evaluate how closely the methods | 
| 493 |  |  | mimicked the Ewald energy gaps.  Unitary results for both the | 
| 494 |  |  | correlation (slope) and correlation coefficient for these regressions | 
| 495 |  |  | indicate perfect agreement between the alternative method and {\sc spme}. | 
| 496 |  |  | Sample correlation plots for two alternate methods are shown in | 
| 497 |  |  | Fig. \ref{fig:linearFit}. | 
| 498 |  |  |  | 
| 499 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 500 |  |  | \centering | 
| 501 | chrisfen | 2975 | \includegraphics[width = 3.5in]{./figures/dualLinear.pdf} | 
| 502 | chrisfen | 2973 | \caption{Example least squares regressions of the configuration energy | 
| 503 |  |  | differences for SPC/E water systems. The upper plot shows a data set | 
| 504 |  |  | with a poor correlation coefficient ($R^2$), while the lower plot | 
| 505 |  |  | shows a data set with a good correlation coefficient.} | 
| 506 |  |  | \label{fig:linearFit} | 
| 507 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 508 |  |  |  | 
| 509 |  |  | Each of the seven system types (detailed in section \ref{sec:RepSims}) | 
| 510 |  |  | were represented using 500 independent configurations.  Thus, each of | 
| 511 |  |  | the alternative (non-Ewald) electrostatic summation methods was | 
| 512 |  |  | evaluated using an accumulated 873,250 configurational energy | 
| 513 |  |  | differences. | 
| 514 |  |  |  | 
| 515 |  |  | Results and discussion for the individual analysis of each of the | 
| 516 |  |  | system types appear in sections \ref{sec:IndividualResults}, while the | 
| 517 |  |  | cumulative results over all the investigated systems appear below in | 
| 518 |  |  | sections \ref{sec:EnergyResults}. | 
| 519 |  |  |  | 
| 520 |  |  | \subsection{Molecular Dynamics and the Force and Torque | 
| 521 |  |  | Vectors}\label{sec:MDMethods} We evaluated the pairwise methods | 
| 522 |  |  | (outlined in section \ref{sec:ESMethods}) for use in MD simulations by | 
| 523 |  |  | comparing the force and torque vectors with those obtained using the | 
| 524 |  |  | reference Ewald summation ({\sc spme}).  Both the magnitude and the | 
| 525 |  |  | direction of these vectors on each of the bodies in the system were | 
| 526 |  |  | analyzed.  For the magnitude of these vectors, linear least squares | 
| 527 |  |  | regression analyses were performed as described previously for | 
| 528 |  |  | comparing $\Delta E$ values.  Instead of a single energy difference | 
| 529 |  |  | between two system configurations, we compared the magnitudes of the | 
| 530 |  |  | forces (and torques) on each molecule in each configuration.  For a | 
| 531 |  |  | system of 1000 water molecules and 40 ions, there are 1040 force | 
| 532 |  |  | vectors and 1000 torque vectors.  With 500 configurations, this | 
| 533 |  |  | results in 520,000 force and 500,000 torque vector comparisons. | 
| 534 |  |  | Additionally, data from seven different system types was aggregated | 
| 535 |  |  | before the comparison was made. | 
| 536 |  |  |  | 
| 537 |  |  | The {\it directionality} of the force and torque vectors was | 
| 538 |  |  | investigated through measurement of the angle ($\theta$) formed | 
| 539 |  |  | between those computed from the particular method and those from {\sc spme}, | 
| 540 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 541 |  |  | \theta_f = \cos^{-1} \left(\hat{F}_\textrm{SPME} | 
| 542 |  |  | \cdot \hat{F}_\textrm{M}\right), | 
| 543 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 544 |  |  | where $\hat{F}_\textrm{M}$ is the unit vector pointing along the force | 
| 545 |  |  | vector computed using method M.  Each of these $\theta$ values was | 
| 546 |  |  | accumulated in a distribution function and weighted by the area on the | 
| 547 |  |  | unit sphere.  Since this distribution is a measure of angular error | 
| 548 |  |  | between two different electrostatic summation methods, there is no | 
| 549 |  |  | {\it a priori} reason for the profile to adhere to any specific | 
| 550 |  |  | shape. Thus, gaussian fits were used to measure the width of the | 
| 551 |  |  | resulting distributions. The variance ($\sigma^2$) was extracted from | 
| 552 |  |  | each of these fits and was used to compare distribution widths. | 
| 553 |  |  | Values of $\sigma^2$ near zero indicate vector directions | 
| 554 |  |  | indistinguishable from those calculated when using the reference | 
| 555 |  |  | method ({\sc spme}). | 
| 556 |  |  |  | 
| 557 |  |  | \subsection{Short-time Dynamics} | 
| 558 |  |  |  | 
| 559 |  |  | The effects of the alternative electrostatic summation methods on the | 
| 560 |  |  | short-time dynamics of charged systems were evaluated by considering a | 
| 561 |  |  | NaCl crystal at a temperature of 1000 K.  A subset of the best | 
| 562 |  |  | performing pairwise methods was used in this comparison.  The NaCl | 
| 563 |  |  | crystal was chosen to avoid possible complications from the treatment | 
| 564 |  |  | of orientational motion in molecular systems.  All systems were | 
| 565 |  |  | started with the same initial positions and velocities.  Simulations | 
| 566 |  |  | were performed under the microcanonical ensemble, and velocity | 
| 567 |  |  | autocorrelation functions (Eq. \ref{eq:vCorr}) were computed for each | 
| 568 |  |  | of the trajectories, | 
| 569 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 570 |  |  | C_v(t) = \frac{\langle v(0)\cdot v(t)\rangle}{\langle v^2\rangle}. | 
| 571 |  |  | \label{eq:vCorr} | 
| 572 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 573 |  |  | Velocity autocorrelation functions require detailed short time data, | 
| 574 |  |  | thus velocity information was saved every 2fs over 10ps | 
| 575 |  |  | trajectories. Because the NaCl crystal is composed of two different | 
| 576 |  |  | atom types, the average of the two resulting velocity autocorrelation | 
| 577 |  |  | functions was used for comparisons. | 
| 578 |  |  |  | 
| 579 |  |  | \subsection{Long-Time and Collective Motion}\label{sec:LongTimeMethods} | 
| 580 |  |  |  | 
| 581 |  |  | The effects of the same subset of alternative electrostatic methods on | 
| 582 |  |  | the {\it long-time} dynamics of charged systems were evaluated using | 
| 583 |  |  | the same model system (NaCl crystals at 1000K).  The power spectrum | 
| 584 |  |  | ($I(\omega)$) was obtained via Fourier transform of the velocity | 
| 585 |  |  | autocorrelation function, | 
| 586 |  |  | \begin{equation} I(\omega) = | 
| 587 |  |  | \frac{1}{2\pi}\int^{\infty}_{-\infty}C_v(t)e^{-i\omega t}dt, | 
| 588 |  |  | \label{eq:powerSpec} | 
| 589 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 590 |  |  | where the frequency, $\omega=0,\ 1,\ ...,\ N-1$. Again, because the | 
| 591 |  |  | NaCl crystal is composed of two different atom types, the average of | 
| 592 |  |  | the two resulting power spectra was used for comparisons. Simulations | 
| 593 |  |  | were performed under the microcanonical ensemble, and velocity | 
| 594 |  |  | information was saved every 5fs over 100ps trajectories. | 
| 595 |  |  |  | 
| 596 |  |  | \subsection{Representative Simulations}\label{sec:RepSims} | 
| 597 |  |  | A variety of representative molecular simulations were analyzed to | 
| 598 |  |  | determine the relative effectiveness of the pairwise summation | 
| 599 |  |  | techniques in reproducing the energetics and dynamics exhibited by | 
| 600 |  |  | {\sc spme}.  We wanted to span the space of typical molecular | 
| 601 |  |  | simulations (i.e. from liquids of neutral molecules to ionic | 
| 602 |  |  | crystals), so the systems studied were: | 
| 603 |  |  |  | 
| 604 |  |  | \begin{enumerate}[itemsep=0pt] | 
| 605 |  |  | \item liquid water (SPC/E),\cite{Berendsen87} | 
| 606 |  |  | \item crystalline water (Ice I$_\textrm{c}$ crystals of SPC/E), | 
| 607 |  |  | \item NaCl crystals, | 
| 608 |  |  | \item NaCl melts, | 
| 609 |  |  | \item a low ionic strength solution of NaCl in water (0.11 M), | 
| 610 |  |  | \item a high ionic strength solution of NaCl in water (1.1 M), and | 
| 611 |  |  | \item a 6\AA\  radius sphere of Argon in water. | 
| 612 |  |  | \end{enumerate} | 
| 613 |  |  |  | 
| 614 |  |  | By utilizing the pairwise techniques (outlined in section | 
| 615 |  |  | \ref{sec:ESMethods}) in systems composed entirely of neutral groups, | 
| 616 |  |  | charged particles, and mixtures of the two, we hope to discern under | 
| 617 |  |  | which conditions it will be possible to use one of the alternative | 
| 618 |  |  | summation methodologies instead of the Ewald sum. | 
| 619 |  |  |  | 
| 620 |  |  | For the solid and liquid water configurations, configurations were | 
| 621 |  |  | taken at regular intervals from high temperature trajectories of 1000 | 
| 622 |  |  | SPC/E water molecules.  Each configuration was equilibrated | 
| 623 |  |  | independently at a lower temperature (300K for the liquid, 200K for | 
| 624 |  |  | the crystal).  The solid and liquid NaCl systems consisted of 500 | 
| 625 |  |  | $\textrm{Na}^{+}$ and 500 $\textrm{Cl}^{-}$ ions.  Configurations for | 
| 626 |  |  | these systems were selected and equilibrated in the same manner as the | 
| 627 |  |  | water systems. In order to introduce measurable fluctuations in the | 
| 628 |  |  | configuration energy differences, the crystalline simulations were | 
| 629 |  |  | equilibrated at 1000K, near the $T_\textrm{m}$ for NaCl. The liquid | 
| 630 |  |  | NaCl configurations needed to represent a fully disordered array of | 
| 631 |  |  | point charges, so the high temperature of 7000K was selected for | 
| 632 |  |  | equilibration. The ionic solutions were made by solvating 4 (or 40) | 
| 633 |  |  | ions in a periodic box containing 1000 SPC/E water molecules.  Ion and | 
| 634 |  |  | water positions were then randomly swapped, and the resulting | 
| 635 |  |  | configurations were again equilibrated individually.  Finally, for the | 
| 636 |  |  | Argon / Water ``charge void'' systems, the identities of all the SPC/E | 
| 637 |  |  | waters within 6\AA\ of the center of the equilibrated water | 
| 638 |  |  | configurations were converted to argon. | 
| 639 |  |  |  | 
| 640 |  |  | These procedures guaranteed us a set of representative configurations | 
| 641 |  |  | from chemically-relevant systems sampled from appropriate | 
| 642 |  |  | ensembles. Force field parameters for the ions and Argon were taken | 
| 643 |  |  | from the force field utilized by {\sc oopse}.\cite{Meineke05} | 
| 644 |  |  |  | 
| 645 |  |  | \subsection{Comparison of Summation Methods}\label{sec:ESMethods} | 
| 646 |  |  | We compared the following alternative summation methods with results | 
| 647 |  |  | from the reference method ({\sc spme}): | 
| 648 |  |  |  | 
| 649 |  |  | \begin{enumerate}[itemsep=0pt] | 
| 650 |  |  | \item {\sc sp} with damping parameters ($\alpha$) of 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, | 
| 651 |  |  | and 0.3\AA$^{-1}$, | 
| 652 |  |  | \item {\sc sf} with damping parameters ($\alpha$) of 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, | 
| 653 |  |  | and 0.3\AA$^{-1}$, | 
| 654 |  |  | \item reaction field with an infinite dielectric constant, and | 
| 655 |  |  | \item an unmodified cutoff. | 
| 656 |  |  | \end{enumerate} | 
| 657 |  |  |  | 
| 658 |  |  | Group-based cutoffs with a fifth-order polynomial switching function | 
| 659 |  |  | were utilized for the reaction field simulations.  Additionally, we | 
| 660 |  |  | investigated the use of these cutoffs with the {\sc sp}, {\sc sf}, and pure | 
| 661 |  |  | cutoff.  The {\sc spme} electrostatics were performed using the {\sc tinker} | 
| 662 |  |  | implementation of {\sc spme},\cite{Ponder87} while all other calculations | 
| 663 |  |  | were performed using the {\sc oopse} molecular mechanics | 
| 664 |  |  | package.\cite{Meineke05} All other portions of the energy calculation | 
| 665 |  |  | (i.e. Lennard-Jones interactions) were handled in exactly the same | 
| 666 |  |  | manner across all systems and configurations. | 
| 667 |  |  |  | 
| 668 |  |  | The alternative methods were also evaluated with three different | 
| 669 |  |  | cutoff radii (9, 12, and 15\AA).  As noted previously, the | 
| 670 |  |  | convergence parameter ($\alpha$) plays a role in the balance of the | 
| 671 |  |  | real-space and reciprocal-space portions of the Ewald calculation. | 
| 672 |  |  | Typical molecular mechanics packages set this to a value dependent on | 
| 673 |  |  | the cutoff radius and a tolerance (typically less than $1 \times | 
| 674 |  |  | 10^{-4}$ kcal/mol).  Smaller tolerances are typically associated with | 
| 675 |  |  | increasing accuracy at the expense of computational time spent on the | 
| 676 |  |  | reciprocal-space portion of the summation.\cite{Perram88,Essmann95} | 
| 677 |  |  | The default {\sc tinker} tolerance of $1 \times 10^{-8}$ kcal/mol was used | 
| 678 |  |  | in all {\sc spme} calculations, resulting in Ewald coefficients of 0.4200, | 
| 679 |  |  | 0.3119, and 0.2476\AA$^{-1}$ for cutoff radii of 9, 12, and 15\AA\ | 
| 680 |  |  | respectively. | 
| 681 |  |  |  | 
| 682 |  |  | \section{Configuration Energy Difference Results}\label{sec:EnergyResults} | 
| 683 |  |  | In order to evaluate the performance of the pairwise electrostatic | 
| 684 |  |  | summation methods for Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, the energy | 
| 685 |  |  | differences between configurations were compared to the values | 
| 686 |  |  | obtained when using {\sc spme}.  The results for the combined | 
| 687 |  |  | regression analysis of all of the systems are shown in figure | 
| 688 |  |  | \ref{fig:delE}. | 
| 689 |  |  |  | 
| 690 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 691 |  |  | \centering | 
| 692 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=4.75in]{./figures/delEplot.pdf} | 
| 693 |  |  | \caption{Statistical analysis of the quality of configurational energy | 
| 694 |  |  | differences for a given electrostatic method compared with the | 
| 695 |  |  | reference Ewald sum.  Results with a value equal to 1 (dashed line) | 
| 696 |  |  | indicate $\Delta E$ values indistinguishable from those obtained using | 
| 697 |  |  | {\sc spme}.  Different values of the cutoff radius are indicated with | 
| 698 |  |  | different symbols (9\AA\ = circles, 12\AA\ = squares, and 15\AA\ = | 
| 699 |  |  | inverted triangles).} | 
| 700 |  |  | \label{fig:delE} | 
| 701 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 702 |  |  |  | 
| 703 |  |  | The most striking feature of this plot is how well the Shifted Force | 
| 704 |  |  | ({\sc sf}) and Shifted Potential ({\sc sp}) methods capture the energy | 
| 705 |  |  | differences.  For the undamped {\sc sf} method, and the | 
| 706 |  |  | moderately-damped {\sc sp} methods, the results are nearly | 
| 707 |  |  | indistinguishable from the Ewald results.  The other common methods do | 
| 708 |  |  | significantly less well. | 
| 709 |  |  |  | 
| 710 |  |  | The unmodified cutoff method is essentially unusable.  This is not | 
| 711 |  |  | surprising since hard cutoffs give large energy fluctuations as atoms | 
| 712 |  |  | or molecules move in and out of the cutoff | 
| 713 |  |  | radius.\cite{Rahman71,Adams79} These fluctuations can be alleviated to | 
| 714 |  |  | some degree by using group based cutoffs with a switching | 
| 715 |  |  | function.\cite{Adams79,Steinbach94,Leach01} However, we do not see | 
| 716 |  |  | significant improvement using the group-switched cutoff because the | 
| 717 |  |  | salt and salt solution systems contain non-neutral groups.  Section | 
| 718 |  |  | \ref{sec:IndividualResults} includes results for systems comprised entirely | 
| 719 |  |  | of neutral groups. | 
| 720 |  |  |  | 
| 721 |  |  | For the {\sc sp} method, inclusion of electrostatic damping improves | 
| 722 |  |  | the agreement with Ewald, and using an $\alpha$ of 0.2\AA $^{-1}$ | 
| 723 |  |  | shows an excellent correlation and quality of fit with the {\sc spme} | 
| 724 |  |  | results, particularly with a cutoff radius greater than 12 | 
| 725 |  |  | \AA .  Use of a larger damping parameter is more helpful for the | 
| 726 |  |  | shortest cutoff shown, but it has a detrimental effect on simulations | 
| 727 |  |  | with larger cutoffs. | 
| 728 |  |  |  | 
| 729 |  |  | In the {\sc sf} sets, increasing damping results in progressively {\it | 
| 730 |  |  | worse} correlation with Ewald.  Overall, the undamped case is the best | 
| 731 |  |  | performing set, as the correlation and quality of fits are | 
| 732 |  |  | consistently superior regardless of the cutoff distance.  The undamped | 
| 733 |  |  | case is also less computationally demanding (because no evaluation of | 
| 734 |  |  | the complementary error function is required). | 
| 735 |  |  |  | 
| 736 |  |  | The reaction field results illustrates some of that method's | 
| 737 |  |  | limitations, primarily that it was developed for use in homogeneous | 
| 738 |  |  | systems; although it does provide results that are an improvement over | 
| 739 |  |  | those from an unmodified cutoff. | 
| 740 |  |  |  | 
| 741 |  |  | \section{Magnitude of the Force and Torque Vector Results}\label{sec:FTMagResults} | 
| 742 |  |  |  | 
| 743 |  |  | Evaluation of pairwise methods for use in Molecular Dynamics | 
| 744 |  |  | simulations requires consideration of effects on the forces and | 
| 745 |  |  | torques.  Figures \ref{fig:frcMag} and \ref{fig:trqMag} show the | 
| 746 |  |  | regression results for the force and torque vector magnitudes, | 
| 747 |  |  | respectively.  The data in these figures was generated from an | 
| 748 |  |  | accumulation of the statistics from all of the system types. | 
| 749 |  |  |  | 
| 750 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 751 |  |  | \centering | 
| 752 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=4.75in]{./figures/frcMagplot.pdf} | 
| 753 |  |  | \caption{Statistical analysis of the quality of the force vector | 
| 754 |  |  | magnitudes for a given electrostatic method compared with the | 
| 755 |  |  | reference Ewald sum.  Results with a value equal to 1 (dashed line) | 
| 756 |  |  | indicate force magnitude values indistinguishable from those obtained | 
| 757 |  |  | using {\sc spme}.  Different values of the cutoff radius are indicated with | 
| 758 |  |  | different symbols (9\AA\ = circles, 12\AA\ = squares, and 15\AA\ = | 
| 759 |  |  | inverted triangles).} | 
| 760 |  |  | \label{fig:frcMag} | 
| 761 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 762 |  |  |  | 
| 763 |  |  | Again, it is striking how well the Shifted Potential and Shifted Force | 
| 764 |  |  | methods are doing at reproducing the {\sc spme} forces.  The undamped and | 
| 765 |  |  | weakly-damped {\sc sf} method gives the best agreement with Ewald. | 
| 766 |  |  | This is perhaps expected because this method explicitly incorporates a | 
| 767 |  |  | smooth transition in the forces at the cutoff radius as well as the | 
| 768 |  |  | neutralizing image charges. | 
| 769 |  |  |  | 
| 770 |  |  | Figure \ref{fig:frcMag}, for the most part, parallels the results seen | 
| 771 |  |  | in the previous $\Delta E$ section.  The unmodified cutoff results are | 
| 772 |  |  | poor, but using group based cutoffs and a switching function provides | 
| 773 |  |  | an improvement much more significant than what was seen with $\Delta | 
| 774 |  |  | E$. | 
| 775 |  |  |  | 
| 776 |  |  | With moderate damping and a large enough cutoff radius, the {\sc sp} | 
| 777 |  |  | method is generating usable forces.  Further increases in damping, | 
| 778 |  |  | while beneficial for simulations with a cutoff radius of 9\AA\ , is | 
| 779 |  |  | detrimental to simulations with larger cutoff radii. | 
| 780 |  |  |  | 
| 781 |  |  | The reaction field results are surprisingly good, considering the poor | 
| 782 |  |  | quality of the fits for the $\Delta E$ results.  There is still a | 
| 783 |  |  | considerable degree of scatter in the data, but the forces correlate | 
| 784 |  |  | well with the Ewald forces in general.  We note that the reaction | 
| 785 |  |  | field calculations do not include the pure NaCl systems, so these | 
| 786 |  |  | results are partly biased towards conditions in which the method | 
| 787 |  |  | performs more favorably. | 
| 788 |  |  |  | 
| 789 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 790 |  |  | \centering | 
| 791 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=4.75in]{./figures/trqMagplot.pdf} | 
| 792 |  |  | \caption{Statistical analysis of the quality of the torque vector | 
| 793 |  |  | magnitudes for a given electrostatic method compared with the | 
| 794 |  |  | reference Ewald sum.  Results with a value equal to 1 (dashed line) | 
| 795 |  |  | indicate torque magnitude values indistinguishable from those obtained | 
| 796 |  |  | using {\sc spme}.  Different values of the cutoff radius are indicated with | 
| 797 |  |  | different symbols (9\AA\ = circles, 12\AA\ = squares, and 15\AA\ = | 
| 798 |  |  | inverted triangles).} | 
| 799 |  |  | \label{fig:trqMag} | 
| 800 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 801 |  |  |  | 
| 802 |  |  | Molecular torques were only available from the systems which contained | 
| 803 |  |  | rigid molecules (i.e. the systems containing water).  The data in | 
| 804 |  |  | fig. \ref{fig:trqMag} is taken from this smaller sampling pool. | 
| 805 |  |  |  | 
| 806 |  |  | Torques appear to be much more sensitive to charges at a longer | 
| 807 |  |  | distance.   The striking feature in comparing the new electrostatic | 
| 808 |  |  | methods with {\sc spme} is how much the agreement improves with increasing | 
| 809 |  |  | cutoff radius.  Again, the weakly damped and undamped {\sc sf} method | 
| 810 |  |  | appears to be reproducing the {\sc spme} torques most accurately. | 
| 811 |  |  |  | 
| 812 |  |  | Water molecules are dipolar, and the reaction field method reproduces | 
| 813 |  |  | the effect of the surrounding polarized medium on each of the | 
| 814 |  |  | molecular bodies. Therefore it is not surprising that reaction field | 
| 815 |  |  | performs best of all of the methods on molecular torques. | 
| 816 |  |  |  | 
| 817 |  |  | \section{Directionality of the Force and Torque Vector Results}\label{sec:FTDirResults} | 
| 818 |  |  |  | 
| 819 |  |  | It is clearly important that a new electrostatic method can reproduce | 
| 820 |  |  | the magnitudes of the force and torque vectors obtained via the Ewald | 
| 821 |  |  | sum. However, the {\it directionality} of these vectors will also be | 
| 822 |  |  | vital in calculating dynamical quantities accurately.  Force and | 
| 823 |  |  | torque directionalities were investigated by measuring the angles | 
| 824 |  |  | formed between these vectors and the same vectors calculated using | 
| 825 |  |  | {\sc spme}.  The results (Fig. \ref{fig:frcTrqAng}) are compared through the | 
| 826 |  |  | variance ($\sigma^2$) of the Gaussian fits of the angle error | 
| 827 |  |  | distributions of the combined set over all system types. | 
| 828 |  |  |  | 
| 829 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 830 |  |  | \centering | 
| 831 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=4.75in]{./figures/frcTrqAngplot.pdf} | 
| 832 |  |  | \caption{Statistical analysis of the width of the angular distribution | 
| 833 |  |  | that the force and torque vectors from a given electrostatic method | 
| 834 |  |  | make with their counterparts obtained using the reference Ewald sum. | 
| 835 |  |  | Results with a variance ($\sigma^2$) equal to zero (dashed line) | 
| 836 |  |  | indicate force and torque directions indistinguishable from those | 
| 837 |  |  | obtained using {\sc spme}.  Different values of the cutoff radius are | 
| 838 |  |  | indicated with different symbols (9\AA\ = circles, 12\AA\ = squares, | 
| 839 |  |  | and 15\AA\ = inverted triangles).} | 
| 840 |  |  | \label{fig:frcTrqAng} | 
| 841 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 842 |  |  |  | 
| 843 |  |  | Both the force and torque $\sigma^2$ results from the analysis of the | 
| 844 |  |  | total accumulated system data are tabulated in figure | 
| 845 |  |  | \ref{fig:frcTrqAng}. Here it is clear that the Shifted Potential ({\sc | 
| 846 |  |  | sp}) method would be essentially unusable for molecular dynamics | 
| 847 |  |  | unless the damping function is added.  The Shifted Force ({\sc sf}) | 
| 848 |  |  | method, however, is generating force and torque vectors which are | 
| 849 |  |  | within a few degrees of the Ewald results even with weak (or no) | 
| 850 |  |  | damping. | 
| 851 |  |  |  | 
| 852 |  |  | All of the sets (aside from the over-damped case) show the improvement | 
| 853 |  |  | afforded by choosing a larger cutoff radius.  Increasing the cutoff | 
| 854 |  |  | from 9 to 12\AA\ typically results in a halving of the width of the | 
| 855 |  |  | distribution, with a similar improvement when going from 12 to 15 | 
| 856 |  |  | \AA . | 
| 857 |  |  |  | 
| 858 |  |  | The undamped {\sc sf}, group-based cutoff, and reaction field methods | 
| 859 |  |  | all do equivalently well at capturing the direction of both the force | 
| 860 |  |  | and torque vectors.  Using the electrostatic damping improves the | 
| 861 |  |  | angular behavior significantly for the {\sc sp} and moderately for the | 
| 862 |  |  | {\sc sf} methods.  Over-damping is detrimental to both methods.  Again | 
| 863 |  |  | it is important to recognize that the force vectors cover all | 
| 864 |  |  | particles in all seven systems, while torque vectors are only | 
| 865 |  |  | available for neutral molecular groups.  Damping is more beneficial to | 
| 866 |  |  | charged bodies, and this observation is investigated further in | 
| 867 |  |  | section \ref{sec:IndividualResults}. | 
| 868 |  |  |  | 
| 869 |  |  | Although not discussed previously, group based cutoffs can be applied | 
| 870 |  |  | to both the {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} methods.  The group-based cutoffs | 
| 871 |  |  | will reintroduce small discontinuities at the cutoff radius, but the | 
| 872 |  |  | effects of these can be minimized by utilizing a switching function. | 
| 873 |  |  | Though there are no significant benefits or drawbacks observed in | 
| 874 |  |  | $\Delta E$ and the force and torque magnitudes when doing this, there | 
| 875 |  |  | is a measurable improvement in the directionality of the forces and | 
| 876 |  |  | torques. Table \ref{tab:groupAngle} shows the angular variances | 
| 877 |  |  | obtained both without (N) and with (Y) group based cutoffs and a | 
| 878 |  |  | switching function.  Note that the $\alpha$ values have units of | 
| 879 |  |  | \AA$^{-1}$ and the variance values have units of degrees$^2$.  The | 
| 880 |  |  | {\sc sp} (with an $\alpha$ of 0.2\AA$^{-1}$ or smaller) shows much | 
| 881 |  |  | narrower angular distributions when using group-based cutoffs. The | 
| 882 |  |  | {\sc sf} method likewise shows improvement in the undamped and lightly | 
| 883 |  |  | damped cases. | 
| 884 |  |  |  | 
| 885 |  |  | \begin{table} | 
| 886 |  |  | \caption{STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF THE ANGULAR DISTRIBUTIONS ($\sigma^2$) | 
| 887 |  |  | THAT THE FORCE ({\it upper}) AND TORQUE ({\it lower}) VECTORS FROM A | 
| 888 |  |  | GIVEN ELECTROSTATIC METHOD MAKE WITH THEIR COUNTERPARTS OBTAINED USING | 
| 889 |  |  | THE REFERENCE EWALD SUMMATION} | 
| 890 |  |  |  | 
| 891 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 892 |  |  | \begin{center} | 
| 893 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 894 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 895 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 896 |  |  | & &\multicolumn{4}{c}{Shifted Potential} & \multicolumn{4}{c}{Shifted | 
| 897 |  |  | Force} \\ | 
| 898 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-6} \cmidrule(l){7-10} $R_\textrm{c}$ & Groups & | 
| 899 |  |  | $\alpha = 0$ & $\alpha = 0.1$ & $\alpha = 0.2$ & $\alpha = 0.3$ & | 
| 900 |  |  | $\alpha = 0$ & $\alpha = 0.1$ & $\alpha = 0.2$ & $\alpha = 0.3$\\ | 
| 901 |  |  |  | 
| 902 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 903 |  |  |  | 
| 904 |  |  | 9\AA   & N & 29.545 & 12.003 & 5.489 & 0.610 & 2.323 & 2.321 & 0.429 & 0.603 \\ | 
| 905 |  |  | & \textbf{Y} & \textbf{2.486} & \textbf{2.160} & \textbf{0.667} & \textbf{0.608} & \textbf{1.768} & \textbf{1.766} & \textbf{0.676} & \textbf{0.609} \\ | 
| 906 |  |  | 12\AA  & N & 19.381 & 3.097 & 0.190 & 0.608 & 0.920 & 0.736 & 0.133 & 0.612 \\ | 
| 907 |  |  | & \textbf{Y} & \textbf{0.515} & \textbf{0.288} & \textbf{0.127} & \textbf{0.586} & \textbf{0.308} & \textbf{0.249} & \textbf{0.127} & \textbf{0.586} \\ | 
| 908 |  |  | 15\AA  & N & 12.700 & 1.196 & 0.123 & 0.601 & 0.339 & 0.160 & 0.123 & 0.601 \\ | 
| 909 |  |  | & \textbf{Y} & \textbf{0.228} & \textbf{0.099} & \textbf{0.121} & \textbf{0.598} & \textbf{0.144} & \textbf{0.090} & \textbf{0.121} & \textbf{0.598} \\ | 
| 910 |  |  |  | 
| 911 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 912 |  |  |  | 
| 913 |  |  | 9\AA   & N & 262.716 & 116.585 & 5.234 & 5.103 & 2.392 & 2.350 & 1.770 & 5.122 \\ | 
| 914 |  |  | & \textbf{Y} & \textbf{2.115} & \textbf{1.914} & \textbf{1.878} & \textbf{5.142} & \textbf{2.076} & \textbf{2.039} & \textbf{1.972} & \textbf{5.146} \\ | 
| 915 |  |  | 12\AA  & N & 129.576 & 25.560 & 1.369 & 5.080 & 0.913 & 0.790 & 1.362 & 5.124 \\ | 
| 916 |  |  | & \textbf{Y} & \textbf{0.810} & \textbf{0.685} & \textbf{1.352} & \textbf{5.082} & \textbf{0.765} & \textbf{0.714} & \textbf{1.360} & \textbf{5.082} \\ | 
| 917 |  |  | 15\AA  & N & 87.275 & 4.473 & 1.271 & 5.000 & 0.372 & 0.312 & 1.271 & 5.000 \\ | 
| 918 |  |  | & \textbf{Y} & \textbf{0.282} & \textbf{0.294} & \textbf{1.272} & \textbf{4.999} & \textbf{0.324} & \textbf{0.318} & \textbf{1.272} & \textbf{4.999} \\ | 
| 919 |  |  |  | 
| 920 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 921 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 922 |  |  | \end{center} | 
| 923 |  |  | \label{tab:groupAngle} | 
| 924 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 925 |  |  |  | 
| 926 |  |  | One additional trend in table \ref{tab:groupAngle} is that the | 
| 927 |  |  | $\sigma^2$ values for both {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} converge as $\alpha$ | 
| 928 |  |  | increases, something that is more obvious with group-based cutoffs. | 
| 929 |  |  | The complimentary error function inserted into the potential weakens | 
| 930 |  |  | the electrostatic interaction as the value of $\alpha$ is increased. | 
| 931 |  |  | However, at larger values of $\alpha$, it is possible to over-damp the | 
| 932 |  |  | electrostatic interaction and to remove it completely.  Kast | 
| 933 |  |  | \textit{et al.}  developed a method for choosing appropriate $\alpha$ | 
| 934 |  |  | values for these types of electrostatic summation methods by fitting | 
| 935 |  |  | to $g(r)$ data, and their methods indicate optimal values of 0.34, | 
| 936 |  |  | 0.25, and 0.16\AA$^{-1}$ for cutoff values of 9, 12, and 15\AA\ | 
| 937 |  |  | respectively.\cite{Kast03} These appear to be reasonable choices to | 
| 938 |  |  | obtain proper MC behavior (Fig. \ref{fig:delE}); however, based on | 
| 939 |  |  | these findings, choices this high would introduce error in the | 
| 940 |  |  | molecular torques, particularly for the shorter cutoffs.  Based on our | 
| 941 |  |  | observations, empirical damping up to 0.2\AA$^{-1}$ is beneficial, | 
| 942 |  |  | but damping may be unnecessary when using the {\sc sf} method. | 
| 943 |  |  |  | 
| 944 |  |  | \section{Individual System Analysis Results}\label{sec:IndividualResults} | 
| 945 |  |  |  | 
| 946 |  |  | The combined results of the previous sections show how the pairwise | 
| 947 |  |  | methods compare to the Ewald summation in the general sense over all | 
| 948 |  |  | of the system types.  It is also useful to consider each of the | 
| 949 |  |  | studied systems in an individual fashion, so that we can identify | 
| 950 |  |  | conditions that are particularly difficult for a selected pairwise | 
| 951 |  |  | method to address. This allows us to further establish the limitations | 
| 952 |  |  | of these pairwise techniques.  Below, the energy difference, force | 
| 953 |  |  | vector, and torque vector analyses are presented on an individual | 
| 954 |  |  | system basis. | 
| 955 |  |  |  | 
| 956 |  |  | \subsection{SPC/E Water Results}\label{sec:WaterResults} | 
| 957 |  |  |  | 
| 958 |  |  | The first system considered was liquid water at 300K using the SPC/E | 
| 959 |  |  | model of water.\cite{Berendsen87} The results for the energy gap | 
| 960 |  |  | comparisons and the force and torque vector magnitude comparisons are | 
| 961 |  |  | shown in table \ref{tab:spce}.  The force and torque vector | 
| 962 |  |  | directionality results are displayed separately in table | 
| 963 |  |  | \ref{tab:spceAng}, where the effect of group-based cutoffs and | 
| 964 |  |  | switching functions on the {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} potentials are also | 
| 965 |  |  | investigated.  In all of the individual results table, the method | 
| 966 |  |  | abbreviations are as follows: | 
| 967 |  |  |  | 
| 968 |  |  | \begin{itemize}[itemsep=0pt] | 
| 969 |  |  | \item PC = Pure Cutoff, | 
| 970 |  |  | \item SP = Shifted Potential, | 
| 971 |  |  | \item SF = Shifted Force, | 
| 972 |  |  | \item GSC = Group Switched Cutoff, | 
| 973 |  |  | \item RF = Reaction Field (where $\varepsilon \approx\infty$), | 
| 974 |  |  | \item GSSP = Group Switched Shifted Potential, and | 
| 975 |  |  | \item GSSF = Group Switched Shifted Force. | 
| 976 |  |  | \end{itemize} | 
| 977 |  |  |  | 
| 978 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 979 |  |  | \centering | 
| 980 |  |  | \caption{REGRESSION RESULTS OF THE LIQUID WATER SYSTEM FOR THE | 
| 981 |  |  | $\Delta E$ VALUES ({\it upper}), FORCE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it middle}) | 
| 982 |  |  | AND TORQUE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it lower})} | 
| 983 |  |  |  | 
| 984 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 985 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 986 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 987 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 988 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{2}{c}{9\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{12\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{15\AA}\\ | 
| 989 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-4} | 
| 990 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){5-6} | 
| 991 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){7-8} | 
| 992 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ \\ | 
| 993 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 994 |  |  | PC  &     & 3.046 & 0.002 & -3.018 & 0.002 & 4.719 & 0.005 \\ | 
| 995 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 1.035 & 0.218 & 0.908 & 0.313 & 1.037 & 0.470 \\ | 
| 996 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.021 & 0.387 & 0.965 & 0.752 & 1.006 & 0.947 \\ | 
| 997 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.997 & 0.962 & 1.001 & 0.994 & 0.994 & 0.996 \\ | 
| 998 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.984 & 0.980 & 0.997 & 0.985 & 0.982 & 0.987 \\ | 
| 999 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.977 & 0.974 & 0.996 & 0.992 & 0.991 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 1000 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.983 & 0.974 & 1.001 & 0.994 & 0.996 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1001 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.992 & 0.989 & 1.001 & 0.995 & 0.994 & 0.996 \\ | 
| 1002 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.984 & 0.980 & 0.996 & 0.985 & 0.982 & 0.987 \\ | 
| 1003 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.918 & 0.862 & 0.852 & 0.756 & 0.801 & 0.700 \\ | 
| 1004 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.971 & 0.958 & 0.975 & 0.987 & 0.959 & 0.983 \\ | 
| 1005 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1006 |  |  | PC  &     & -1.647 & 0.000 & -0.127 & 0.000 & -0.979 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1007 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.735 & 0.368 & 0.813 & 0.537 & 0.865 & 0.659 \\ | 
| 1008 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.850 & 0.612 & 0.956 & 0.887 & 0.992 & 0.979 \\ | 
| 1009 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.996 & 0.989 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1010 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.996 & 0.998 & 0.997 & 0.998 & 0.996 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1011 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.998 & 0.995 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1012 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.998 & 0.995 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1013 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.999 & 0.998 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1014 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.996 & 0.998 & 0.997 & 0.998 & 0.996 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1015 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.998 & 0.995 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1016 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.999 & 0.995 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1017 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1018 |  |  | PC  &     & 2.387 & 0.000 & 0.183 & 0.000 & 1.282 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1019 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.847 & 0.543 & 0.904 & 0.694 & 0.935 & 0.786 \\ | 
| 1020 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.922 & 0.749 & 0.980 & 0.934 & 0.996 & 0.988 \\ | 
| 1021 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.987 & 0.985 & 0.989 & 0.992 & 0.990 & 0.993 \\ | 
| 1022 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.965 & 0.973 & 0.967 & 0.975 & 0.967 & 0.976 \\ | 
| 1023 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.978 & 0.990 & 0.988 & 0.997 & 0.993 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1024 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.983 & 0.991 & 0.993 & 0.997 & 0.997 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1025 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.986 & 0.989 & 0.989 & 0.992 & 0.990 & 0.993 \\ | 
| 1026 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.965 & 0.973 & 0.967 & 0.975 & 0.967 & 0.976 \\ | 
| 1027 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.995 & 0.981 & 0.999 & 0.991 & 1.001 & 0.994 \\ | 
| 1028 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.993 & 0.989 & 0.998 & 0.996 & 1.000 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1029 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1030 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1031 |  |  | \label{tab:spce} | 
| 1032 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1033 |  |  |  | 
| 1034 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1035 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1036 |  |  | \caption{VARIANCE RESULTS FROM GAUSSIAN FITS TO ANGULAR | 
| 1037 |  |  | DISTRIBUTIONS OF THE FORCE AND TORQUE VECTORS IN THE LIQUID WATER | 
| 1038 |  |  | SYSTEM} | 
| 1039 |  |  |  | 
| 1040 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1041 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1042 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1043 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1044 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Force $\sigma^2$} & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Torque $\sigma^2$} \\ | 
| 1045 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-5} | 
| 1046 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){6-8} | 
| 1047 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA \\ | 
| 1048 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1049 |  |  | PC  &     & 783.759 & 481.353 & 332.677 & 248.674 & 144.382 & 98.535 \\ | 
| 1050 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 659.440 & 380.699 & 250.002 & 235.151 & 134.661 & 88.135 \\ | 
| 1051 |  |  | & 0.1 & 293.849 & 67.772 & 11.609 & 105.090 & 23.813 & 4.369 \\ | 
| 1052 |  |  | & 0.2 & 5.975 & 0.136 & 0.094 & 5.553 & 1.784 & 1.536 \\ | 
| 1053 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.725 & 0.707 & 0.693 & 7.293 & 6.933 & 6.748 \\ | 
| 1054 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 2.238 & 0.713 & 0.292 & 3.290 & 1.090 & 0.416 \\ | 
| 1055 |  |  | & 0.1 & 2.238 & 0.524 & 0.115 & 3.184 & 0.945 & 0.326 \\ | 
| 1056 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.374 & 0.102 & 0.094 & 2.598 & 1.755 & 1.537 \\ | 
| 1057 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.721 & 0.707 & 0.693 & 7.322 & 6.933 & 6.748 \\ | 
| 1058 |  |  | GSC &     & 2.431 & 0.614 & 0.274 & 5.135 & 2.133 & 1.339 \\ | 
| 1059 |  |  | RF  &     & 2.091 & 0.403 & 0.113 & 3.583 & 1.071 & 0.399 \\ | 
| 1060 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1061 |  |  | GSSP  & 0.0 & 2.431 & 0.614 & 0.274 & 5.135 & 2.133 & 1.339 \\ | 
| 1062 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.879 & 0.291 & 0.057 & 3.983 & 1.117 & 0.370 \\ | 
| 1063 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.443 & 0.103 & 0.093 & 2.821 & 1.794 & 1.532 \\ | 
| 1064 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.728 & 0.694 & 0.692 & 7.387 & 6.942 & 6.748 \\ | 
| 1065 |  |  | GSSF  & 0.0 & 1.298 & 0.270 & 0.083 & 3.098 & 0.992 & 0.375 \\ | 
| 1066 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.296 & 0.210 & 0.044 & 3.055 & 0.922 & 0.330 \\ | 
| 1067 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.433 & 0.104 & 0.093 & 2.895 & 1.797 & 1.532 \\ | 
| 1068 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.728 & 0.694 & 0.692 & 7.410 & 6.942 & 6.748 \\ | 
| 1069 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1070 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1071 |  |  | \label{tab:spceAng} | 
| 1072 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1073 |  |  |  | 
| 1074 |  |  | The water results parallel the combined results seen in sections | 
| 1075 |  |  | \ref{sec:EnergyResults} through \ref{sec:FTDirResults}.  There is good | 
| 1076 |  |  | agreement with {\sc spme} in both energetic and dynamic behavior when | 
| 1077 |  |  | using the {\sc sf} method with and without damping. The {\sc sp} | 
| 1078 |  |  | method does well with an $\alpha$ around 0.2\AA$^{-1}$, particularly | 
| 1079 |  |  | with cutoff radii greater than 12\AA. Over-damping the electrostatics | 
| 1080 |  |  | reduces the agreement between both these methods and {\sc spme}. | 
| 1081 |  |  |  | 
| 1082 |  |  | The pure cutoff ({\sc pc}) method performs poorly, again mirroring the | 
| 1083 |  |  | observations from the combined results.  In contrast to these results, however, the use of a switching function and group | 
| 1084 |  |  | based cutoffs greatly improves the results for these neutral water | 
| 1085 |  |  | molecules.  The group switched cutoff ({\sc gsc}) does not mimic the | 
| 1086 |  |  | energetics of {\sc spme} as well as the {\sc sp} (with moderate | 
| 1087 |  |  | damping) and {\sc sf} methods, but the dynamics are quite good.  The | 
| 1088 |  |  | switching functions correct discontinuities in the potential and | 
| 1089 |  |  | forces, leading to these improved results.  Such improvements with the | 
| 1090 |  |  | use of a switching function have been recognized in previous | 
| 1091 |  |  | studies,\cite{Andrea83,Steinbach94} and this proves to be a useful | 
| 1092 |  |  | tactic for stably incorporating local area electrostatic effects. | 
| 1093 |  |  |  | 
| 1094 |  |  | The reaction field ({\sc rf}) method simply extends upon the results | 
| 1095 |  |  | observed in the {\sc gsc} case.  Both methods are similar in form | 
| 1096 |  |  | (i.e. neutral groups, switching function), but {\sc rf} incorporates | 
| 1097 |  |  | an added effect from the external dielectric. This similarity | 
| 1098 |  |  | translates into the same good dynamic results and improved energetic | 
| 1099 |  |  | agreement with {\sc spme}.  Though this agreement is not to the level | 
| 1100 |  |  | of the moderately damped {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} methods, these results | 
| 1101 |  |  | show how incorporating some implicit properties of the surroundings | 
| 1102 |  |  | (i.e. $\epsilon_\textrm{S}$) can improve the solvent depiction. | 
| 1103 |  |  |  | 
| 1104 |  |  | As a final note for the liquid water system, use of group cutoffs and a | 
| 1105 |  |  | switching function leads to noticeable improvements in the {\sc sp} | 
| 1106 |  |  | and {\sc sf} methods, primarily in directionality of the force and | 
| 1107 |  |  | torque vectors (table \ref{tab:spceAng}). The {\sc sp} method shows | 
| 1108 |  |  | significant narrowing of the angle distribution when using little to | 
| 1109 |  |  | no damping and only modest improvement for the recommended conditions | 
| 1110 |  |  | ($\alpha = 0.2$\AA$^{-1}$ and $R_\textrm{c}~\geqslant~12$\AA).  The | 
| 1111 |  |  | {\sc sf} method shows modest narrowing across all damping and cutoff | 
| 1112 |  |  | ranges of interest.  When over-damping these methods, group cutoffs and | 
| 1113 |  |  | the switching function do not improve the force and torque | 
| 1114 |  |  | directionalities. | 
| 1115 |  |  |  | 
| 1116 |  |  | \subsection{SPC/E Ice I$_\textrm{c}$ Results}\label{sec:IceResults} | 
| 1117 |  |  |  | 
| 1118 |  |  | In addition to the disordered molecular system above, the ordered | 
| 1119 |  |  | molecular system of ice I$_\textrm{c}$ was also considered.  Ice | 
| 1120 |  |  | polymorph could have been used to fit this role; however, ice | 
| 1121 |  |  | I$_\textrm{c}$ was chosen because it can form an ideal periodic | 
| 1122 |  |  | lattice with the same number of water molecules used in the disordered | 
| 1123 |  |  | liquid state case.  The results for the energy gap comparisons and the | 
| 1124 |  |  | force and torque vector magnitude comparisons are shown in table | 
| 1125 |  |  | \ref{tab:ice}.  The force and torque vector directionality results are | 
| 1126 |  |  | displayed separately in table \ref{tab:iceAng}, where the effect of | 
| 1127 |  |  | group-based cutoffs and switching functions on the {\sc sp} and {\sc | 
| 1128 |  |  | sf} potentials are also displayed. | 
| 1129 |  |  |  | 
| 1130 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1131 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1132 |  |  | \caption{REGRESSION RESULTS OF THE ICE I$_\textrm{c}$ SYSTEM FOR | 
| 1133 |  |  | $\Delta E$ VALUES ({\it upper}), FORCE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it | 
| 1134 |  |  | middle}) AND TORQUE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it lower})} | 
| 1135 |  |  |  | 
| 1136 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1137 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1138 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1139 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1140 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{2}{c}{9\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{12\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{15\AA}\\ | 
| 1141 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-4} | 
| 1142 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){5-6} | 
| 1143 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){7-8} | 
| 1144 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ \\ | 
| 1145 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1146 |  |  | PC  &     & 19.897 & 0.047 & -29.214 & 0.048 & -3.771 & 0.001 \\ | 
| 1147 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & -0.014 & 0.000 & 2.135 & 0.347 & 0.457 & 0.045 \\ | 
| 1148 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.321 & 0.017 & 1.490 & 0.584 & 0.886 & 0.796 \\ | 
| 1149 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.896 & 0.872 & 1.011 & 0.998 & 0.997 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1150 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.983 & 0.997 & 0.992 & 0.997 & 0.991 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 1151 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.943 & 0.979 & 1.048 & 0.978 & 0.995 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1152 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.948 & 0.979 & 1.044 & 0.983 & 1.000 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1153 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.982 & 0.997 & 0.969 & 0.960 & 0.997 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1154 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.985 & 0.997 & 0.961 & 0.961 & 0.991 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 1155 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.983 & 0.985 & 0.966 & 0.994 & 1.003 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1156 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.924 & 0.944 & 0.990 & 0.996 & 0.991 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1157 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1158 |  |  | PC  &     & -4.375 & 0.000 & 6.781 & 0.000 & -3.369 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1159 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.515 & 0.164 & 0.856 & 0.426 & 0.743 & 0.478 \\ | 
| 1160 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.696 & 0.405 & 0.977 & 0.817 & 0.974 & 0.964 \\ | 
| 1161 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.981 & 0.980 & 1.001 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1162 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.996 & 0.998 & 0.997 & 0.999 & 0.997 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1163 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.991 & 0.995 & 1.003 & 0.998 & 0.999 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1164 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.992 & 0.995 & 1.003 & 0.998 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1165 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.998 & 0.998 & 0.981 & 0.962 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1166 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.996 & 0.998 & 0.976 & 0.957 & 0.997 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1167 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.997 & 0.996 & 0.998 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1168 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.988 & 0.989 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1169 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1170 |  |  | PC  &     & -6.367 & 0.000 & -3.552 & 0.000 & -3.447 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1171 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.643 & 0.409 & 0.833 & 0.607 & 0.961 & 0.805 \\ | 
| 1172 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.791 & 0.683 & 0.957 & 0.914 & 1.000 & 0.989 \\ | 
| 1173 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.974 & 0.991 & 0.993 & 0.998 & 0.993 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1174 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.976 & 0.992 & 0.977 & 0.992 & 0.977 & 0.992 \\ | 
| 1175 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.979 & 0.997 & 0.992 & 0.999 & 0.994 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1176 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.984 & 0.997 & 0.996 & 0.999 & 0.998 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1177 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.991 & 0.997 & 0.974 & 0.958 & 0.993 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1178 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.977 & 0.992 & 0.956 & 0.948 & 0.977 & 0.992 \\ | 
| 1179 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.999 & 0.997 & 0.996 & 0.999 & 1.002 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1180 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.994 & 0.997 & 0.997 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1181 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1182 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1183 |  |  | \label{tab:ice} | 
| 1184 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1185 |  |  |  | 
| 1186 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1187 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1188 |  |  | \caption{VARIANCE RESULTS FROM GAUSSIAN FITS TO ANGULAR DISTRIBUTIONS | 
| 1189 |  |  | OF THE FORCE AND TORQUE VECTORS IN THE ICE I$_\textrm{c}$ SYSTEM} | 
| 1190 |  |  |  | 
| 1191 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1192 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1193 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1194 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1195 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Force $\sigma^2$} & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Torque | 
| 1196 |  |  | $\sigma^2$} \\ | 
| 1197 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-5} | 
| 1198 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){6-8} | 
| 1199 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA \\ | 
| 1200 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1201 |  |  | PC  &     & 2128.921 & 603.197 & 715.579 & 329.056 & 221.397 & 81.042 \\ | 
| 1202 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 1429.341 & 470.320 & 447.557 & 301.678 & 197.437 & 73.840 \\ | 
| 1203 |  |  | & 0.1 & 590.008 & 107.510 & 18.883 & 118.201 & 32.472 & 3.599 \\ | 
| 1204 |  |  | & 0.2 & 10.057 & 0.105 & 0.038 & 2.875 & 0.572 & 0.518 \\ | 
| 1205 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.245 & 0.260 & 0.262 & 2.365 & 2.396 & 2.327 \\ | 
| 1206 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 1.745 & 1.161 & 0.212 & 1.135 & 0.426 & 0.155 \\ | 
| 1207 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.721 & 0.868 & 0.082 & 1.118 & 0.358 & 0.118 \\ | 
| 1208 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.201 & 0.040 & 0.038 & 0.786 & 0.555 & 0.518 \\ | 
| 1209 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.241 & 0.260 & 0.262 & 2.368 & 2.400 & 2.327 \\ | 
| 1210 |  |  | GSC &     & 1.483 & 0.261 & 0.099 & 0.926 & 0.295 & 0.095 \\ | 
| 1211 |  |  | RF  &     & 2.887 & 0.217 & 0.107 & 1.006 & 0.281 & 0.085 \\ | 
| 1212 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1213 |  |  | GSSP  & 0.0 & 1.483 & 0.261 & 0.099 & 0.926 & 0.295 & 0.095 \\ | 
| 1214 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.341 & 0.123 & 0.037 & 0.835 & 0.234 & 0.085 \\ | 
| 1215 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.558 & 0.040 & 0.037 & 0.823 & 0.557 & 0.519 \\ | 
| 1216 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.250 & 0.251 & 0.259 & 2.387 & 2.395 & 2.328 \\ | 
| 1217 |  |  | GSSF  & 0.0 & 2.124 & 0.132 & 0.069 & 0.919 & 0.263 & 0.099 \\ | 
| 1218 |  |  | & 0.1 & 2.165 & 0.101 & 0.035 & 0.895 & 0.244 & 0.096 \\ | 
| 1219 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.706 & 0.040 & 0.037 & 0.870 & 0.559 & 0.519 \\ | 
| 1220 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.251 & 0.251 & 0.259 & 2.387 & 2.395 & 2.328 \\ | 
| 1221 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1222 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1223 |  |  | \label{tab:iceAng} | 
| 1224 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1225 |  |  |  | 
| 1226 |  |  | Highly ordered systems are a difficult test for the pairwise methods | 
| 1227 |  |  | in that they lack the implicit periodicity of the Ewald summation.  As | 
| 1228 |  |  | expected, the energy gap agreement with {\sc spme} is reduced for the | 
| 1229 |  |  | {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} methods with parameters that were ideal for the | 
| 1230 |  |  | disordered liquid system.  Moving to higher $R_\textrm{c}$ helps | 
| 1231 |  |  | improve the agreement, though at an increase in computational cost. | 
| 1232 |  |  | The dynamics of this crystalline system (both in magnitude and | 
| 1233 |  |  | direction) are little affected. Both methods still reproduce the Ewald | 
| 1234 |  |  | behavior with the same parameter recommendations from the previous | 
| 1235 |  |  | section. | 
| 1236 |  |  |  | 
| 1237 |  |  | It is also worth noting that {\sc rf} exhibits improved energy gap | 
| 1238 |  |  | results over the liquid water system.  One possible explanation is | 
| 1239 |  |  | that the ice I$_\textrm{c}$ crystal is ordered such that the net | 
| 1240 |  |  | dipole moment of the crystal is zero.  With $\epsilon_\textrm{S} = | 
| 1241 |  |  | \infty$, the reaction field incorporates this structural organization | 
| 1242 |  |  | by actively enforcing a zeroed dipole moment within each cutoff | 
| 1243 |  |  | sphere. | 
| 1244 |  |  |  | 
| 1245 |  |  | \subsection{NaCl Melt Results}\label{sec:SaltMeltResults} | 
| 1246 |  |  |  | 
| 1247 |  |  | A high temperature NaCl melt was tested to gauge the accuracy of the | 
| 1248 |  |  | pairwise summation methods in a disordered system of charges. The | 
| 1249 |  |  | results for the energy gap comparisons and the force vector magnitude | 
| 1250 |  |  | comparisons are shown in table \ref{tab:melt}.  The force vector | 
| 1251 |  |  | directionality results are displayed separately in table | 
| 1252 |  |  | \ref{tab:meltAng}. | 
| 1253 |  |  |  | 
| 1254 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1255 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1256 |  |  | \caption{REGRESSION RESULTS OF THE MOLTEN SODIUM CHLORIDE SYSTEM FOR | 
| 1257 |  |  | $\Delta E$ VALUES ({\it upper}) AND FORCE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it | 
| 1258 |  |  | lower})} | 
| 1259 |  |  |  | 
| 1260 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1261 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1262 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1263 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1264 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{2}{c}{9\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{12\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{15\AA}\\ | 
| 1265 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-4} | 
| 1266 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){5-6} | 
| 1267 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){7-8} | 
| 1268 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ \\ | 
| 1269 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1270 |  |  | PC  &     & -0.008 & 0.000 & -0.049 & 0.005 & -0.136 & 0.020 \\ | 
| 1271 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.928 & 0.996 & 0.931 & 0.998 & 0.950 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1272 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.977 & 0.998 & 0.998 & 1.000 & 0.997 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1273 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.960 & 1.000 & 0.813 & 0.996 & 0.811 & 0.954 \\ | 
| 1274 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.671 & 0.994 & 0.439 & 0.929 & 0.535 & 0.831 \\ | 
| 1275 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.996 & 1.000 & 0.995 & 1.000 & 0.997 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1276 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.021 & 1.000 & 1.024 & 1.000 & 1.007 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1277 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.966 & 1.000 & 0.813 & 0.996 & 0.811 & 0.954 \\ | 
| 1278 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.671 & 0.994 & 0.439 & 0.929 & 0.535 & 0.831 \\ | 
| 1279 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1280 |  |  | PC  &     & 1.103 & 0.000 & 0.989 & 0.000 & 0.802 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1281 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.973 & 0.981 & 0.975 & 0.988 & 0.979 & 0.992 \\ | 
| 1282 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.987 & 0.992 & 0.993 & 0.998 & 0.997 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1283 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.993 & 0.996 & 0.985 & 0.988 & 0.986 & 0.981 \\ | 
| 1284 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.956 & 0.956 & 0.940 & 0.912 & 0.948 & 0.929 \\ | 
| 1285 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.996 & 0.997 & 0.997 & 0.999 & 0.998 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1286 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.000 & 0.997 & 1.001 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1287 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.994 & 0.996 & 0.985 & 0.988 & 0.986 & 0.981 \\ | 
| 1288 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.956 & 0.956 & 0.940 & 0.912 & 0.948 & 0.929 \\ | 
| 1289 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1290 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1291 |  |  | \label{tab:melt} | 
| 1292 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1293 |  |  |  | 
| 1294 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1295 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1296 |  |  | \caption{VARIANCE RESULTS FROM GAUSSIAN FITS TO ANGULAR DISTRIBUTIONS | 
| 1297 |  |  | OF THE FORCE VECTORS IN THE MOLTEN SODIUM CHLORIDE SYSTEM} | 
| 1298 |  |  |  | 
| 1299 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1300 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1301 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1302 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1303 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Force $\sigma^2$} \\ | 
| 1304 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-5} | 
| 1305 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){6-8} | 
| 1306 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA \\ | 
| 1307 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1308 |  |  | PC  &     & 13.294 & 8.035 & 5.366 \\ | 
| 1309 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 13.316 & 8.037 & 5.385 \\ | 
| 1310 |  |  | & 0.1 & 5.705 & 1.391 & 0.360 \\ | 
| 1311 |  |  | & 0.2 & 2.415 & 7.534 & 13.927 \\ | 
| 1312 |  |  | & 0.3 & 23.769 & 67.306 & 57.252 \\ | 
| 1313 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 1.693 & 0.603 & 0.256 \\ | 
| 1314 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.687 & 0.653 & 0.272 \\ | 
| 1315 |  |  | & 0.2 & 2.598 & 7.523 & 13.930 \\ | 
| 1316 |  |  | & 0.3 & 23.734 & 67.305 & 57.252 \\ | 
| 1317 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1318 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1319 |  |  | \label{tab:meltAng} | 
| 1320 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1321 |  |  |  | 
| 1322 |  |  | The molten NaCl system shows more sensitivity to the electrostatic | 
| 1323 |  |  | damping than the water systems. The most noticeable point is that the | 
| 1324 |  |  | undamped {\sc sf} method does very well at replicating the {\sc spme} | 
| 1325 |  |  | configurational energy differences and forces. Light damping appears | 
| 1326 |  |  | to minimally improve the dynamics, but this comes with a deterioration | 
| 1327 |  |  | of the energy gap results. In contrast, this light damping improves | 
| 1328 |  |  | the {\sc sp} energy gaps and forces. Moderate and heavy electrostatic | 
| 1329 |  |  | damping reduce the agreement with {\sc spme} for both methods. From | 
| 1330 |  |  | these observations, the undamped {\sc sf} method is the best choice | 
| 1331 |  |  | for disordered systems of charges. | 
| 1332 |  |  |  | 
| 1333 |  |  | \subsection{NaCl Crystal Results}\label{sec:SaltCrystalResults} | 
| 1334 |  |  |  | 
| 1335 |  |  | Similar to the use of ice I$_\textrm{c}$ to investigate the role of | 
| 1336 |  |  | order in molecular systems on the effectiveness of the pairwise | 
| 1337 |  |  | methods, the 1000K NaCl crystal system was used to investigate the | 
| 1338 |  |  | accuracy of the pairwise summation methods in an ordered system of | 
| 1339 |  |  | charged particles. The results for the energy gap comparisons and the | 
| 1340 |  |  | force vector magnitude comparisons are shown in table \ref{tab:salt}. | 
| 1341 |  |  | The force vector directionality results are displayed separately in | 
| 1342 |  |  | table \ref{tab:saltAng}. | 
| 1343 |  |  |  | 
| 1344 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1345 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1346 |  |  | \caption{REGRESSION RESULTS OF THE CRYSTALLINE SODIUM CHLORIDE | 
| 1347 |  |  | SYSTEM FOR $\Delta E$ VALUES ({\it upper}) AND FORCE VECTOR MAGNITUDES | 
| 1348 |  |  | ({\it lower})} | 
| 1349 |  |  |  | 
| 1350 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1351 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1352 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1353 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1354 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{2}{c}{9\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{12\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{15\AA}\\ | 
| 1355 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-4} | 
| 1356 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){5-6} | 
| 1357 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){7-8} | 
| 1358 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ \\ | 
| 1359 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1360 |  |  | PC  &     & -20.241 & 0.228 & -20.248 & 0.229 & -20.239 & 0.228 \\ | 
| 1361 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 1.039 & 0.733 & 2.037 & 0.565 & 1.225 & 0.743 \\ | 
| 1362 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.049 & 0.865 & 1.424 & 0.784 & 1.029 & 0.980 \\ | 
| 1363 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.982 & 0.976 & 0.969 & 0.980 & 0.960 & 0.980 \\ | 
| 1364 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.873 & 0.944 & 0.872 & 0.945 & 0.872 & 0.945 \\ | 
| 1365 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 1.041 & 0.967 & 0.994 & 0.989 & 0.957 & 0.993 \\ | 
| 1366 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.050 & 0.968 & 0.996 & 0.991 & 0.972 & 0.995 \\ | 
| 1367 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.982 & 0.975 & 0.959 & 0.980 & 0.960 & 0.980 \\ | 
| 1368 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.873 & 0.944 & 0.872 & 0.945 & 0.872 & 0.944 \\ | 
| 1369 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1370 |  |  | PC  &     & 0.795 & 0.000 & 0.792 & 0.000 & 0.793 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1371 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.916 & 0.829 & 1.086 & 0.791 & 1.010 & 0.936 \\ | 
| 1372 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.958 & 0.917 & 1.049 & 0.943 & 1.001 & 0.995 \\ | 
| 1373 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.981 & 0.981 & 0.982 & 0.984 & 0.981 & 0.984 \\ | 
| 1374 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.950 & 0.952 & 0.950 & 0.953 & 0.950 & 0.953 \\ | 
| 1375 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 1.002 & 0.983 & 0.997 & 0.994 & 0.991 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 1376 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.003 & 0.984 & 0.996 & 0.995 & 0.993 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 1377 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.983 & 0.980 & 0.981 & 0.984 & 0.981 & 0.984 \\ | 
| 1378 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.950 & 0.952 & 0.950 & 0.953 & 0.950 & 0.953 \\ | 
| 1379 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1380 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1381 |  |  | \label{tab:salt} | 
| 1382 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1383 |  |  |  | 
| 1384 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1385 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1386 |  |  | \caption{VARIANCE RESULTS FROM GAUSSIAN FITS TO ANGULAR | 
| 1387 |  |  | DISTRIBUTIONS OF THE FORCE VECTORS IN THE CRYSTALLINE SODIUM CHLORIDE | 
| 1388 |  |  | SYSTEM} | 
| 1389 |  |  |  | 
| 1390 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1391 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1392 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1393 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1394 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Force $\sigma^2$} \\ | 
| 1395 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-5} | 
| 1396 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){6-8} | 
| 1397 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA \\ | 
| 1398 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1399 |  |  | PC  &     & 111.945 & 111.824 & 111.866 \\ | 
| 1400 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 112.414 & 152.215 & 38.087 \\ | 
| 1401 |  |  | & 0.1 & 52.361 & 42.574 & 2.819 \\ | 
| 1402 |  |  | & 0.2 & 10.847 & 9.709 & 9.686 \\ | 
| 1403 |  |  | & 0.3 & 31.128 & 31.104 & 31.029 \\ | 
| 1404 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 10.025 & 3.555 & 1.648 \\ | 
| 1405 |  |  | & 0.1 & 9.462 & 3.303 & 1.721 \\ | 
| 1406 |  |  | & 0.2 & 11.454 & 9.813 & 9.701 \\ | 
| 1407 |  |  | & 0.3 & 31.120 & 31.105 & 31.029 \\ | 
| 1408 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1409 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1410 |  |  | \label{tab:saltAng} | 
| 1411 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1412 |  |  |  | 
| 1413 |  |  | The crystalline NaCl system is the most challenging test case for the | 
| 1414 |  |  | pairwise summation methods, as evidenced by the results in tables | 
| 1415 |  |  | \ref{tab:salt} and \ref{tab:saltAng}. The undamped and weakly damped | 
| 1416 |  |  | {\sc sf} methods seem to be the best choices. These methods match well | 
| 1417 |  |  | with {\sc spme} across the energy gap, force magnitude, and force | 
| 1418 |  |  | directionality tests.  The {\sc sp} method struggles in all cases, | 
| 1419 |  |  | with the exception of good dynamics reproduction when using weak | 
| 1420 |  |  | electrostatic damping with a large cutoff radius. | 
| 1421 |  |  |  | 
| 1422 |  |  | The moderate electrostatic damping case is not as good as we would | 
| 1423 |  |  | expect given the long-time dynamics results observed for this system | 
| 1424 |  |  | (see section \ref{sec:LongTimeDynamics}). Since the data tabulated in | 
| 1425 |  |  | tables \ref{tab:salt} and \ref{tab:saltAng} are a test of | 
| 1426 |  |  | instantaneous dynamics, this indicates that good long-time dynamics | 
| 1427 |  |  | comes in part at the expense of short-time dynamics. | 
| 1428 |  |  |  | 
| 1429 |  |  | \subsection{0.11M NaCl Solution Results} | 
| 1430 |  |  |  | 
| 1431 |  |  | In an effort to bridge the charged atomic and neutral molecular | 
| 1432 |  |  | systems, Na$^+$ and Cl$^-$ ion charge defects were incorporated into | 
| 1433 |  |  | the liquid water system. This low ionic strength system consists of 4 | 
| 1434 |  |  | ions in the 1000 SPC/E water solvent ($\approx$0.11 M). The results | 
| 1435 |  |  | for the energy gap comparisons and the force and torque vector | 
| 1436 |  |  | magnitude comparisons are shown in table \ref{tab:solnWeak}.  The | 
| 1437 |  |  | force and torque vector directionality results are displayed | 
| 1438 |  |  | separately in table \ref{tab:solnWeakAng}, where the effect of | 
| 1439 |  |  | group-based cutoffs and switching functions on the {\sc sp} and {\sc | 
| 1440 |  |  | sf} potentials are investigated. | 
| 1441 |  |  |  | 
| 1442 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1443 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1444 |  |  | \caption{REGRESSION RESULTS OF THE WEAK SODIUM CHLORIDE SOLUTION | 
| 1445 |  |  | SYSTEM FOR $\Delta E$ VALUES ({\it upper}), FORCE VECTOR MAGNITUDES | 
| 1446 |  |  | ({\it middle}) AND TORQUE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it lower})} | 
| 1447 |  |  |  | 
| 1448 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1449 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1450 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1451 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1452 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{2}{c}{9\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{12\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{15\AA}\\ | 
| 1453 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-4} | 
| 1454 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){5-6} | 
| 1455 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){7-8} | 
| 1456 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ \\ | 
| 1457 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1458 |  |  | PC  &     & 0.247 & 0.000 & -1.103 & 0.001 & 5.480 & 0.015 \\ | 
| 1459 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.935 & 0.388 & 0.984 & 0.541 & 1.010 & 0.685 \\ | 
| 1460 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.951 & 0.603 & 0.993 & 0.875 & 1.001 & 0.979 \\ | 
| 1461 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.969 & 0.968 & 0.996 & 0.997 & 0.994 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 1462 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.955 & 0.966 & 0.984 & 0.992 & 0.978 & 0.991 \\ | 
| 1463 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.963 & 0.971 & 0.989 & 0.996 & 0.991 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1464 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.970 & 0.971 & 0.995 & 0.997 & 0.997 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1465 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.972 & 0.975 & 0.996 & 0.997 & 0.994 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 1466 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.955 & 0.966 & 0.984 & 0.992 & 0.978 & 0.991 \\ | 
| 1467 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.964 & 0.731 & 0.984 & 0.704 & 1.005 & 0.770 \\ | 
| 1468 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.968 & 0.605 & 0.974 & 0.541 & 1.014 & 0.614 \\ | 
| 1469 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1470 |  |  | PC  &     & 1.354 & 0.000 & -1.190 & 0.000 & -0.314 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1471 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.720 & 0.338 & 0.808 & 0.523 & 0.860 & 0.643 \\ | 
| 1472 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.839 & 0.583 & 0.955 & 0.882 & 0.992 & 0.978 \\ | 
| 1473 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.995 & 0.987 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1474 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.995 & 0.996 & 0.996 & 0.998 & 0.996 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1475 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.998 & 0.994 & 1.000 & 0.998 & 1.000 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1476 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.997 & 0.994 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1477 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.999 & 0.998 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1478 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.995 & 0.996 & 0.996 & 0.998 & 0.996 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1479 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.995 & 0.990 & 0.998 & 0.997 & 0.998 & 0.996 \\ | 
| 1480 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.998 & 0.993 & 0.999 & 0.998 & 0.999 & 0.996 \\ | 
| 1481 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1482 |  |  | PC  &     & 2.437 & 0.000 & -1.872 & 0.000 & 2.138 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1483 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.838 & 0.525 & 0.901 & 0.686 & 0.932 & 0.779 \\ | 
| 1484 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.914 & 0.733 & 0.979 & 0.932 & 0.995 & 0.987 \\ | 
| 1485 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.977 & 0.969 & 0.988 & 0.990 & 0.989 & 0.990 \\ | 
| 1486 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.952 & 0.950 & 0.964 & 0.971 & 0.965 & 0.970 \\ | 
| 1487 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.969 & 0.977 & 0.987 & 0.996 & 0.993 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1488 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.975 & 0.978 & 0.993 & 0.996 & 0.997 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1489 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.976 & 0.973 & 0.988 & 0.990 & 0.989 & 0.990 \\ | 
| 1490 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.952 & 0.950 & 0.964 & 0.971 & 0.965 & 0.970 \\ | 
| 1491 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.980 & 0.959 & 0.990 & 0.983 & 0.992 & 0.989 \\ | 
| 1492 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.984 & 0.975 & 0.996 & 0.995 & 0.998 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1493 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1494 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1495 |  |  | \label{tab:solnWeak} | 
| 1496 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1497 |  |  |  | 
| 1498 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1499 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1500 |  |  | \caption{VARIANCE RESULTS FROM GAUSSIAN FITS TO ANGULAR | 
| 1501 |  |  | DISTRIBUTIONS OF THE FORCE AND TORQUE VECTORS IN THE WEAK SODIUM | 
| 1502 |  |  | CHLORIDE SOLUTION SYSTEM} | 
| 1503 |  |  |  | 
| 1504 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1505 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1506 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1507 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1508 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Force $\sigma^2$} & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Torque $\sigma^2$} \\ | 
| 1509 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-5} | 
| 1510 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){6-8} | 
| 1511 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA \\ | 
| 1512 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1513 |  |  | PC  &     & 882.863 & 510.435 & 344.201 & 277.691 & 154.231 & 100.131 \\ | 
| 1514 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 732.569 & 405.704 & 257.756 & 261.445 & 142.245 & 91.497 \\ | 
| 1515 |  |  | & 0.1 & 329.031 & 70.746 & 12.014 & 118.496 & 25.218 & 4.711 \\ | 
| 1516 |  |  | & 0.2 & 6.772 & 0.153 & 0.118 & 9.780 & 2.101 & 2.102 \\ | 
| 1517 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.951 & 0.774 & 0.784 & 12.108 & 7.673 & 7.851 \\ | 
| 1518 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 2.555 & 0.762 & 0.313 & 6.590 & 1.328 & 0.558 \\ | 
| 1519 |  |  | & 0.1 & 2.561 & 0.560 & 0.123 & 6.464 & 1.162 & 0.457 \\ | 
| 1520 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.501 & 0.118 & 0.118 & 5.698 & 2.074 & 2.099 \\ | 
| 1521 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.943 & 0.774 & 0.784 & 12.118 & 7.674 & 7.851 \\ | 
| 1522 |  |  | GSC &     & 2.915 & 0.643 & 0.261 & 9.576 & 3.133 & 1.812 \\ | 
| 1523 |  |  | RF  &     & 2.415 & 0.452 & 0.130 & 6.915 & 1.423 & 0.507 \\ | 
| 1524 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1525 |  |  | GSSP  & 0.0 & 2.915 & 0.643 & 0.261 & 9.576 & 3.133 & 1.812 \\ | 
| 1526 |  |  | & 0.1 & 2.251 & 0.324 & 0.064 & 7.628 & 1.639 & 0.497 \\ | 
| 1527 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.590 & 0.118 & 0.116 & 6.080 & 2.096 & 2.103 \\ | 
| 1528 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.953 & 0.759 & 0.780 & 12.347 & 7.683 & 7.849 \\ | 
| 1529 |  |  | GSSF  & 0.0 & 1.541 & 0.301 & 0.096 & 6.407 & 1.316 & 0.496 \\ | 
| 1530 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.541 & 0.237 & 0.050 & 6.356 & 1.202 & 0.457 \\ | 
| 1531 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.568 & 0.118 & 0.116 & 6.166 & 2.105 & 2.105 \\ | 
| 1532 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.954 & 0.759 & 0.780 & 12.337 & 7.684 & 7.849 \\ | 
| 1533 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1534 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1535 |  |  | \label{tab:solnWeakAng} | 
| 1536 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1537 |  |  |  | 
| 1538 |  |  | Because this system is a perturbation of the pure liquid water system, | 
| 1539 |  |  | comparisons are best drawn between these two sets. The {\sc sp} and | 
| 1540 |  |  | {\sc sf} methods are not significantly affected by the inclusion of a | 
| 1541 |  |  | few ions. The aspect of cutoff sphere neutralization aids in the | 
| 1542 |  |  | smooth incorporation of these ions; thus, all of the observations | 
| 1543 |  |  | regarding these methods carry over from section | 
| 1544 |  |  | \ref{sec:WaterResults}. The differences between these systems are more | 
| 1545 |  |  | visible for the {\sc rf} method. Though good force agreement is still | 
| 1546 |  |  | maintained, the energy gaps show a significant increase in the scatter | 
| 1547 |  |  | of the data. | 
| 1548 |  |  |  | 
| 1549 |  |  | \subsection{1.1M NaCl Solution Results} | 
| 1550 |  |  |  | 
| 1551 |  |  | The bridging of the charged atomic and neutral molecular systems was | 
| 1552 |  |  | further developed by considering a high ionic strength system | 
| 1553 |  |  | consisting of 40 ions in the 1000 SPC/E water solvent ($\approx$1.1 | 
| 1554 |  |  | M). The results for the energy gap comparisons and the force and | 
| 1555 |  |  | torque vector magnitude comparisons are shown in table | 
| 1556 |  |  | \ref{tab:solnStr}.  The force and torque vector directionality | 
| 1557 |  |  | results are displayed separately in table \ref{tab:solnStrAng}, where | 
| 1558 |  |  | the effect of group-based cutoffs and switching functions on the {\sc | 
| 1559 |  |  | sp} and {\sc sf} potentials are investigated. | 
| 1560 |  |  |  | 
| 1561 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1562 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1563 |  |  | \caption{REGRESSION RESULTS OF THE STRONG SODIUM CHLORIDE SOLUTION | 
| 1564 |  |  | SYSTEM FOR $\Delta E$ VALUES ({\it upper}), FORCE VECTOR MAGNITUDES | 
| 1565 |  |  | ({\it middle}) AND TORQUE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it lower})} | 
| 1566 |  |  |  | 
| 1567 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1568 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1569 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1570 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1571 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{2}{c}{9\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{12\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{15\AA}\\ | 
| 1572 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-4} | 
| 1573 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){5-6} | 
| 1574 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){7-8} | 
| 1575 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ \\ | 
| 1576 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1577 |  |  | PC  &     & -0.081 & 0.000 & 0.945 & 0.001 & 0.073 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1578 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.978 & 0.469 & 0.996 & 0.672 & 0.975 & 0.668 \\ | 
| 1579 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.944 & 0.645 & 0.997 & 0.886 & 0.991 & 0.978 \\ | 
| 1580 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.873 & 0.896 & 0.985 & 0.993 & 0.980 & 0.993 \\ | 
| 1581 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.831 & 0.860 & 0.960 & 0.979 & 0.955 & 0.977 \\ | 
| 1582 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.858 & 0.905 & 0.985 & 0.970 & 0.990 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1583 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.865 & 0.907 & 0.992 & 0.974 & 0.994 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1584 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.862 & 0.894 & 0.985 & 0.993 & 0.980 & 0.993 \\ | 
| 1585 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.831 & 0.859 & 0.960 & 0.979 & 0.955 & 0.977 \\ | 
| 1586 |  |  | GSC &     & 1.985 & 0.152 & 0.760 & 0.031 & 1.106 & 0.062 \\ | 
| 1587 |  |  | RF  &     & 2.414 & 0.116 & 0.813 & 0.017 & 1.434 & 0.047 \\ | 
| 1588 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1589 |  |  | PC  &     & -7.028 & 0.000 & -9.364 & 0.000 & 0.925 & 0.865 \\ | 
| 1590 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.701 & 0.319 & 0.909 & 0.773 & 0.861 & 0.665 \\ | 
| 1591 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.824 & 0.565 & 0.970 & 0.930 & 0.990 & 0.979 \\ | 
| 1592 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.988 & 0.981 & 0.995 & 0.998 & 0.991 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1593 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.983 & 0.985 & 0.985 & 0.991 & 0.978 & 0.990 \\ | 
| 1594 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.993 & 0.988 & 0.992 & 0.984 & 0.998 & 0.999 \\ | 
| 1595 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.993 & 0.989 & 0.993 & 0.986 & 0.998 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1596 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.993 & 0.992 & 0.995 & 0.998 & 0.991 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1597 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.983 & 0.985 & 0.985 & 0.991 & 0.978 & 0.990 \\ | 
| 1598 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.964 & 0.897 & 0.970 & 0.917 & 0.925 & 0.865 \\ | 
| 1599 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.994 & 0.864 & 0.988 & 0.865 & 0.980 & 0.784 \\ | 
| 1600 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1601 |  |  | PC  &     & -2.212 & 0.000 & -0.588 & 0.000 & 0.953 & 0.925 \\ | 
| 1602 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.800 & 0.479 & 0.930 & 0.804 & 0.924 & 0.759 \\ | 
| 1603 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.883 & 0.694 & 0.976 & 0.942 & 0.993 & 0.986 \\ | 
| 1604 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.952 & 0.943 & 0.980 & 0.984 & 0.980 & 0.983 \\ | 
| 1605 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.914 & 0.909 & 0.943 & 0.948 & 0.944 & 0.946 \\ | 
| 1606 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.945 & 0.953 & 0.980 & 0.984 & 0.991 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1607 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.951 & 0.954 & 0.987 & 0.986 & 0.995 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1608 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.951 & 0.946 & 0.980 & 0.984 & 0.980 & 0.983 \\ | 
| 1609 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.914 & 0.908 & 0.943 & 0.948 & 0.944 & 0.946 \\ | 
| 1610 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.882 & 0.818 & 0.939 & 0.902 & 0.953 & 0.925 \\ | 
| 1611 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.949 & 0.939 & 0.988 & 0.988 & 0.992 & 0.993 \\ | 
| 1612 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1613 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1614 |  |  | \label{tab:solnStr} | 
| 1615 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1616 |  |  |  | 
| 1617 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1618 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1619 |  |  | \caption{VARIANCE RESULTS FROM GAUSSIAN FITS TO ANGULAR DISTRIBUTIONS | 
| 1620 |  |  | OF THE FORCE AND TORQUE VECTORS IN THE STRONG SODIUM CHLORIDE SOLUTION | 
| 1621 |  |  | SYSTEM} | 
| 1622 |  |  |  | 
| 1623 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1624 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1625 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1626 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1627 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Force $\sigma^2$} & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Torque $\sigma^2$} \\ | 
| 1628 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-5} | 
| 1629 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){6-8} | 
| 1630 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA \\ | 
| 1631 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1632 |  |  | PC  &     & 957.784 & 513.373 & 2.260 & 340.043 & 179.443 & 13.079 \\ | 
| 1633 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 786.244 & 139.985 & 259.289 & 311.519 & 90.280 & 105.187 \\ | 
| 1634 |  |  | & 0.1 & 354.697 & 38.614 & 12.274 & 144.531 & 23.787 & 5.401 \\ | 
| 1635 |  |  | & 0.2 & 7.674 & 0.363 & 0.215 & 16.655 & 3.601 & 3.634 \\ | 
| 1636 |  |  | & 0.3 & 1.745 & 1.456 & 1.449 & 23.669 & 14.376 & 14.240 \\ | 
| 1637 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 3.282 & 8.567 & 0.369 & 11.904 & 6.589 & 0.717 \\ | 
| 1638 |  |  | & 0.1 & 3.263 & 7.479 & 0.142 & 11.634 & 5.750 & 0.591 \\ | 
| 1639 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.686 & 0.324 & 0.215 & 10.809 & 3.580 & 3.635 \\ | 
| 1640 |  |  | & 0.3 & 1.749 & 1.456 & 1.449 & 23.635 & 14.375 & 14.240 \\ | 
| 1641 |  |  | GSC &     & 6.181 & 2.904 & 2.263 & 44.349 & 19.442 & 12.873 \\ | 
| 1642 |  |  | RF  &     & 3.891 & 0.847 & 0.323 & 18.628 & 3.995 & 2.072 \\ | 
| 1643 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1644 |  |  | GSSP  & 0.0 & 6.197 & 2.929 & 2.290 & 44.441 & 19.442 & 12.873 \\ | 
| 1645 |  |  | & 0.1 & 4.688 & 1.064 & 0.260 & 31.208 & 6.967 & 2.303 \\ | 
| 1646 |  |  | & 0.2 & 1.021 & 0.218 & 0.213 & 14.425 & 3.629 & 3.649 \\ | 
| 1647 |  |  | & 0.3 & 1.752 & 1.454 & 1.451 & 23.540 & 14.390 & 14.245 \\ | 
| 1648 |  |  | GSSF  & 0.0 & 2.494 & 0.546 & 0.217 & 16.391 & 3.230 & 1.613 \\ | 
| 1649 |  |  | & 0.1 & 2.448 & 0.429 & 0.106 & 16.390 & 2.827 & 1.159 \\ | 
| 1650 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.899 & 0.214 & 0.213 & 13.542 & 3.583 & 3.645 \\ | 
| 1651 |  |  | & 0.3 & 1.752 & 1.454 & 1.451 & 23.587 & 14.390 & 14.245 \\ | 
| 1652 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1653 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1654 |  |  | \label{tab:solnStrAng} | 
| 1655 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1656 |  |  |  | 
| 1657 |  |  | The {\sc rf} method struggles with the jump in ionic strength. The | 
| 1658 |  |  | configuration energy differences degrade to unusable levels while the | 
| 1659 |  |  | forces and torques show a more modest reduction in the agreement with | 
| 1660 |  |  | {\sc spme}. The {\sc rf} method was designed for homogeneous systems, | 
| 1661 |  |  | and this attribute is apparent in these results. | 
| 1662 |  |  |  | 
| 1663 |  |  | The {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} methods require larger cutoffs to maintain | 
| 1664 |  |  | their agreement with {\sc spme}. With these results, we still | 
| 1665 |  |  | recommend undamped to moderate damping for the {\sc sf} method and | 
| 1666 |  |  | moderate damping for the {\sc sp} method, both with cutoffs greater | 
| 1667 |  |  | than 12\AA. | 
| 1668 |  |  |  | 
| 1669 |  |  | \subsection{6\AA\ Argon Sphere in SPC/E Water Results} | 
| 1670 |  |  |  | 
| 1671 |  |  | The final model system studied was a 6\AA\ sphere of Argon solvated | 
| 1672 |  |  | by SPC/E water. This serves as a test case of a specifically sized | 
| 1673 |  |  | electrostatic defect in a disordered molecular system. The results for | 
| 1674 |  |  | the energy gap comparisons and the force and torque vector magnitude | 
| 1675 |  |  | comparisons are shown in table \ref{tab:argon}.  The force and torque | 
| 1676 |  |  | vector directionality results are displayed separately in table | 
| 1677 |  |  | \ref{tab:argonAng}, where the effect of group-based cutoffs and | 
| 1678 |  |  | switching functions on the {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} potentials are | 
| 1679 |  |  | investigated. | 
| 1680 |  |  |  | 
| 1681 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1682 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1683 |  |  | \caption{REGRESSION RESULTS OF THE 6\AA\ ARGON SPHERE IN LIQUID | 
| 1684 |  |  | WATER SYSTEM FOR $\Delta E$ VALUES ({\it upper}), FORCE VECTOR | 
| 1685 |  |  | MAGNITUDES ({\it middle}) AND TORQUE VECTOR MAGNITUDES ({\it lower})} | 
| 1686 |  |  |  | 
| 1687 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1688 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1689 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1690 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1691 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{2}{c}{9\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{12\AA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{15\AA}\\ | 
| 1692 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-4} | 
| 1693 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){5-6} | 
| 1694 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){7-8} | 
| 1695 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ & slope & $R^2$ \\ | 
| 1696 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1697 |  |  | PC  &     & 2.320 & 0.008 & -0.650 & 0.001 & 3.848 & 0.029 \\ | 
| 1698 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 1.053 & 0.711 & 0.977 & 0.820 & 0.974 & 0.882 \\ | 
| 1699 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.032 & 0.846 & 0.989 & 0.965 & 0.992 & 0.994 \\ | 
| 1700 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.993 & 0.995 & 0.982 & 0.998 & 0.986 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1701 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.968 & 0.995 & 0.954 & 0.992 & 0.961 & 0.994 \\ | 
| 1702 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.982 & 0.996 & 0.992 & 0.999 & 0.993 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1703 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.987 & 0.996 & 0.996 & 0.999 & 0.997 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1704 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.989 & 0.998 & 0.984 & 0.998 & 0.989 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1705 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.971 & 0.995 & 0.957 & 0.992 & 0.965 & 0.994 \\ | 
| 1706 |  |  | GSC &     & 1.002 & 0.983 & 0.992 & 0.973 & 0.996 & 0.971 \\ | 
| 1707 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.998 & 0.995 & 0.999 & 0.998 & 0.998 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1708 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1709 |  |  | PC  &     & -36.559 & 0.002 & -44.917 & 0.004 & -52.945 & 0.006 \\ | 
| 1710 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.890 & 0.786 & 0.927 & 0.867 & 0.949 & 0.909 \\ | 
| 1711 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.942 & 0.895 & 0.984 & 0.974 & 0.997 & 0.995 \\ | 
| 1712 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.999 & 0.997 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1713 |  |  | & 0.3 & 1.001 & 0.999 & 1.001 & 1.000 & 1.001 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1714 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1715 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.000 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1716 |  |  | & 0.2 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1717 |  |  | & 0.3 & 1.001 & 0.999 & 1.001 & 1.000 & 1.001 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1718 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.999 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1719 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.999 & 0.999 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 & 1.000 \\ | 
| 1720 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1721 |  |  | PC  &     & 1.984 & 0.000 & 0.012 & 0.000 & 1.357 & 0.000 \\ | 
| 1722 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 0.850 & 0.552 & 0.907 & 0.703 & 0.938 & 0.793 \\ | 
| 1723 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.924 & 0.755 & 0.980 & 0.936 & 0.995 & 0.988 \\ | 
| 1724 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.985 & 0.983 & 0.986 & 0.988 & 0.987 & 0.988 \\ | 
| 1725 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.961 & 0.966 & 0.959 & 0.964 & 0.960 & 0.966 \\ | 
| 1726 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 0.977 & 0.989 & 0.987 & 0.995 & 0.992 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1727 |  |  | & 0.1 & 0.982 & 0.989 & 0.992 & 0.996 & 0.997 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1728 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.984 & 0.987 & 0.986 & 0.987 & 0.987 & 0.988 \\ | 
| 1729 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.961 & 0.966 & 0.959 & 0.964 & 0.960 & 0.966 \\ | 
| 1730 |  |  | GSC &     & 0.995 & 0.981 & 0.999 & 0.990 & 1.000 & 0.993 \\ | 
| 1731 |  |  | RF  &     & 0.993 & 0.988 & 0.997 & 0.995 & 0.999 & 0.998 \\ | 
| 1732 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1733 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1734 |  |  | \label{tab:argon} | 
| 1735 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1736 |  |  |  | 
| 1737 |  |  | \begin{table}[htbp] | 
| 1738 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1739 |  |  | \caption{VARIANCE RESULTS FROM GAUSSIAN FITS TO ANGULAR | 
| 1740 |  |  | DISTRIBUTIONS OF THE FORCE AND TORQUE VECTORS IN THE 6\AA\ SPHERE OF | 
| 1741 |  |  | ARGON IN LIQUID WATER SYSTEM} | 
| 1742 |  |  |  | 
| 1743 |  |  | \footnotesize | 
| 1744 |  |  | \begin{tabular}{@{} ccrrrrrr @{}} | 
| 1745 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1746 |  |  | \toprule | 
| 1747 |  |  | & & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Force $\sigma^2$} & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Torque $\sigma^2$} \\ | 
| 1748 |  |  | \cmidrule(lr){3-5} | 
| 1749 |  |  | \cmidrule(l){6-8} | 
| 1750 |  |  | Method & $\alpha$ & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA & 9\AA & 12\AA & 15\AA \\ | 
| 1751 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1752 |  |  | PC  &     & 568.025 & 265.993 & 195.099 & 246.626 & 138.600 & 91.654 \\ | 
| 1753 |  |  | SP  & 0.0 & 504.578 & 251.694 & 179.932 & 231.568 & 131.444 & 85.119 \\ | 
| 1754 |  |  | & 0.1 & 224.886 & 49.746 & 9.346 & 104.482 & 23.683 & 4.480 \\ | 
| 1755 |  |  | & 0.2 & 4.889 & 0.197 & 0.155 & 6.029 & 2.507 & 2.269 \\ | 
| 1756 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.817 & 0.833 & 0.812 & 8.286 & 8.436 & 8.135 \\ | 
| 1757 |  |  | SF  & 0.0 & 1.924 & 0.675 & 0.304 & 3.658 & 1.448 & 0.600 \\ | 
| 1758 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.937 & 0.515 & 0.143 & 3.565 & 1.308 & 0.546 \\ | 
| 1759 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.407 & 0.166 & 0.156 & 3.086 & 2.501 & 2.274 \\ | 
| 1760 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.815 & 0.833 & 0.812 & 8.330 & 8.437 & 8.135 \\ | 
| 1761 |  |  | GSC &     & 2.098 & 0.584 & 0.284 & 5.391 & 2.414 & 1.501 \\ | 
| 1762 |  |  | RF  &     & 1.822 & 0.408 & 0.142 & 3.799 & 1.362 & 0.550 \\ | 
| 1763 |  |  | \midrule | 
| 1764 |  |  | GSSP  & 0.0 & 2.098 & 0.584 & 0.284 & 5.391 & 2.414 & 1.501 \\ | 
| 1765 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.652 & 0.309 & 0.087 & 4.197 & 1.401 & 0.590 \\ | 
| 1766 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.465 & 0.165 & 0.153 & 3.323 & 2.529 & 2.273 \\ | 
| 1767 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.813 & 0.825 & 0.816 & 8.316 & 8.447 & 8.132 \\ | 
| 1768 |  |  | GSSF  & 0.0 & 1.173 & 0.292 & 0.113 & 3.452 & 1.347 & 0.583 \\ | 
| 1769 |  |  | & 0.1 & 1.166 & 0.240 & 0.076 & 3.381 & 1.281 & 0.575 \\ | 
| 1770 |  |  | & 0.2 & 0.459 & 0.165 & 0.153 & 3.430 & 2.542 & 2.273 \\ | 
| 1771 |  |  | & 0.3 & 0.814 & 0.825 & 0.816 & 8.325 & 8.447 & 8.132 \\ | 
| 1772 |  |  | \bottomrule | 
| 1773 |  |  | \end{tabular} | 
| 1774 |  |  | \label{tab:argonAng} | 
| 1775 |  |  | \end{table} | 
| 1776 |  |  |  | 
| 1777 |  |  | This system does not appear to show any significant deviations from | 
| 1778 |  |  | the previously observed results. The {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} methods | 
| 1779 |  |  | have agreements similar to those observed in section | 
| 1780 |  |  | \ref{sec:WaterResults}. The only significant difference is the | 
| 1781 |  |  | improvement in the configuration energy differences for the {\sc rf} | 
| 1782 |  |  | method. This is surprising in that we are introducing an inhomogeneity | 
| 1783 |  |  | to the system; however, this inhomogeneity is charge-neutral and does | 
| 1784 |  |  | not result in charged cutoff spheres. The charge-neutrality of the | 
| 1785 |  |  | cutoff spheres, which the {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} methods explicitly | 
| 1786 |  |  | enforce, seems to play a greater role in the stability of the {\sc rf} | 
| 1787 |  |  | method than the required homogeneity of the environment. | 
| 1788 |  |  |  | 
| 1789 |  |  |  | 
| 1790 |  |  | \section{Short-Time Dynamics: Velocity Autocorrelation Functions of NaCl Crystals}\label{sec:ShortTimeDynamics} | 
| 1791 |  |  |  | 
| 1792 |  |  | Zahn {\it et al.} investigated the structure and dynamics of water | 
| 1793 |  |  | using equations (\ref{eq:ZahnPot}) and | 
| 1794 |  |  | (\ref{eq:WolfForces}).\cite{Zahn02,Kast03} Their results indicated | 
| 1795 |  |  | that a method similar (but not identical with) the damped {\sc sf} | 
| 1796 |  |  | method resulted in properties very similar to those obtained when | 
| 1797 |  |  | using the Ewald summation.  The properties they studied (pair | 
| 1798 |  |  | distribution functions, diffusion constants, and velocity and | 
| 1799 |  |  | orientational correlation functions) may not be particularly sensitive | 
| 1800 |  |  | to the long-range and collective behavior that governs the | 
| 1801 |  |  | low-frequency behavior in crystalline systems.  Additionally, the | 
| 1802 |  |  | ionic crystals are the worst case scenario for the pairwise methods | 
| 1803 |  |  | because they lack the reciprocal space contribution contained in the | 
| 1804 |  |  | Ewald summation. | 
| 1805 |  |  |  | 
| 1806 |  |  | We are using two separate measures to probe the effects of these | 
| 1807 |  |  | alternative electrostatic methods on the dynamics in crystalline | 
| 1808 |  |  | materials.  For short- and intermediate-time dynamics, we are | 
| 1809 |  |  | computing the velocity autocorrelation function, and for long-time | 
| 1810 |  |  | and large length-scale collective motions, we are looking at the | 
| 1811 |  |  | low-frequency portion of the power spectrum. | 
| 1812 |  |  |  | 
| 1813 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 1814 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1815 |  |  | \includegraphics[width = \linewidth]{./figures/vCorrPlot.pdf} | 
| 1816 |  |  | \caption{Velocity autocorrelation functions of NaCl crystals at | 
| 1817 |  |  | 1000K using {\sc spme}, {\sc sf} ($\alpha$ = 0.0, 0.1, \& | 
| 1818 |  |  | 0.2\AA$^{-1}$), and {\sc sp} ($\alpha$ = 0.2\AA$^{-1}$). The inset is | 
| 1819 |  |  | a magnification of the area around the first minimum.  The times to | 
| 1820 |  |  | first collision are nearly identical, but differences can be seen in | 
| 1821 |  |  | the peaks and troughs, where the undamped and weakly damped methods | 
| 1822 |  |  | are stiffer than the moderately damped and {\sc spme} methods.} | 
| 1823 |  |  | \label{fig:vCorrPlot} | 
| 1824 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 1825 |  |  |  | 
| 1826 |  |  | The short-time decay of the velocity autocorrelation function through | 
| 1827 |  |  | the first collision are nearly identical in figure | 
| 1828 |  |  | \ref{fig:vCorrPlot}, but the peaks and troughs of the functions show | 
| 1829 |  |  | how the methods differ.  The undamped {\sc sf} method has deeper | 
| 1830 |  |  | troughs (see inset in Fig. \ref{fig:vCorrPlot}) and higher peaks than | 
| 1831 |  |  | any of the other methods.  As the damping parameter ($\alpha$) is | 
| 1832 |  |  | increased, these peaks are smoothed out, and the {\sc sf} method | 
| 1833 |  |  | approaches the {\sc spme} results.  With $\alpha$ values of 0.2\AA$^{-1}$, | 
| 1834 |  |  | the {\sc sf} and {\sc sp} functions are nearly identical and track the | 
| 1835 |  |  | {\sc spme} features quite well.  This is not surprising because the {\sc sf} | 
| 1836 |  |  | and {\sc sp} potentials become nearly identical with increased | 
| 1837 |  |  | damping.  However, this appears to indicate that once damping is | 
| 1838 |  |  | utilized, the details of the form of the potential (and forces) | 
| 1839 |  |  | constructed out of the damped electrostatic interaction are less | 
| 1840 |  |  | important. | 
| 1841 |  |  |  | 
| 1842 |  |  | \section{Collective Motion: Power Spectra of NaCl Crystals}\label{sec:LongTimeDynamics} | 
| 1843 |  |  |  | 
| 1844 |  |  | To evaluate how the differences between the methods affect the | 
| 1845 |  |  | collective long-time motion, we computed power spectra from long-time | 
| 1846 |  |  | traces of the velocity autocorrelation function. The power spectra for | 
| 1847 |  |  | the best-performing alternative methods are shown in | 
| 1848 |  |  | fig. \ref{fig:methodPS}.  Apodization of the correlation functions via | 
| 1849 |  |  | a cubic switching function between 40 and 50ps was used to reduce the | 
| 1850 |  |  | ringing resulting from data truncation.  This procedure had no | 
| 1851 |  |  | noticeable effect on peak location or magnitude. | 
| 1852 |  |  |  | 
| 1853 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 1854 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1855 |  |  | \includegraphics[width = \linewidth]{./figures/spectraSquare.pdf} | 
| 1856 |  |  | \caption{Power spectra obtained from the velocity auto-correlation | 
| 1857 |  |  | functions of NaCl crystals at 1000K while using {\sc spme}, {\sc sf} | 
| 1858 |  |  | ($\alpha$ = 0, 0.1, \& 0.2\AA$^{-1}$), and {\sc sp} ($\alpha$ = | 
| 1859 |  |  | 0.2\AA$^{-1}$).  The inset shows the frequency region below 100 | 
| 1860 |  |  | cm$^{-1}$ to highlight where the spectra differ.} | 
| 1861 |  |  | \label{fig:methodPS} | 
| 1862 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 1863 |  |  |  | 
| 1864 |  |  | While the high frequency regions of the power spectra for the | 
| 1865 |  |  | alternative methods are quantitatively identical with Ewald spectrum, | 
| 1866 |  |  | the low frequency region shows how the summation methods differ. | 
| 1867 |  |  | Considering the low-frequency inset (expanded in the upper frame of | 
| 1868 |  |  | figure \ref{fig:dampInc}), at frequencies below 100 cm$^{-1}$, the | 
| 1869 |  |  | correlated motions are blue-shifted when using undamped or weakly | 
| 1870 |  |  | damped {\sc sf}.  When using moderate damping ($\alpha = 0.2$ | 
| 1871 |  |  | \AA$^{-1}$) both the {\sc sf} and {\sc sp} methods give nearly identical | 
| 1872 |  |  | correlated motion to the Ewald method (which has a convergence | 
| 1873 |  |  | parameter of 0.3119\AA$^{-1}$).  This weakening of the electrostatic | 
| 1874 |  |  | interaction with increased damping explains why the long-ranged | 
| 1875 |  |  | correlated motions are at lower frequencies for the moderately damped | 
| 1876 |  |  | methods than for undamped or weakly damped methods. | 
| 1877 |  |  |  | 
| 1878 |  |  | To isolate the role of the damping constant, we have computed the | 
| 1879 |  |  | spectra for a single method ({\sc sf}) with a range of damping | 
| 1880 |  |  | constants and compared this with the {\sc spme} spectrum. | 
| 1881 |  |  | Fig. \ref{fig:dampInc} shows more clearly that increasing the | 
| 1882 |  |  | electrostatic damping red-shifts the lowest frequency phonon modes. | 
| 1883 |  |  | However, even without any electrostatic damping, the {\sc sf} method | 
| 1884 |  |  | has at most a 10 cm$^{-1}$ error in the lowest frequency phonon mode. | 
| 1885 |  |  | Without the {\sc sf} modifications, an undamped (pure cutoff) method | 
| 1886 |  |  | would predict the lowest frequency peak near 325 cm$^{-1}$.  {\it | 
| 1887 |  |  | Most} of the collective behavior in the crystal is accurately captured | 
| 1888 |  |  | using the {\sc sf} method.  Quantitative agreement with Ewald can be | 
| 1889 |  |  | obtained using moderate damping in addition to the shifting at the | 
| 1890 |  |  | cutoff distance. | 
| 1891 |  |  |  | 
| 1892 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 1893 |  |  | \centering | 
| 1894 |  |  | \includegraphics[width = \linewidth]{./figures/increasedDamping.pdf} | 
| 1895 |  |  | \caption{Effect of damping on the two lowest-frequency phonon modes in | 
| 1896 |  |  | the NaCl crystal at 1000K.  The undamped shifted force ({\sc sf}) | 
| 1897 |  |  | method is off by less than 10 cm$^{-1}$, and increasing the | 
| 1898 |  |  | electrostatic damping to 0.25\AA$^{-1}$ gives quantitative agreement | 
| 1899 |  |  | with the power spectrum obtained using the Ewald sum.  Over-damping can | 
| 1900 |  |  | result in underestimates of frequencies of the long-wavelength | 
| 1901 |  |  | motions.} | 
| 1902 |  |  | \label{fig:dampInc} | 
| 1903 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 1904 |  |  |  | 
| 1905 |  |  | \section{An Application: TIP5P-E Water}\label{sec:t5peApplied} | 
| 1906 |  |  |  | 
| 1907 |  |  | The above sections focused on the energetics and dynamics of a variety | 
| 1908 |  |  | of systems when utilizing the {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} pairwise | 
| 1909 |  |  | techniques.  A unitary correlation with results obtained using the | 
| 1910 |  |  | Ewald summation should result in a successful reproduction of both the | 
| 1911 |  |  | static and dynamic properties of any selected system.  To test this, | 
| 1912 |  |  | we decided to calculate a series of properties for the TIP5P-E water | 
| 1913 |  |  | model when using the {\sc sf} technique. | 
| 1914 |  |  |  | 
| 1915 |  |  | The TIP5P-E water model is a variant of Mahoney and Jorgensen's | 
| 1916 |  |  | five-point transferable intermolecular potential (TIP5P) model for | 
| 1917 |  |  | water.\cite{Mahoney00} TIP5P was developed to reproduce the density | 
| 1918 |  |  | maximum anomaly present in liquid water near 4$^\circ$C. As with many | 
| 1919 |  |  | previous point charge water models (such as ST2, TIP3P, TIP4P, SPC, | 
| 1920 |  |  | and SPC/E), TIP5P was parametrized using a simple cutoff with no | 
| 1921 |  |  | long-range electrostatic | 
| 1922 |  |  | correction.\cite{Stillinger74,Jorgensen83,Berendsen81,Berendsen87} | 
| 1923 |  |  | Without this correction, the pressure term on the central particle | 
| 1924 |  |  | from the surroundings is missing. Because they expand to compensate | 
| 1925 |  |  | for this added pressure term when this correction is included, systems | 
| 1926 |  |  | composed of these particles tend to under-predict the density of water | 
| 1927 |  |  | under standard conditions. When using any form of long-range | 
| 1928 |  |  | electrostatic correction, it has become common practice to develop or | 
| 1929 |  |  | utilize a reparametrized water model that corrects for this | 
| 1930 |  |  | effect.\cite{vanderSpoel98,Fennell04,Horn04} The TIP5P-E model follows | 
| 1931 |  |  | this practice and was optimized specifically for use with the Ewald | 
| 1932 |  |  | summation.\cite{Rick04} In his publication, Rick preserved the | 
| 1933 |  |  | geometry and point charge magnitudes in TIP5P and focused on altering | 
| 1934 |  |  | the Lennard-Jones parameters to correct the density at | 
| 1935 |  |  | 298K.\cite{Rick04} With the density corrected, he compared common | 
| 1936 |  |  | water properties for TIP5P-E using the Ewald sum with TIP5P using a | 
| 1937 |  |  | 9\AA\ cutoff. | 
| 1938 |  |  |  | 
| 1939 |  |  | In the following sections, we compared these same water properties | 
| 1940 |  |  | calculated from TIP5P-E using the Ewald sum with TIP5P-E using the | 
| 1941 |  |  | {\sc sf} technique.  In the above evaluation of the pairwise | 
| 1942 |  |  | techniques, we observed some flexibility in the choice of parameters. | 
| 1943 |  |  | Because of this, the following comparisons include the {\sc sf} | 
| 1944 |  |  | technique with a 12\AA\ cutoff and an $\alpha$ = 0.0, 0.1, and | 
| 1945 |  |  | 0.2\AA$^{-1}$, as well as a 9\AA\ cutoff with an $\alpha$ = | 
| 1946 |  |  | 0.2\AA$^{-1}$. | 
| 1947 |  |  |  | 
| 1948 |  |  | \subsection{Density}\label{sec:t5peDensity} | 
| 1949 |  |  |  | 
| 1950 |  |  | As stated previously, the property that prompted the development of | 
| 1951 |  |  | TIP5P-E was the density at 1 atm.  The density depends upon the | 
| 1952 |  |  | internal pressure of the system in the $NPT$ ensemble, and the | 
| 1953 |  |  | calculation of the pressure includes a components from both the | 
| 1954 |  |  | kinetic energy and the virial. More specifically, the instantaneous | 
| 1955 |  |  | molecular pressure ($p(t)$) is given by | 
| 1956 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 1957 |  |  | p(t) =  \frac{1}{\textrm{d}V}\sum_\mu | 
| 1958 |  |  | \left[\frac{\mathbf{P}_{\mu}^2}{M_{\mu}} | 
| 1959 |  |  | + \mathbf{R}_{\mu}\cdot\sum_i\mathbf{F}_{\mu i}\right], | 
| 1960 |  |  | \label{eq:MolecularPressure} | 
| 1961 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 1962 |  |  | where $V$ is the volume, $\mathbf{P}_{\mu}$ is the momentum of | 
| 1963 |  |  | molecule $\mu$, $\mathbf{R}_\mu$ is the position of the center of mass | 
| 1964 |  |  | ($M_\mu$) of molecule $\mu$, and $\mathbf{F}_{\mu i}$ is the force on | 
| 1965 |  |  | atom $i$ of molecule $\mu$.\cite{Melchionna93} The virial term (the | 
| 1966 |  |  | right term in the brackets of equation \ref{eq:MolecularPressure}) is | 
| 1967 |  |  | directly dependent on the interatomic forces.  Since the {\sc sp} | 
| 1968 |  |  | method does not modify the forces (see | 
| 1969 |  |  | section. \ref{sec:PairwiseDerivation}), the pressure using {\sc sp} will | 
| 1970 |  |  | be identical to that obtained without an electrostatic correction. | 
| 1971 |  |  | The {\sc sf} method does alter the virial component and, by way of the | 
| 1972 |  |  | modified pressures, should provide densities more in line with those | 
| 1973 |  |  | obtained using the Ewald summation. | 
| 1974 |  |  |  | 
| 1975 |  |  | To compare densities, $NPT$ simulations were performed with the same | 
| 1976 |  |  | temperatures as those selected by Rick in his Ewald summation | 
| 1977 |  |  | simulations.\cite{Rick04} In order to improve statistics around the | 
| 1978 |  |  | density maximum, 3ns trajectories were accumulated at 0, 12.5, and | 
| 1979 |  |  | 25$^\circ$C, while 2ns trajectories were obtained at all other | 
| 1980 |  |  | temperatures. The average densities were calculated from the later | 
| 1981 |  |  | three-fourths of each trajectory. Similar to Mahoney and Jorgensen's | 
| 1982 |  |  | method for accumulating statistics, these sequences were spliced into | 
| 1983 |  |  | 200 segments to calculate the average density and standard deviation | 
| 1984 |  |  | at each temperature.\cite{Mahoney00} | 
| 1985 |  |  |  | 
| 1986 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 1987 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/tip5peDensities.pdf} | 
| 1988 |  |  | \caption{Density versus temperature for the TIP5P-E water model when | 
| 1989 |  |  | using the Ewald summation (Ref. \cite{Rick04}) and the {\sc sf} method | 
| 1990 |  |  | with various parameters. The pressure term from the image-charge shell | 
| 1991 |  |  | is larger than that provided by the reciprocal-space portion of the | 
| 1992 |  |  | Ewald summation, leading to slightly lower densities. This effect is | 
| 1993 |  |  | more visible with the 9\AA\ cutoff, where the image charges exert a | 
| 1994 |  |  | greater force on the central particle. The error bars for the {\sc sf} | 
| 1995 |  |  | methods show plus or minus the standard deviation of the density | 
| 1996 |  |  | measurement at each temperature.} | 
| 1997 |  |  | \label{fig:t5peDensities} | 
| 1998 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 1999 |  |  |  | 
| 2000 |  |  | Figure \ref{fig:t5peDensities} shows the densities calculated for | 
| 2001 |  |  | TIP5P-E using differing electrostatic corrections overlaid on the | 
| 2002 |  |  | experimental values.\cite{CRC80} The densities when using the {\sc sf} | 
| 2003 |  |  | technique are close to, though typically lower than, those calculated | 
| 2004 |  |  | while using the Ewald summation. These slightly reduced densities | 
| 2005 |  |  | indicate that the pressure component from the image charges at | 
| 2006 |  |  | R$_\textrm{c}$ is larger than that exerted by the reciprocal-space | 
| 2007 |  |  | portion of the Ewald summation. Bringing the image charges closer to | 
| 2008 |  |  | the central particle by choosing a 9\AA\ R$_\textrm{c}$ (rather than | 
| 2009 |  |  | the preferred 12\AA\ R$_\textrm{c}$) increases the strength of their | 
| 2010 |  |  | interactions, resulting in a further reduction of the densities. | 
| 2011 |  |  |  | 
| 2012 |  |  | Because the strength of the image charge interactions has a noticeable | 
| 2013 |  |  | effect on the density, we would expect the use of electrostatic | 
| 2014 |  |  | damping to also play a role in these calculations. Larger values of | 
| 2015 |  |  | $\alpha$ weaken the pair-interactions; and since electrostatic damping | 
| 2016 |  |  | is distance-dependent, force components from the image charges will be | 
| 2017 |  |  | reduced more than those from particles close the the central | 
| 2018 |  |  | charge. This effect is visible in figure \ref{fig:t5peDensities} with | 
| 2019 |  |  | the damped {\sc sf} sums showing slightly higher densities; however, | 
| 2020 |  |  | it is apparent that the choice of cutoff radius plays a much more | 
| 2021 |  |  | important role in the resulting densities. | 
| 2022 |  |  |  | 
| 2023 |  |  | As a final note, all of the above density calculations were performed | 
| 2024 |  |  | with systems of 512 water molecules. Rick observed a system sized | 
| 2025 |  |  | dependence of the computed densities when using the Ewald summation, | 
| 2026 |  |  | most likely due to his tying of the convergence parameter to the box | 
| 2027 |  |  | dimensions.\cite{Rick04} For systems of 256 water molecules, the | 
| 2028 |  |  | calculated densities were on average 0.002 to 0.003 g/cm$^3$ lower. A | 
| 2029 |  |  | system size of 256 molecules would force the use of a shorter | 
| 2030 |  |  | R$_\textrm{c}$ when using the {\sc sf} technique, and this would also | 
| 2031 |  |  | lower the densities. Moving to larger systems, as long as the | 
| 2032 |  |  | R$_\textrm{c}$ remains at a fixed value, we would expect the densities | 
| 2033 |  |  | to remain constant. | 
| 2034 |  |  |  | 
| 2035 |  |  | \subsection{Liquid Structure}\label{sec:t5peLiqStructure} | 
| 2036 |  |  |  | 
| 2037 |  |  | A common function considered when developing and comparing water | 
| 2038 |  |  | models is the oxygen-oxygen radial distribution function | 
| 2039 |  |  | ($g_\textrm{OO}(r)$). The $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$ is the probability of | 
| 2040 |  |  | finding a pair of oxygen atoms some distance ($r$) apart relative to a | 
| 2041 |  |  | random distribution at the same density.\cite{Allen87} It is | 
| 2042 |  |  | calculated via | 
| 2043 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2044 |  |  | g_\textrm{OO}(r) = \frac{V}{N^2}\left\langle\sum_i\sum_{j\ne i} | 
| 2045 |  |  | \delta(\mathbf{r}-\mathbf{r}_{ij})\right\rangle, | 
| 2046 |  |  | \label{eq:GOOofR} | 
| 2047 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2048 |  |  | where the double sum is over all $i$ and $j$ pairs of $N$ oxygen | 
| 2049 |  |  | atoms. The $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$ can be directly compared to X-ray or | 
| 2050 |  |  | neutron scattering experiments through the oxygen-oxygen structure | 
| 2051 |  |  | factor ($S_\textrm{OO}(k)$) by the following relationship: | 
| 2052 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2053 |  |  | S_\textrm{OO}(k) = 1 + 4\pi\rho | 
| 2054 |  |  | \int_0^\infty r^2\frac{\sin kr}{kr}g_\textrm{OO}(r)\textrm{d}r. | 
| 2055 |  |  | \label{eq:SOOofK} | 
| 2056 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2057 |  |  | Thus, $S_\textrm{OO}(k)$ is related to the Fourier-Laplace transform | 
| 2058 |  |  | of $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$. | 
| 2059 |  |  |  | 
| 2060 |  |  | The experimentally determined $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$ for liquid water has | 
| 2061 |  |  | been compared in great detail with the various common water models, | 
| 2062 |  |  | and TIP5P was found to be in better agreement than other rigid, | 
| 2063 |  |  | non-polarizable models.\cite{Sorenson00} This excellent agreement with | 
| 2064 |  |  | experiment was maintained when Rick developed TIP5P-E.\cite{Rick04} To | 
| 2065 |  |  | check whether the choice of using the Ewald summation or the {\sc sf} | 
| 2066 |  |  | technique alters the liquid structure, the $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$s at 298K | 
| 2067 |  |  | and 1atm were determined for the systems compared in the previous | 
| 2068 |  |  | section. | 
| 2069 |  |  |  | 
| 2070 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 2071 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/tip5peGofR.pdf} | 
| 2072 |  |  | \caption{The $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$s calculated for TIP5P-E at 298K and | 
| 2073 |  |  | 1atm while using the Ewald summation (Ref. \cite{Rick04}) and the {\sc | 
| 2074 |  |  | sf} technique with varying parameters. Even with the reduced densities | 
| 2075 |  |  | using the {\sc sf} technique, the $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$s are essentially | 
| 2076 |  |  | identical.} | 
| 2077 |  |  | \label{fig:t5peGofRs} | 
| 2078 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 2079 |  |  |  | 
| 2080 |  |  | The $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$s calculated for TIP5P-E while using the {\sc | 
| 2081 |  |  | sf} technique with a various parameters are overlaid on the | 
| 2082 |  |  | $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$ while using the Ewald summation. The differences in | 
| 2083 |  |  | density do not appear to have any effect on the liquid structure as | 
| 2084 |  |  | the $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$s are indistinguishable. These results indicate | 
| 2085 |  |  | that the $g_\textrm{OO}(r)$ is insensitive to the choice of | 
| 2086 |  |  | electrostatic correction. | 
| 2087 |  |  |  | 
| 2088 |  |  | \subsection{Thermodynamic Properties}\label{sec:t5peThermo} | 
| 2089 |  |  |  | 
| 2090 |  |  | In addition to the density, there are a variety of thermodynamic | 
| 2091 |  |  | quantities that can be calculated for water and compared directly to | 
| 2092 |  |  | experimental values. Some of these additional quantities include the | 
| 2093 |  |  | latent heat of vaporization ($\Delta H_\textrm{vap}$), the constant | 
| 2094 |  |  | pressure heat capacity ($C_p$), the isothermal compressibility | 
| 2095 |  |  | ($\kappa_T$), the thermal expansivity ($\alpha_p$), and the static | 
| 2096 |  |  | dielectric constant ($\epsilon$). All of these properties were | 
| 2097 |  |  | calculated for TIP5P-E with the Ewald summation, so they provide a | 
| 2098 |  |  | good set for comparisons involving the {\sc sf} technique. | 
| 2099 |  |  |  | 
| 2100 |  |  | The $\Delta H_\textrm{vap}$ is the enthalpy change required to | 
| 2101 |  |  | transform one mol of substance from the liquid phase to the gas | 
| 2102 |  |  | phase.\cite{Berry00} In molecular simulations, this quantity can be | 
| 2103 |  |  | determined via | 
| 2104 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2105 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 2106 |  |  | \Delta H_\textrm{vap} &= H_\textrm{gas} - H_\textrm{liq.} \\ | 
| 2107 |  |  | &= E_\textrm{gas} - E_\textrm{liq.} | 
| 2108 |  |  | + p(V_\textrm{gas} - V_\textrm{liq.}) \\ | 
| 2109 |  |  | &\approx -\frac{\langle U_\textrm{liq.}\rangle}{N}+ RT, | 
| 2110 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 2111 |  |  | \label{eq:DeltaHVap} | 
| 2112 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2113 |  |  | where $E$ is the total energy, $U$ is the potential energy, $p$ is the | 
| 2114 |  |  | pressure, $V$ is the volume, $N$ is the number of molecules, $R$ is | 
| 2115 |  |  | the gas constant, and $T$ is the temperature.\cite{Jorgensen98b} As | 
| 2116 |  |  | seen in the last line of equation (\ref{eq:DeltaHVap}), we can | 
| 2117 |  |  | approximate $\Delta H_\textrm{vap}$ by using the ideal gas for the gas | 
| 2118 |  |  | state. This allows us to cancel the kinetic energy terms, leaving only | 
| 2119 |  |  | the $U_\textrm{liq.}$ term. Additionally, the $pV$ term for the gas is | 
| 2120 |  |  | several orders of magnitude larger than that of the liquid, so we can | 
| 2121 |  |  | neglect the liquid $pV$ term. | 
| 2122 |  |  |  | 
| 2123 |  |  | The remaining thermodynamic properties can all be calculated from | 
| 2124 |  |  | fluctuations of the enthalpy, volume, and system dipole | 
| 2125 |  |  | moment.\cite{Allen87} $C_p$ can be calculated from fluctuations in the | 
| 2126 |  |  | enthalpy in constant pressure simulations via | 
| 2127 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2128 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 2129 |  |  | C_p     = \left(\frac{\partial H}{\partial T}\right)_{N,p} | 
| 2130 |  |  | = \frac{(\langle H^2\rangle - \langle H\rangle^2)}{Nk_BT^2}, | 
| 2131 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 2132 |  |  | \label{eq:Cp} | 
| 2133 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2134 |  |  | where $k_B$ is Boltzmann's constant.  $\kappa_T$ can be calculated via | 
| 2135 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2136 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 2137 |  |  | \kappa_T = \frac{1}{V}\left(\frac{\partial V}{\partial p}\right)_{N,T} | 
| 2138 |  |  | = \frac{(\langle V^2\rangle_{N,P,T} - \langle V\rangle^2_{N,P,T})} | 
| 2139 |  |  | {k_BT\langle V\rangle_{N,P,T}}, | 
| 2140 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 2141 |  |  | \label{eq:kappa} | 
| 2142 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2143 |  |  | and $\alpha_p$ can be calculated via | 
| 2144 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2145 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 2146 |  |  | \alpha_p        = \frac{1}{V}\left(\frac{\partial V}{\partial T}\right)_{N,P} | 
| 2147 |  |  | = \frac{(\langle VH\rangle_{N,P,T} | 
| 2148 |  |  | - \langle V\rangle_{N,P,T}\langle H\rangle_{N,P,T})} | 
| 2149 |  |  | {k_BT^2\langle V\rangle_{N,P,T}}. | 
| 2150 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 2151 |  |  | \label{eq:alpha} | 
| 2152 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2153 |  |  | Using the Ewald sum under tin-foil boundary conditions, $\epsilon$ can | 
| 2154 |  |  | be calculated for systems of non-polarizable substances via | 
| 2155 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2156 |  |  | \epsilon = 1 + \frac{\langle M^2\rangle}{3\epsilon_0k_\textrm{B}TV}, | 
| 2157 |  |  | \label{eq:staticDielectric} | 
| 2158 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2159 |  |  | where $\epsilon_0$ is the permittivity of free space and $\langle | 
| 2160 |  |  | M^2\rangle$ is the fluctuation of the system dipole | 
| 2161 |  |  | moment.\cite{Allen87} The numerator in the fractional term in equation | 
| 2162 |  |  | (\ref{eq:staticDielectric}) is the fluctuation of the simulation-box | 
| 2163 |  |  | dipole moment, identical to the quantity calculated in the | 
| 2164 |  |  | finite-system Kirkwood $g$ factor ($G_k$): | 
| 2165 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2166 |  |  | G_k = \frac{\langle M^2\rangle}{N\mu^2}, | 
| 2167 |  |  | \label{eq:KirkwoodFactor} | 
| 2168 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2169 |  |  | where $\mu$ is the dipole moment of a single molecule of the | 
| 2170 |  |  | homogeneous system.\cite{Neumann83,Neumann84,Neumann85} The | 
| 2171 |  |  | fluctuation term in both equation (\ref{eq:staticDielectric}) and | 
| 2172 |  |  | \ref{eq:KirkwoodFactor} is calculated as follows, | 
| 2173 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2174 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 2175 |  |  | \langle M^2\rangle &= \langle\bm{M}\cdot\bm{M}\rangle | 
| 2176 |  |  | - \langle\bm{M}\rangle\cdot\langle\bm{M}\rangle \\ | 
| 2177 |  |  | &= \langle M_x^2+M_y^2+M_z^2\rangle | 
| 2178 |  |  | - (\langle M_x\rangle^2 + \langle M_x\rangle^2 | 
| 2179 |  |  | + \langle M_x\rangle^2). | 
| 2180 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 2181 |  |  | \label{eq:fluctBoxDipole} | 
| 2182 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2183 |  |  | This fluctuation term can be accumulated during the simulation; | 
| 2184 |  |  | however, it converges rather slowly, thus requiring multi-nanosecond | 
| 2185 |  |  | simulation times.\cite{Horn04} In the case of tin-foil boundary | 
| 2186 |  |  | conditions, the dielectric/surface term of equation (\ref{eq:EwaldSum}) | 
| 2187 |  |  | is equal to zero. Since the {\sc sf} method also lacks this | 
| 2188 |  |  | dielectric/surface term, equation (\ref{eq:staticDielectric}) is still | 
| 2189 |  |  | valid for determining static dielectric constants. | 
| 2190 |  |  |  | 
| 2191 |  |  | All of the above properties were calculated from the same trajectories | 
| 2192 |  |  | used to determine the densities in section \ref{sec:t5peDensity} | 
| 2193 |  |  | except for the static dielectric constants. The $\epsilon$ values were | 
| 2194 |  |  | accumulated from 2ns $NVE$ ensemble trajectories with system densities | 
| 2195 |  |  | fixed at the average values from the $NPT$ simulations at each of the | 
| 2196 |  |  | temperatures. The resulting values are displayed in figure | 
| 2197 |  |  | \ref{fig:t5peThermo}. | 
| 2198 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 2199 |  |  | \centering | 
| 2200 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=5.5in]{./figures/t5peThermo.pdf} | 
| 2201 |  |  | \caption{Thermodynamic properties for TIP5P-E using the Ewald summation | 
| 2202 |  |  | and the {\sc sf} techniques along with the experimental values. Units | 
| 2203 |  |  | for the properties are kcal mol$^{-1}$ for $\Delta H_\textrm{vap}$, | 
| 2204 |  |  | cal mol$^{-1}$ K$^{-1}$ for $C_p$, 10$^6$ atm$^{-1}$ for $\kappa_T$, | 
| 2205 |  |  | and 10$^5$ K$^{-1}$ for $\alpha_p$. Ewald summation results are from | 
| 2206 |  |  | reference \cite{Rick04}. Experimental values for $\Delta | 
| 2207 |  |  | H_\textrm{vap}$, $\kappa_T$, and $\alpha_p$ are from reference | 
| 2208 |  |  | \cite{Kell75}. Experimental values for $C_p$ are from reference | 
| 2209 |  |  | \cite{Wagner02}. Experimental values for $\epsilon$ are from reference | 
| 2210 |  |  | \cite{Malmberg56}.} | 
| 2211 |  |  | \label{fig:t5peThermo} | 
| 2212 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 2213 |  |  |  | 
| 2214 |  |  | As observed for the density in section \ref{sec:t5peDensity}, the | 
| 2215 |  |  | property trends with temperature seen when using the Ewald summation | 
| 2216 |  |  | are reproduced with the {\sc sf} technique. Differences include the | 
| 2217 |  |  | calculated values of $\Delta H_\textrm{vap}$ under-predicting the Ewald | 
| 2218 |  |  | values. This is to be expected due to the direct weakening of the | 
| 2219 |  |  | electrostatic interaction through forced neutralization in {\sc | 
| 2220 |  |  | sf}. This results in an increase of the intermolecular potential | 
| 2221 |  |  | producing lower values from equation (\ref{eq:DeltaHVap}). The slopes of | 
| 2222 |  |  | these values with temperature are similar to that seen using the Ewald | 
| 2223 |  |  | summation; however, they are both steeper than the experimental trend, | 
| 2224 |  |  | indirectly resulting in the inflated $C_p$ values at all temperatures. | 
| 2225 |  |  |  | 
| 2226 |  |  | Above the supercooled regime, $C_p$, $\kappa_T$, and $\alpha_p$ | 
| 2227 |  |  | values all overlap within error. As indicated for the $\Delta | 
| 2228 |  |  | H_\textrm{vap}$ and $C_p$ results discussed in the previous paragraph, | 
| 2229 |  |  | the deviations between experiment and simulation in this region are | 
| 2230 |  |  | not the fault of the electrostatic summation methods but are due to | 
| 2231 |  |  | the TIP5P class model itself. Like most rigid, non-polarizable, | 
| 2232 |  |  | point-charge water models, the density decreases with temperature at a | 
| 2233 |  |  | much faster rate than experiment (see figure | 
| 2234 |  |  | \ref{fig:t5peDensities}). The reduced density leads to the inflated | 
| 2235 |  |  | compressibility and expansivity values at higher temperatures seen | 
| 2236 |  |  | here in figure \ref{fig:t5peThermo}. Incorporation of polarizability | 
| 2237 |  |  | and many-body effects are required in order for simulation to overcome | 
| 2238 |  |  | these differences with experiment.\cite{Laasonen93,Donchev06} | 
| 2239 |  |  |  | 
| 2240 |  |  | At temperatures below the freezing point for experimental water, the | 
| 2241 |  |  | differences between {\sc sf} and the Ewald summation results are more | 
| 2242 |  |  | apparent. The larger $C_p$ and lower $\alpha_p$ values in this region | 
| 2243 |  |  | indicate a more pronounced transition in the supercooled regime, | 
| 2244 |  |  | particularly in the case of {\sc sf} without damping. This points to | 
| 2245 |  |  | the onset of a more frustrated or glassy behavior for TIP5P-E at | 
| 2246 |  |  | temperatures below 250K in these simulations. Because the systems are | 
| 2247 |  |  | locked in different regions of phase-space, comparisons between | 
| 2248 |  |  | properties at these temperatures are not exactly fair. This | 
| 2249 |  |  | observation is explored in more detail in section | 
| 2250 |  |  | \ref{sec:t5peDynamics}. | 
| 2251 |  |  |  | 
| 2252 |  |  | The final thermodynamic property displayed in figure | 
| 2253 |  |  | \ref{fig:t5peThermo}, $\epsilon$, shows the greatest discrepancy | 
| 2254 |  |  | between the Ewald summation and the {\sc sf} technique (and experiment | 
| 2255 |  |  | for that matter). It is known that the dielectric constant is | 
| 2256 |  |  | dependent upon and quite sensitive to the imposed boundary | 
| 2257 |  |  | conditions.\cite{Neumann80,Neumann83} This is readily apparent in the | 
| 2258 |  |  | converged $\epsilon$ values accumulated for the {\sc sf} | 
| 2259 |  |  | simulations. Lack of a damping function results in dielectric | 
| 2260 |  |  | constants significantly smaller than that obtained using the Ewald | 
| 2261 |  |  | sum. Increasing the damping coefficient to 0.2\AA$^{-1}$ improves the | 
| 2262 |  |  | agreement considerably. It should be noted that the choice of the | 
| 2263 |  |  | ``Ewald coefficient'' value also has a significant effect on the | 
| 2264 |  |  | calculated value when using the Ewald summation. In the simulations of | 
| 2265 |  |  | TIP5P-E with the Ewald sum, this screening parameter was tethered to | 
| 2266 |  |  | the simulation box size (as was the $R_\textrm{c}$).\cite{Rick04} In | 
| 2267 |  |  | general, systems with larger screening parameters reported larger | 
| 2268 |  |  | dielectric constant values, the same behavior we see here with {\sc | 
| 2269 |  |  | sf}; however, the choice of cutoff radius also plays an important | 
| 2270 |  |  | role. In section \ref{sec:dampingDielectric}, this connection is | 
| 2271 |  |  | further explored as optimal damping coefficients for different choices | 
| 2272 |  |  | of $R_\textrm{c}$ are determined for {\sc sf} for capturing the | 
| 2273 |  |  | dielectric behavior. | 
| 2274 |  |  |  | 
| 2275 |  |  | \subsection{Dynamic Properties}\label{sec:t5peDynamics} | 
| 2276 |  |  |  | 
| 2277 |  |  | To look at the dynamic properties of TIP5P-E when using the {\sc sf} | 
| 2278 |  |  | method, 200ps $NVE$ simulations were performed for each temperature at | 
| 2279 |  |  | the average density reported by the $NPT$ simulations. The | 
| 2280 |  |  | self-diffusion constants ($D$) were calculated with the Einstein | 
| 2281 |  |  | relation using the mean square displacement (MSD), | 
| 2282 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2283 |  |  | D = \frac{\langle\left|\mathbf{r}_i(t)-\mathbf{r}_i(0)\right|^2\rangle}{6t}, | 
| 2284 |  |  | \label{eq:MSD} | 
| 2285 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2286 |  |  | where $t$ is time, and $\mathbf{r}_i$ is the position of particle | 
| 2287 |  |  | $i$.\cite{Allen87} Figure \ref{fig:ExampleMSD} shows an example MSD | 
| 2288 |  |  | plot. As labeled in the figure, MSD plots consist of three distinct | 
| 2289 |  |  | regions: | 
| 2290 |  |  |  | 
| 2291 |  |  | \begin{enumerate}[itemsep=0pt] | 
| 2292 |  |  | \item parabolic short-time ballistic motion, | 
| 2293 |  |  | \item linear diffusive regime, and | 
| 2294 |  |  | \item poor statistic region at long-time. | 
| 2295 |  |  | \end{enumerate} | 
| 2296 |  |  | The slope from the linear region (region 2) is used to calculate $D$. | 
| 2297 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 2298 |  |  | \centering | 
| 2299 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=3.5in]{./figures/ExampleMSD.pdf} | 
| 2300 |  |  | \caption{Example plot of mean square displacement verses time. The | 
| 2301 |  |  | left red region is the ballistic motion regime, the middle green | 
| 2302 |  |  | region is the linear diffusive regime, and the right blue region is | 
| 2303 |  |  | the region with poor statistics.} | 
| 2304 |  |  | \label{fig:ExampleMSD} | 
| 2305 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 2306 |  |  |  | 
| 2307 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 2308 |  |  | \centering | 
| 2309 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=3.5in]{./figures/waterFrame.pdf} | 
| 2310 |  |  | \caption{Body-fixed coordinate frame for a water molecule. The | 
| 2311 |  |  | respective molecular principle axes point in the direction of the | 
| 2312 |  |  | labeled frame axes.} | 
| 2313 |  |  | \label{fig:waterFrame} | 
| 2314 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 2315 |  |  | In addition to translational diffusion, reorientational time constants | 
| 2316 |  |  | were calculated for comparisons with the Ewald simulations and with | 
| 2317 |  |  | experiments. These values were determined from 25ps $NVE$ trajectories | 
| 2318 |  |  | through calculation of the orientational time correlation function, | 
| 2319 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2320 |  |  | C_l^\alpha(t) = \left\langle P_l\left[\hat{\mathbf{u}}_i^\alpha(t) | 
| 2321 |  |  | \cdot\hat{\mathbf{u}}_i^\alpha(0)\right]\right\rangle, | 
| 2322 |  |  | \label{eq:OrientCorr} | 
| 2323 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2324 |  |  | where $P_l$ is the Legendre polynomial of order $l$ and | 
| 2325 |  |  | $\hat{\mathbf{u}}_i^\alpha$ is the unit vector of molecule $i$ along | 
| 2326 |  |  | principle axis $\alpha$. The principle axis frame for these water | 
| 2327 |  |  | molecules is shown in figure \ref{fig:waterFrame}. As an example, | 
| 2328 |  |  | $C_l^y$ is calculated from the time evolution of the unit vector | 
| 2329 |  |  | connecting the two hydrogen atoms. | 
| 2330 |  |  |  | 
| 2331 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 2332 |  |  | \centering | 
| 2333 |  |  | \includegraphics[width=3.5in]{./figures/ExampleOrientCorr.pdf} | 
| 2334 |  |  | \caption{Example plots of the orientational autocorrelation functions | 
| 2335 |  |  | for the first and second Legendre polynomials. These curves show the | 
| 2336 |  |  | time decay of the unit vector along the $y$ principle axis.} | 
| 2337 |  |  | \label{fig:OrientCorr} | 
| 2338 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 2339 |  |  | From the orientation autocorrelation functions, we can obtain time | 
| 2340 |  |  | constants for rotational relaxation. Figure \ref{fig:OrientCorr} shows | 
| 2341 |  |  | some example plots of orientational autocorrelation functions for the | 
| 2342 |  |  | first and second Legendre polynomials. The relatively short time | 
| 2343 |  |  | portions (between 1 and 3ps for water) of these curves can be fit to | 
| 2344 |  |  | an exponential decay to obtain these constants, and they are directly | 
| 2345 |  |  | comparable to water orientational relaxation times from nuclear | 
| 2346 |  |  | magnetic resonance (NMR). The relaxation constant obtained from | 
| 2347 |  |  | $C_2^y(t)$ is of particular interest because it describes the | 
| 2348 |  |  | relaxation of the principle axis connecting the hydrogen atoms. Thus, | 
| 2349 |  |  | $C_2^y(t)$ can be compared to the intermolecular portion of the | 
| 2350 |  |  | dipole-dipole relaxation from a proton NMR signal and should provide | 
| 2351 |  |  | the best estimate of the NMR relaxation time constant.\cite{Impey82} | 
| 2352 |  |  |  | 
| 2353 |  |  | \begin{figure} | 
| 2354 |  |  | \centering | 
| 2355 | chrisfen | 2975 | \includegraphics[width=3.5in]{./figures/t5peDynamics.pdf} | 
| 2356 | chrisfen | 2973 | \caption{Diffusion constants ({\it upper}) and reorientational time | 
| 2357 |  |  | constants ({\it lower}) for TIP5P-E using the Ewald sum and {\sc sf} | 
| 2358 |  |  | technique compared with experiment. Data at temperatures less that | 
| 2359 |  |  | 0$^\circ$C were not included in the $\tau_2^y$ plot to allow for | 
| 2360 |  |  | easier comparisons in the more relevant temperature regime.} | 
| 2361 |  |  | \label{fig:t5peDynamics} | 
| 2362 |  |  | \end{figure} | 
| 2363 |  |  | Results for the diffusion constants and reorientational time constants | 
| 2364 |  |  | are shown in figure \ref{fig:t5peDynamics}. From this figure, it is | 
| 2365 |  |  | apparent that the trends for both $D$ and $\tau_2^y$ of TIP5P-E using | 
| 2366 |  |  | the Ewald sum are reproduced with the {\sc sf} technique. The enhanced | 
| 2367 |  |  | diffusion at high temperatures are again the product of the lower | 
| 2368 |  |  | densities in comparison with experiment and do not provide any special | 
| 2369 |  |  | insight into differences between the electrostatic summation | 
| 2370 |  |  | techniques. With the undamped {\sc sf} technique, TIP5P-E tends to | 
| 2371 |  |  | diffuse a little faster than with the Ewald sum; however, use of light | 
| 2372 |  |  | to moderate damping results in indistinguishable $D$ values. Though not | 
| 2373 |  |  | apparent in this figure, {\sc sf} values at the lowest temperature are | 
| 2374 |  |  | approximately an order of magnitude lower than with Ewald. These | 
| 2375 |  |  | values support the observation from section \ref{sec:t5peThermo} that | 
| 2376 |  |  | there appeared to be a change to a more glassy-like phase with the | 
| 2377 |  |  | {\sc sf} technique at these lower temperatures. | 
| 2378 |  |  |  | 
| 2379 |  |  | The $\tau_2^y$ results in the lower frame of figure | 
| 2380 |  |  | \ref{fig:t5peDynamics} show a much greater difference between the {\sc | 
| 2381 |  |  | sf} results and the Ewald results. At all temperatures shown, TIP5P-E | 
| 2382 |  |  | relaxes faster than experiment with the Ewald sum while tracking | 
| 2383 |  |  | experiment fairly well when using the {\sc sf} technique, independent | 
| 2384 |  |  | of the choice of damping constant. Their are several possible reasons | 
| 2385 |  |  | for this deviation between techniques. The Ewald results were taken | 
| 2386 |  |  | shorter (10ps) trajectories than the {\sc sf} results (25ps). A quick | 
| 2387 |  |  | calculation from a 10ps trajectory with {\sc sf} with an $\alpha$ of | 
| 2388 |  |  | 0.2\AA$^-1$ at 25$^\circ$C showed a 0.4ps drop in $\tau_2^y$, placing | 
| 2389 |  |  | the result more in line with that obtained using the Ewald sum. These | 
| 2390 |  |  | results support this explanation; however, recomputing the results to | 
| 2391 |  |  | meet a poorer statistical standard is counter-productive. Assuming the | 
| 2392 |  |  | Ewald results are not the product of poor statistics, differences in | 
| 2393 |  |  | techniques to integrate the orientational motion could also play a | 
| 2394 |  |  | role. {\sc shake} is the most commonly used technique for | 
| 2395 |  |  | approximating rigid-body orientational motion,\cite{Ryckaert77} where | 
| 2396 |  |  | as in {\sc oopse}, we maintain and integrate the entire rotation | 
| 2397 |  |  | matrix using the {\sc dlm} method.\cite{Meineke05} Since {\sc shake} | 
| 2398 |  |  | is an iterative constraint technique, if the convergence tolerances | 
| 2399 |  |  | are raised for increased performance, error will accumulate in the | 
| 2400 |  |  | orientational motion. Finally, the Ewald results were calculated using | 
| 2401 |  |  | the $NVT$ ensemble, while the $NVE$ ensemble was used for {\sc sf} | 
| 2402 |  |  | calculations. The additional mode of motion due to the thermostat will | 
| 2403 |  |  | alter the dynamics, resulting in differences between $NVT$ and $NVE$ | 
| 2404 |  |  | results. These differences are increasingly noticeable as the | 
| 2405 |  |  | thermostat time constant decreases. | 
| 2406 |  |  |  | 
| 2407 |  |  | \section{Damping of Point Multipoles}\label{sec:dampingMultipoles} | 
| 2408 |  |  |  | 
| 2409 |  |  | As discussed above, the {\sc sp} and {\sc sf} methods operate by | 
| 2410 |  |  | neutralizing the cutoff sphere with charge-charge interaction shifting | 
| 2411 |  |  | and by damping the electrostatic interactions. Now we would like to | 
| 2412 |  |  | consider an extension of these techniques to include point multipole | 
| 2413 |  |  | interactions. How will the shifting and damping need to develop in | 
| 2414 |  |  | order to accommodate point multipoles? | 
| 2415 |  |  |  | 
| 2416 |  |  | Of the two techniques, the least to vary is shifting. Shifting is | 
| 2417 |  |  | employed to neutralize the cutoff sphere; however, in a system | 
| 2418 |  |  | composed purely of point multipoles, the cutoff sphere is already | 
| 2419 |  |  | neutralized. This means that shifting is not necessary between point | 
| 2420 |  |  | multipoles. In a mixed system of monopoles and multipoles, the | 
| 2421 |  |  | undamped {\sc sf} potential needs only to shift the force terms of the | 
| 2422 |  |  | monopole (and use the monopole potential of equation (\ref{eq:SFPot})) | 
| 2423 |  |  | and smoothly cutoff the multipole interactions with a switching | 
| 2424 |  |  | function. The switching function is required in order to conserve | 
| 2425 |  |  | energy, because a discontinuity will exist at $R_\textrm{c}$ in the | 
| 2426 |  |  | absence of shifting terms. | 
| 2427 |  |  |  | 
| 2428 |  |  | If we consider damping the {\sc sf} potential (Eq. (\ref{eq:DSFPot})), | 
| 2429 |  |  | then we need to incorporate the complimentary error function term into | 
| 2430 |  |  | the multipole potentials. The most direct way to do this is by | 
| 2431 |  |  | replacing $r^{-1}$ with erfc$(\alpha r)\cdot r^{-1}$ in the multipole | 
| 2432 |  |  | expansion.\cite{Hirschfelder67} In the multipole expansion, rather | 
| 2433 |  |  | than considering only the interactions between single point charges, | 
| 2434 |  |  | the electrostatic interactions is reformulated such that it describes | 
| 2435 |  |  | the interaction between charge distributions about central sites of | 
| 2436 |  |  | the respective sets of charges. This procedure is what leads to the | 
| 2437 |  |  | familiar charge-dipole, | 
| 2438 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2439 |  |  | V_\textrm{cd} = -q_i\frac{\boldsymbol{\mu}_j\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}}{r^3_{ij}} | 
| 2440 |  |  | = -q_i\mu_j\frac{\cos\theta}{r^2_{ij}}, | 
| 2441 |  |  | \label{eq:chargeDipole} | 
| 2442 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2443 |  |  | and dipole-dipole, | 
| 2444 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2445 |  |  | V_\textrm{dd} = 3\frac{(\boldsymbol{\mu}_i\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}) | 
| 2446 |  |  | (\boldsymbol{\mu}_j\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij})}{r^5_{ij}} - | 
| 2447 |  |  | \frac{\boldsymbol{\mu}_i\cdot\boldsymbol{\mu}_j}{r^3_{ij}}, | 
| 2448 |  |  | \label{eq:dipoleDipole} | 
| 2449 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2450 |  |  | interaction potentials. | 
| 2451 |  |  |  | 
| 2452 |  |  | Using the charge-dipole interaction as an example, if we insert | 
| 2453 |  |  | erfc$(\alpha r)\cdot r^{-1}$ in place of $r^{-1}$, a damped | 
| 2454 |  |  | charge-dipole results, | 
| 2455 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2456 |  |  | V_\textrm{Dcd} = -q_i\mu_j\frac{\cos\theta}{r^2_{ij}} c_1(r_{ij}), | 
| 2457 |  |  | \label{eq:dChargeDipole} | 
| 2458 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2459 |  |  | where $c_1(r_{ij})$ is | 
| 2460 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2461 |  |  | c_1(r_{ij}) = \frac{2\alpha r_{ij}e^{-\alpha^2r^2_{ij}}}{\sqrt{\pi}} | 
| 2462 |  |  | + \textrm{erfc}(\alpha r_{ij}). | 
| 2463 |  |  | \label{eq:c1Func} | 
| 2464 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2465 |  |  | Thus, $c_1(r_{ij})$ is the resulting damping term that modifies the | 
| 2466 |  |  | standard charge-dipole potential (Eq. (\ref{eq:chargeDipole})).  Note | 
| 2467 |  |  | that this damping term is dependent upon distance and not upon | 
| 2468 |  |  | orientation, and that it is acting on what was originally an | 
| 2469 | chrisfen | 2975 | $r^{-3}$ function. By writing the damped form in this manner, we | 
| 2470 | chrisfen | 2973 | can collect the damping into one function and apply it to the original | 
| 2471 |  |  | potential when damping is desired. This works well for potentials that | 
| 2472 |  |  | have only one $r^{-n}$ term (where $n$ is an odd positive integer); | 
| 2473 |  |  | but in the case of the dipole-dipole potential, there is one part | 
| 2474 |  |  | dependent on $r^{-3}$ and another dependent on $r^{-5}$. In order to | 
| 2475 |  |  | properly damping this potential, each of these parts is dampened with | 
| 2476 |  |  | separate damping functions. We can determine the necessary damping | 
| 2477 |  |  | functions by continuing with the multipole expansion; however, it | 
| 2478 |  |  | quickly becomes more complex with ``two-center'' systems, like the | 
| 2479 |  |  | dipole-dipole potential, and is typically approached with a spherical | 
| 2480 |  |  | harmonic formalism.\cite{Hirschfelder67} A simpler method for | 
| 2481 |  |  | determining these functions arises from adopting the tensor formalism | 
| 2482 |  |  | for expressing the electrostatic interactions.\cite{Stone02} | 
| 2483 |  |  |  | 
| 2484 |  |  | The tensor formalism for electrostatic interactions involves obtaining | 
| 2485 |  |  | the multipole interactions from successive gradients of the monopole | 
| 2486 |  |  | potential. Thus, tensors of rank one through three are | 
| 2487 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2488 |  |  | T = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0r_{ij}}, | 
| 2489 |  |  | \label{eq:tensorRank1} | 
| 2490 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2491 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2492 |  |  | T_\alpha = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0}\nabla_\alpha \frac{1}{r_{ij}}, | 
| 2493 |  |  | \label{eq:tensorRank2} | 
| 2494 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2495 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2496 |  |  | T_{\alpha\beta} = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0} | 
| 2497 |  |  | \nabla_\alpha\nabla_\beta \frac{1}{r_{ij}}, | 
| 2498 |  |  | \label{eq:tensorRank3} | 
| 2499 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2500 |  |  | where the form of the first tensor gives the monopole-monopole | 
| 2501 |  |  | potential, the second gives the monopole-dipole potential, and the | 
| 2502 |  |  | third gives the monopole-quadrupole and dipole-dipole | 
| 2503 |  |  | potentials.\cite{Stone02} Since the force is $-\nabla V$, the forces | 
| 2504 |  |  | for each potential come from the next higher tensor. | 
| 2505 |  |  |  | 
| 2506 |  |  | To obtain the damped electrostatic forms, we replace $r^{-1}$ with | 
| 2507 |  |  | erfc$(\alpha r)\cdot r^{-1}$. Equation \ref{eq:tensorRank2} generates | 
| 2508 |  |  | $c_1(r_{ij})$, just like the multipole expansion, while equation | 
| 2509 |  |  | \ref{eq:tensorRank3} generates $c_2(r_{ij})$, where | 
| 2510 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2511 |  |  | c_2(r_{ij}) = \frac{4\alpha^3r^3_{ij}e^{-\alpha^2r^2_{ij}}}{3\sqrt{\pi}} | 
| 2512 |  |  | + \frac{2\alpha r_{ij}e^{-\alpha^2r^2_{ij}}}{\sqrt{\pi}} | 
| 2513 |  |  | + \textrm{erfc}(\alpha r_{ij}). | 
| 2514 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2515 |  |  | Note that $c_2(r_{ij})$ is equal to $c_1(r_{ij})$ plus an additional | 
| 2516 |  |  | term. Continuing with higher rank tensors, we can obtain the damping | 
| 2517 |  |  | functions for higher multipoles as well as the forces. Each subsequent | 
| 2518 |  |  | damping function includes one additional term, and we can simplify the | 
| 2519 |  |  | procedure for obtaining these terms by writing out the following | 
| 2520 |  |  | generating function, | 
| 2521 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2522 |  |  | c_n(r_{ij}) = \frac{2^n(\alpha r_{ij})^{2n-1}e^{-\alpha^2r^2_{ij}}} | 
| 2523 | chrisfen | 2975 | {(2n-1)!!\sqrt{\pi}} + c_{n-1}(r_{ij}), | 
| 2524 | chrisfen | 2973 | \label{eq:dampingGeneratingFunc} | 
| 2525 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2526 |  |  | where, | 
| 2527 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2528 |  |  | m!! \equiv \left\{ \begin{array}{l@{\quad\quad}l} | 
| 2529 |  |  | m\cdot(m-2)\ldots 5\cdot3\cdot1 & m > 0\textrm{ odd} \\ | 
| 2530 |  |  | m\cdot(m-2)\ldots 6\cdot4\cdot2 & m > 0\textrm{ even} \\ | 
| 2531 |  |  | 1 & m = -1\textrm{ or }0, | 
| 2532 |  |  | \end{array}\right. | 
| 2533 |  |  | \label{eq:doubleFactorial} | 
| 2534 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2535 |  |  | and $c_0(r_{ij})$ is erfc$(\alpha r_{ij})$. This generating function | 
| 2536 |  |  | is similar in form to those obtained by researchers for the | 
| 2537 |  |  | application of the Ewald sum to | 
| 2538 |  |  | multipoles.\cite{Smith82,Smith98,Aguado03} | 
| 2539 |  |  |  | 
| 2540 |  |  | Returning to the dipole-dipole example, the potential consists of a | 
| 2541 |  |  | portion dependent upon $r^{-5}$ and another dependent upon | 
| 2542 |  |  | $r^{-3}$. In the damped dipole-dipole potential, | 
| 2543 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2544 |  |  | V_\textrm{Ddd} = 3\frac{(\boldsymbol{\mu}_i\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}) | 
| 2545 |  |  | (\boldsymbol{\mu}_j\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij})}{r^5_{ij}} | 
| 2546 |  |  | c_2(r_{ij}) - | 
| 2547 |  |  | \frac{\boldsymbol{\mu}_i\cdot\boldsymbol{\mu}_j}{r^3_{ij}} | 
| 2548 |  |  | c_1(r_{ij}), | 
| 2549 |  |  | \label{eq:dampDipoleDipole} | 
| 2550 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2551 |  |  | $c_2(r_{ij})$ and $c_1(r_{ij})$ respectively dampen these two | 
| 2552 |  |  | parts. The forces for the damped dipole-dipole interaction, | 
| 2553 |  |  | \begin{equation} | 
| 2554 |  |  | \begin{split} | 
| 2555 |  |  | F_\textrm{Ddd} = &15\frac{(\boldsymbol{\mu}_i\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}) | 
| 2556 |  |  | (\boldsymbol{\mu}_j\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij})\mathbf{r}_{ij}}{r^7_{ij}} | 
| 2557 |  |  | c_3(r_{ij})\\ &- | 
| 2558 |  |  | 3\frac{\boldsymbol{\mu}_i\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}\cdot\hat{\boldsymbol{\mu}}_j + | 
| 2559 |  |  | \boldsymbol{\mu}_j\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}\cdot\hat{\boldsymbol{\mu}}_i + | 
| 2560 |  |  | \boldsymbol{\mu}_i\cdot\boldsymbol{\mu}_j\cdot\mathbf{r}_{ij}} | 
| 2561 |  |  | {r^5_{ij}} c_2(r_{ij}), | 
| 2562 |  |  | \end{split} | 
| 2563 |  |  | \label{eq:dampDipoleDipoleForces} | 
| 2564 |  |  | \end{equation} | 
| 2565 |  |  | rely on higher order damping functions because we perform another | 
| 2566 |  |  | gradient operation. In this manner, we can dampen higher order | 
| 2567 |  |  | multipolar interactions along with the monopole interactions, allowing | 
| 2568 |  |  | us to include multipoles in simulations involving damped electrostatic | 
| 2569 |  |  | interactions. | 
| 2570 |  |  |  | 
| 2571 |  |  |  | 
| 2572 |  |  | \section{Damping and Dielectric Constants}\label{sec:dampingDielectric} | 
| 2573 |  |  |  | 
| 2574 |  |  | In section \ref{sec:t5peThermo}, we observed that the choice of | 
| 2575 |  |  | damping coefficient plays a major role in the calculated dielectric | 
| 2576 |  |  | constant. This is not too surprising given the results for damping | 
| 2577 |  |  | parameter influence on the long-time correlated motions of the NaCl | 
| 2578 |  |  | crystal in section \ref{sec:LongTimeDynamics}. The static dielectric | 
| 2579 |  |  | constant is calculated from the long-time fluctuations of the system's | 
| 2580 |  |  | accumulated dipole moment (Eq. (\ref{eq:staticDielectric})), so it is | 
| 2581 |  |  | going to be quite sensitive to the choice of damping parameter. We | 
| 2582 |  |  | would like to choose an optimal damping constant for any particular | 
| 2583 |  |  | cutoff radius choice that would properly capture the dielectric | 
| 2584 |  |  | behavior of the liquid. | 
| 2585 |  |  |  | 
| 2586 |  |  | In order to find these optimal values, we mapped out the static | 
| 2587 |  |  | dielectric constant as a function of both the damping parameter and | 
| 2588 |  |  | cutoff radius for several different water models. To calculate the | 
| 2589 | chrisfen | 2975 | static dielectric constant, we performed 5ns $NPT$ calculations on | 
| 2590 |  |  | systems of 512 water molecules, using the TIP5P-E, TIP4P-Ew, SPC/E, | 
| 2591 | chrisfen | 2973 | and SSD/RF water models. TIP4P-Ew is a reparametrized version of the | 
| 2592 |  |  | four-point transferable intermolecular potential (TIP4P) for water | 
| 2593 |  |  | targeted for use with the Ewald summation.\cite{Horn04} SSD/RF is the | 
| 2594 |  |  | reaction field modified variant of the soft sticky dipole (SSD) model | 
| 2595 | chrisfen | 2975 | for water\cite{Fennell04} This model is discussed in more detail in | 
| 2596 |  |  | the next chapter. One thing to note about it, electrostatic | 
| 2597 |  |  | interactions are handled via dipole-dipole interactions rather than | 
| 2598 |  |  | charge-charge interactions like the other three models. Damping of the | 
| 2599 |  |  | dipole-dipole interaction was handled as described in section | 
| 2600 |  |  | \ref{sec:dampingMultipoles}. Each of these systems were studied with | 
| 2601 |  |  | cutoff radii of 9, 10, 11, and 12\AA\ and with damping parameter values | 
| 2602 |  |  | ranging from 0 to 0.35\AA$^{-1}$. | 
| 2603 | chrisfen | 2973 | \begin{figure} | 
| 2604 |  |  | \centering | 
| 2605 | chrisfen | 2975 | \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/dielectricMap.pdf} | 
| 2606 |  |  | \caption{The static dielectric constant for the TIP5P-E (A), TIP4P-Ew | 
| 2607 |  |  | (B), SPC/E (C), and SSD/RF (D) water models as a function of cutoff | 
| 2608 |  |  | radius ($R_\textrm{c}$) and damping coefficient ($\alpha$).} | 
| 2609 | chrisfen | 2974 | \label{fig:dielectricMap} | 
| 2610 | chrisfen | 2973 | \end{figure} | 
| 2611 |  |  |  | 
| 2612 | chrisfen | 2974 | The results of these calculations are displayed in figure | 
| 2613 |  |  | \ref{fig:dielectricMap} in the form of shaded contour plots. An | 
| 2614 |  |  | interesting aspect of all four contour plots is that the dielectric | 
| 2615 |  |  | constant is effectively linear with respect to $\alpha$ and | 
| 2616 | chrisfen | 2975 | $R_\textrm{c}$ in the low to moderate damping regions, and the slope | 
| 2617 |  |  | is 0.025\AA$^{-1}\cdot R_\textrm{c}^{-1}$. Another point to note is | 
| 2618 |  |  | that choosing $\alpha$ and $R_\textrm{c}$ identical to those used in | 
| 2619 |  |  | studies with the Ewald summation results in the same calculated | 
| 2620 |  |  | dielectric constant. As an example, in the paper outlining the | 
| 2621 |  |  | development of TIP5P-E, the real-space cutoff and Ewald coefficient | 
| 2622 |  |  | were tethered to the system size, and for a 512 molecule system are | 
| 2623 |  |  | approximately 12\AA\ and 0.25\AA$^{-1}$ respectively.\cite{Rick04} | 
| 2624 |  |  | These parameters resulted in a dielectric constant of 92$\pm$14, while | 
| 2625 |  |  | with {\sc sf} these parameters give a dielectric constant of | 
| 2626 |  |  | 90.8$\pm$0.9. Another example comes from the TIP4P-Ew paper where | 
| 2627 |  |  | $\alpha$ and $R_\textrm{c}$ were chosen to be 9.5\AA\ and | 
| 2628 |  |  | 0.35\AA$^{-1}$, and these parameters resulted in a $\epsilon_0$ equal | 
| 2629 |  |  | to 63$\pm$1.\cite{Horn04} We did not perform calculations with these | 
| 2630 |  |  | exact parameters, but interpolating between surrounding values gives a | 
| 2631 |  |  | $\epsilon_0$ of 61$\pm$1. Seeing a dependence of the dielectric | 
| 2632 |  |  | constant on $\alpha$ and $R_\textrm{c}$ with the {\sc sf} technique, | 
| 2633 |  |  | it might be interesting to investigate the dielectric dependence of | 
| 2634 |  |  | the real-space Ewald parameters. | 
| 2635 | chrisfen | 2974 |  | 
| 2636 | chrisfen | 2975 | Although it is tempting to choose damping parameters equivalent to | 
| 2637 |  |  | these Ewald examples, the results discussed in sections | 
| 2638 |  |  | \ref{sec:EnergyResults} through \ref{sec:IndividualResults} indicate | 
| 2639 |  |  | that values this high are destructive to both the energetics and | 
| 2640 |  |  | dynamics. Ideally, $\alpha$ should not exceed 0.3\AA$^{-1}$ for any of | 
| 2641 |  |  | the cutoff values in this range. If the optimal damping parameter is | 
| 2642 |  |  | chosen to be midway between 0.275 and 0.3\AA$^{-1}$ (0.2875\AA$^{-1}$) | 
| 2643 |  |  | at the 9\AA\ cutoff, then the linear trend with $R_\textrm{c}$ will | 
| 2644 |  |  | always keep $\alpha$ below 0.3\AA$^{-1}$. This linear progression | 
| 2645 |  |  | would give values of 0.2875, 0.2625, 0.2375, and 0.2125\AA$^{-1}$ for | 
| 2646 |  |  | cutoff radii of 9, 10, 11, and 12\AA. Setting this to be the default | 
| 2647 |  |  | behavior for the damped {\sc sf} technique will result in consistent | 
| 2648 |  |  | dielectric behavior for these and other condensed molecular systems, | 
| 2649 |  |  | regardless of the chosen cutoff radius. The static dielectric | 
| 2650 |  |  | constants for TIP5P-E, TIP4P-Ew, SPC/E, and SSD/RF will be | 
| 2651 |  |  | approximately fixed at 74, 52, 58, and 89 respectively. These values | 
| 2652 |  |  | are generally lower than the values reported in the literature; | 
| 2653 |  |  | however, the relative dielectric behavior scales as expected when | 
| 2654 |  |  | comparing the models to one another. | 
| 2655 | chrisfen | 2974 |  | 
| 2656 | chrisfen | 2973 | \section{Conclusions}\label{sec:PairwiseConclusions} | 
| 2657 |  |  |  | 
| 2658 |  |  | The above investigation of pairwise electrostatic summation techniques | 
| 2659 |  |  | shows that there are viable and computationally efficient alternatives | 
| 2660 |  |  | to the Ewald summation.  These methods are derived from the damped and | 
| 2661 |  |  | cutoff-neutralized Coulombic sum originally proposed by Wolf | 
| 2662 |  |  | \textit{et al.}\cite{Wolf99} In particular, the {\sc sf} | 
| 2663 |  |  | method, reformulated above as equations (\ref{eq:DSFPot}) and | 
| 2664 |  |  | (\ref{eq:DSFForces}), shows a remarkable ability to reproduce the | 
| 2665 |  |  | energetic and dynamic characteristics exhibited by simulations | 
| 2666 |  |  | employing lattice summation techniques.  The cumulative energy | 
| 2667 |  |  | difference results showed the undamped {\sc sf} and moderately damped | 
| 2668 | chrisfen | 2975 | {\sc sp} methods produced results nearly identical to the Ewald | 
| 2669 |  |  | summation.  Similarly for the dynamic features, the undamped or | 
| 2670 |  |  | moderately damped {\sc sf} and moderately damped {\sc sp} methods | 
| 2671 |  |  | produce force and torque vector magnitude and directions very similar | 
| 2672 |  |  | to the expected values.  These results translate into long-time | 
| 2673 |  |  | dynamic behavior equivalent to that produced in simulations using the | 
| 2674 |  |  | Ewald summation. A detailed study of water simulations showed that | 
| 2675 |  |  | liquid properties calculated when using {\sc sf} will also be | 
| 2676 |  |  | equivalent to those obtained using the Ewald summation. | 
| 2677 | chrisfen | 2973 |  | 
| 2678 |  |  | As in all purely-pairwise cutoff methods, these methods are expected | 
| 2679 |  |  | to scale approximately {\it linearly} with system size, and they are | 
| 2680 |  |  | easily parallelizable.  This should result in substantial reductions | 
| 2681 |  |  | in the computational cost of performing large simulations. | 
| 2682 |  |  |  | 
| 2683 |  |  | Aside from the computational cost benefit, these techniques have | 
| 2684 |  |  | applicability in situations where the use of the Ewald sum can prove | 
| 2685 |  |  | problematic.  Of greatest interest is their potential use in | 
| 2686 |  |  | interfacial systems, where the unmodified lattice sum techniques | 
| 2687 |  |  | artificially accentuate the periodicity of the system in an | 
| 2688 |  |  | undesirable manner.  There have been alterations to the standard Ewald | 
| 2689 |  |  | techniques, via corrections and reformulations, to compensate for | 
| 2690 |  |  | these systems; but the pairwise techniques discussed here require no | 
| 2691 |  |  | modifications, making them natural tools to tackle these problems. | 
| 2692 |  |  | Additionally, this transferability gives them benefits over other | 
| 2693 |  |  | pairwise methods, like reaction field, because estimations of physical | 
| 2694 |  |  | properties (e.g. the dielectric constant) are unnecessary. | 
| 2695 |  |  |  | 
| 2696 |  |  | If a researcher is using Monte Carlo simulations of large chemical | 
| 2697 |  |  | systems containing point charges, most structural features will be | 
| 2698 |  |  | accurately captured using the undamped {\sc sf} method or the {\sc sp} | 
| 2699 |  |  | method with an electrostatic damping of 0.2\AA$^{-1}$.  These methods | 
| 2700 |  |  | would also be appropriate for molecular dynamics simulations where the | 
| 2701 |  |  | data of interest is either structural or short-time dynamical | 
| 2702 |  |  | quantities.  For long-time dynamics and collective motions, the safest | 
| 2703 |  |  | pairwise method we have evaluated is the {\sc sf} method with an | 
| 2704 | chrisfen | 2975 | electrostatic damping between 0.2 and 0.25\AA$^{-1}$. It is also | 
| 2705 |  |  | important to note that the static dielectric constant in water | 
| 2706 |  |  | simulations is highly dependent on both $\alpha$ and | 
| 2707 |  |  | $R_\textrm{c}$. For consistent dielectric behavior, the damped {\sc | 
| 2708 |  |  | sf} method should use an $\alpha$ of 0.2175\AA$^{-1}$ for an | 
| 2709 |  |  | $R_\textrm{c}$ of 12\AA, and $\alpha$ should decrease by | 
| 2710 |  |  | 0.025\AA$^{-1}$ for every 1\AA\ increase in cutoff radius. | 
| 2711 | chrisfen | 2973 |  | 
| 2712 |  |  | We are not suggesting that there is any flaw with the Ewald sum; in | 
| 2713 |  |  | fact, it is the standard by which these simple pairwise sums have been | 
| 2714 |  |  | judged.  However, these results do suggest that in the typical | 
| 2715 |  |  | simulations performed today, the Ewald summation may no longer be | 
| 2716 |  |  | required to obtain the level of accuracy most researchers have come to | 
| 2717 |  |  | expect. |