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1 kstocke1 3927 \documentclass[journal = jctcce, manuscript = article]{achemso}
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20 kstocke1 3927 \usepackage[version=3]{mhchem} % this is a great package for formatting chemical reactions
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22    
23 gezelter 4063 \title{A method for creating thermal and angular momentum fluxes in
24     non-periodic simulations}
25 kstocke1 3927
26     \author{Kelsey M. Stocker}
27     \author{J. Daniel Gezelter}
28     \email{gezelter@nd.edu}
29     \affiliation[University of Notre Dame]{251 Nieuwland Science Hall\\ Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry\\ University of Notre Dame\\ Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
30    
31     \begin{document}
32    
33 gezelter 4063 \begin{tocentry}
34 gezelter 4076 \includegraphics[width=3.6cm]{figures/NP20} \includegraphics[width=3.6cm]{figures/E25-75}
35 gezelter 4063 \end{tocentry}
36    
37    
38 kstocke1 3927 \newcolumntype{A}{p{1.5in}}
39     \newcolumntype{B}{p{0.75in}}
40    
41     % \author{Kelsey M. Stocker and J. Daniel
42     % Gezelter\footnote{Corresponding author. \ Electronic mail:
43     % gezelter@nd.edu} \\
44     % 251 Nieuwland Science Hall, \\
45     % Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,\\
46     % University of Notre Dame\\
47     % Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
48    
49 gezelter 4063 %\date{\today}
50 kstocke1 3927
51 gezelter 4063 %\maketitle
52 kstocke1 3927
53 gezelter 4063 %\begin{doublespace}
54 kstocke1 3927
55     \begin{abstract}
56    
57 gezelter 4063 We present a new reverse non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (RNEMD)
58     method that can be used with non-periodic simulation cells. This
59     method applies thermal and/or angular momentum fluxes between two
60     arbitrary regions of the simulation, and is capable of creating
61     stable temperature and angular velocity gradients while conserving
62     total energy and angular momentum. One particularly useful
63     application is the exchange of kinetic energy between two concentric
64     spherical regions, which can be used to generate thermal transport
65     between nanoparticles and the solvent that surrounds them. The
66     rotational couple to the solvent (a measure of interfacial friction)
67     is also available via this method. As demonstrations and tests of
68     the new method, we have computed the thermal conductivities of gold
69     nanoparticles and water clusters, the shear viscosity of a water
70     cluster, the interfacial thermal conductivity ($G$) of a solvated
71     gold nanoparticle and the interfacial friction of a variety of
72     solvated gold nanostructures.
73 kstocke1 3927
74     \end{abstract}
75    
76     \newpage
77    
78     %\narrowtext
79    
80     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
81     % **INTRODUCTION**
82     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
83     \section{Introduction}
84    
85 gezelter 4063 Non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (NEMD) methods impose a temperature
86     or velocity {\it gradient} on a
87     system,\cite{Ashurst:1975eu,Evans:1982oq,Erpenbeck:1984qe,Evans:1986nx,Vogelsang:1988qv,Maginn:1993kl,Hess:2002nr,Schelling:2002dp,Berthier:2002ai,Evans:2002tg,Vasquez:2004ty,Backer:2005sf,Jiang:2008hc,Picalek:2009rz}
88     and use linear response theory to connect the resulting thermal or
89     momentum {\it flux} to transport coefficients of bulk materials,
90     \begin{equation}
91     j_z(p_x) = -\eta \frac{\partial v_x}{\partial z}, \hspace{0.5in}
92     J_z = \lambda \frac{\partial T}{\partial z}.
93     \end{equation}
94     Here, $\frac{\partial T}{\partial z}$ and $\frac{\partial
95     v_x}{\partial z}$ are the imposed thermal and momentum gradients,
96     and as long as the imposed gradients are relatively small, the
97     corresponding fluxes, $J_z$ and $j_z(p_x)$, have a linear relationship
98     to the gradients. The coefficients that provide this relationship
99     correspond to physical properties of the bulk material, either the
100     shear viscosity $(\eta)$ or thermal conductivity $(\lambda)$. For
101     systems which include phase boundaries or interfaces, it is often
102     unclear what gradient (or discontinuity) should be imposed at the
103     boundary between materials.
104 kstocke1 3927
105 gezelter 4063 In contrast, reverse Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics (RNEMD)
106     methods impose an unphysical {\it flux} between different regions or
107     ``slabs'' of the simulation
108     box.\cite{Muller-Plathe:1997wq,Muller-Plathe:1999ao,Patel:2005zm,Shenogina:2009ix,Tenney:2010rp,Kuang:2010if,Kuang:2011ef,Kuang:2012fe,Stocker:2013cl}
109     The system responds by developing a temperature or velocity {\it
110     gradient} between the two regions. The gradients which develop in
111     response to the applied flux have the same linear response
112     relationships to the transport coefficient of interest. Since the
113     amount of the applied flux is known exactly, and measurement of a
114     gradient is generally less complicated, imposed-flux methods typically
115     take shorter simulation times to obtain converged results. At
116     interfaces, the observed gradients often exhibit near-discontinuities
117     at the boundaries between dissimilar materials. RNEMD methods do not
118     need many trajectories to provide information about transport
119     properties, and they have become widely used to compute thermal and
120     mechanical transport in both homogeneous liquids and
121     solids~\cite{Muller-Plathe:1997wq,Muller-Plathe:1999ao,Tenney:2010rp}
122     as well as heterogeneous
123     interfaces.\cite{Patel:2005zm,Shenogina:2009ix,Kuang:2010if,Kuang:2011ef,Kuang:2012fe,Stocker:2013cl}
124 kstocke1 4009
125 gezelter 4060 The strengths of specific algorithms for imposing the flux between two
126     different slabs of the simulation cell has been the subject of some
127     renewed interest. The original RNEMD approach used kinetic energy or
128     momentum exchange between particles in the two slabs, either through
129     direct swapping of momentum vectors or via virtual elastic collisions
130     between atoms in the two regions. There have been recent
131     methodological advances which involve scaling all particle velocities
132 gezelter 4063 in both slabs.\cite{Kuang:2010if,Kuang:2012fe} Constraint equations
133     are simultaneously imposed to require the simulation to conserve both
134     total energy and total linear momentum. The most recent and simplest
135     of the velocity scaling approaches allows for simultaneous shearing
136     (to provide viscosity estimates) as well as scaling (to provide
137     information about thermal conductivity).\cite{Kuang:2012fe}
138 kstocke1 4009
139 gezelter 4076 To date, the primary method of studying heat transfer at {\it curved}
140     nanoscale interfaes has involved transient non-equilibrium molecular
141     dynamics and temperature relaxation.\cite{Lervik:2009fk} RNEMD methods
142     have only been used in periodic simulation cells where the exchange
143     regions are physically separated along one of the axes of the
144     simulation cell. This limits the applicability to infinite planar
145     interfaces which are perpendicular to the applied flux. In order to
146     model steady-state non-equilibrium distributions for curved surfaces
147     (e.g. hot nanoparticles in contact with colder solvent), or for
148     regions that are not planar slabs, the method requires some
149     generalization for non-parallel exchange regions. In the following
150     sections, we present a new velocity shearing and scaling (VSS) RNEMD
151     algorithm which has been explicitly designed for non-periodic
152     simulations, and use the method to compute some thermal transport and
153     solid-liquid friction at the surfaces of spherical and ellipsoidal
154     nanoparticles.
155 gezelter 4060
156 kstocke1 4009 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
157     % **METHODOLOGY**
158     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
159 gezelter 4063 \section{Velocity shearing and scaling (VSS) for non-periodic systems}
160 kstocke1 4009
161 gezelter 4063 The original periodic VSS-RNEMD approach uses a series of simultaneous
162     velocity shearing and scaling exchanges between the two
163     slabs.\cite{Kuang:2012fe} This method imposes energy and linear
164     momentum conservation constraints while simultaneously creating a
165     desired flux between the two slabs. These constraints ensure that all
166     configurations are sampled from the same microcanonical (NVE)
167     ensemble.
168 kstocke1 4009
169 kstocke1 3994 \begin{figure}
170 kstocke1 4071 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/npVSS2}
171 kstocke1 3994 \caption{Schematics of periodic (left) and non-periodic (right)
172     Velocity Shearing and Scaling RNEMD. A kinetic energy or momentum
173     flux is applied from region B to region A. Thermal gradients are
174     depicted by a color gradient. Linear or angular velocity gradients
175     are shown as arrows.}
176     \label{fig:VSS}
177     \end{figure}
178 gezelter 3977
179 gezelter 4063 We have extended the VSS method for use in {\it non-periodic}
180     simulations, in which the ``slabs'' have been generalized to two
181     separated regions of space. These regions could be defined as
182     concentric spheres (as in figure \ref{fig:VSS}), or one of the regions
183     can be defined in terms of a dynamically changing ``hull'' comprising
184     the surface atoms of the cluster. This latter definition is identical
185     to the hull used in the Langevin Hull algorithm.\cite{Vardeman2011}
186     For the non-periodic variant, the constraints fix both the total
187     energy and total {\it angular} momentum of the system while
188     simultaneously imposing a thermal and angular momentum flux between
189     the two regions.
190 gezelter 3977
191 gezelter 4063 After a time interval of $\Delta t$, the particle velocities
192     ($\mathbf{v}_i$ and $\mathbf{v}_j$) in the two shells ($A$ and $B$)
193     are modified by a velocity scaling coefficient ($a$ and $b$) and by a
194     rotational shearing term ($\mathbf{c}_a$ and $\mathbf{c}_b$). The
195     scalars $a$ and $b$ collectively provide a thermal exchange between
196     the two regions. One of the values is larger than 1, and the other
197     smaller. To conserve total energy and angular momentum, the values of
198     these two scalars are coupled. The vectors ($\mathbf{c}_a$ and
199     $\mathbf{c}_b$) provide a relative rotational shear to the velocities
200     of the particles within the two regions, and these vectors must also
201     be coupled to constrain the total angular momentum.
202 kstocke1 4003
203 gezelter 4063 Once the values of the scaling and shearing factors are known, the
204     velocity changes are applied,
205 gezelter 3977 \begin{displaymath}
206     \begin{array}{rclcl}
207     & \underline{~~~~~~~~\mathrm{scaling}~~~~~~~~} & &
208     \underline{\mathrm{rotational~shearing}} \\ \\
209     \mathbf{v}_i $~~~$\leftarrow &
210     a \left(\mathbf{v}_i - \langle \omega_a
211     \rangle \times \mathbf{r}_i\right) & + & \mathbf{c}_a \times \mathbf{r}_i \\
212     \mathbf{v}_j $~~~$\leftarrow &
213     b \left(\mathbf{v}_j - \langle \omega_b
214     \rangle \times \mathbf{r}_j\right) & + & \mathbf{c}_b \times \mathbf{r}_j
215     \end{array}
216     \end{displaymath}
217 kstocke1 4009 Here $\langle\mathbf{\omega}_a\rangle$ and $\langle\mathbf{\omega}_b\rangle$ are the instantaneous angular
218     velocities of each shell, and $\mathbf{r}_i$ is the position of particle $i$ relative to a fixed point in space
219     (usually the center of mass of the cluster). Particles in the shells also receive an additive ``angular shear''
220     to their velocities. The amount of shear is governed by the imposed angular momentum flux,
221 gezelter 3977 $\mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L})$,
222     \begin{eqnarray}
223     \mathbf{c}_a & = & - \mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L}) \cdot
224     \overleftrightarrow{I_a}^{-1} \Delta t + \langle \omega_a \rangle \label{eq:bc}\\
225     \mathbf{c}_b & = & + \mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L}) \cdot
226     \overleftrightarrow{I_b}^{-1} \Delta t + \langle \omega_b \rangle \label{eq:bh}
227     \end{eqnarray}
228 gezelter 4063 where $\overleftrightarrow{I}_{\{a,b\}}$ is the moment of inertia
229     tensor for each of the two shells.
230 gezelter 3977
231 gezelter 4063 To simultaneously impose a thermal flux ($J_r$) between the shells we
232     use energy conservation constraints,
233 gezelter 3977 \begin{eqnarray}
234     K_a - J_r \Delta t & = & a^2 \left(K_a - \frac{1}{2}\langle
235     \omega_a \rangle \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_a} \cdot \langle \omega_a
236     \rangle \right) + \frac{1}{2} \mathbf{c}_a \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_a}
237     \cdot \mathbf{c}_a \label{eq:Kc}\\
238     K_b + J_r \Delta t & = & b^2 \left(K_b - \frac{1}{2}\langle
239     \omega_b \rangle \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_b} \cdot \langle \omega_b
240     \rangle \right) + \frac{1}{2} \mathbf{c}_b \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_b} \cdot \mathbf{c}_b \label{eq:Kh}
241     \end{eqnarray}
242 kstocke1 4009 Simultaneous solution of these quadratic formulae for the scaling coefficients, $a$ and $b$, will ensure that
243     the simulation samples from the original microcanonical (NVE) ensemble. Here $K_{\{a,b\}}$ is the instantaneous
244     translational kinetic energy of each shell. At each time interval, we solve for $a$, $b$, $\mathbf{c}_a$, and
245     $\mathbf{c}_b$, subject to the imposed angular momentum flux, $j_r(\mathbf{L})$, and thermal flux, $J_r$,
246     values. The new particle velocities are computed, and the simulation continues. System configurations after the
247     transformations have exactly the same energy ({\it and} angular momentum) as before the moves.
248 gezelter 3977
249 gezelter 4063 As the simulation progresses, the velocity transformations can be
250     performed on a regular basis, and the system will develop a
251     temperature and/or angular velocity gradient in response to the
252 gezelter 4064 applied flux. By fitting the radial temperature gradient, it is
253     straightforward to obtain the bulk thermal conductivity,
254     \begin{equation}
255     J_r = -\lambda \left( \frac{\partial T}{\partial r}\right)
256     \end{equation}
257     from the radial kinetic energy flux $(J_r)$ that was applied during
258     the simulation. In practice, it is significantly easier to use the
259     integrated form of Fourier's law for spherical geometries. In
260     sections \ref{sec:thermal} -- \ref{sec:rotation} we outline ways of
261     obtaining interfacial transport coefficients from these RNEMD
262     simulations.
263 gezelter 3977
264 kstocke1 4003 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
265     % **COMPUTATIONAL DETAILS**
266     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
267     \section{Computational Details}
268    
269 gezelter 4063 The new VSS-RNEMD methodology for non-periodic system geometries has
270     been implemented in our group molecular dynamics code,
271     OpenMD.\cite{Meineke:2005gd,openmd} We have tested the new method to
272     calculate the thermal conductance of a gold nanoparticle and SPC/E
273     water cluster, and compared the results with previous bulk RNEMD
274     values, as well as experiment. We have also investigated the
275     interfacial thermal conductance and interfacial rotational friction
276     for gold nanostructures solvated in hexane as a function of
277     nanoparticle size and shape.
278 kstocke1 4009
279 kstocke1 3927 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
280 kstocke1 4009 % FORCE FIELD PARAMETERS
281 kstocke1 3927 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
282 gezelter 4063 \subsection{Force field}
283 kstocke1 3927
284 gezelter 4063 Gold -- gold interactions are described by the quantum Sutton-Chen
285     (QSC) model.\cite{PhysRevB.59.3527} The QSC parameters are tuned to
286     experimental properties such as density, cohesive energy, and elastic
287     moduli and include zero-point quantum corrections.
288 kstocke1 3927
289 gezelter 4063 The SPC/E water model~\cite{Berendsen87} is particularly useful for
290     validation of conductivities and shear viscosities. This model has
291     been used to previously test other RNEMD and NEMD approaches, and
292     there are reported values for thermal conductivies and shear
293     viscosities at a wide range of thermodynamic conditions that are
294     available for direct comparison.\cite{Bedrov:2000,Kuang:2010if}
295 kstocke1 3947
296 gezelter 4063 Hexane molecules are described by the TraPPE united atom
297     model,\cite{TraPPE-UA.alkanes} which provides good computational
298     efficiency and reasonable accuracy for bulk thermal conductivity
299     values. In this model, sites are located at the carbon centers for
300     alkyl groups. Bonding interactions, including bond stretches and bends
301     and torsions, were used for intra-molecular sites closer than 3
302     bonds. For non-bonded interactions, Lennard-Jones potentials were
303     used. We have previously utilized both united atom (UA) and all-atom
304     (AA) force fields for thermal
305     conductivity,\cite{Kuang:2011ef,Kuang:2012fe,Stocker:2013cl} and since
306     the united atom force fields cannot populate the high-frequency modes
307     that are present in AA force fields, they appear to work better for
308     modeling thermal conductance at metal/ligand interfaces.
309 kstocke1 3947
310 gezelter 4063 Gold -- hexane nonbonded interactions are governed by pairwise
311     Lennard-Jones parameters derived from Vlugt \emph{et
312     al}.\cite{vlugt:cpc2007154} They fitted parameters for the
313     interaction between Au and CH$_{\emph x}$ pseudo-atoms based on the
314     effective potential of Hautman and Klein for the Au(111)
315     surface.\cite{hautman:4994}
316 kstocke1 4009
317 kstocke1 3947 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
318 kstocke1 4009 % NON-PERIODIC DYNAMICS
319 kstocke1 3947 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
320 kstocke1 4009 % \subsection{Dynamics for non-periodic systems}
321     %
322     % We have run all tests using the Langevin Hull non-periodic simulation methodology.\cite{Vardeman2011} The
323     % Langevin Hull is especially useful for simulating heterogeneous mixtures of materials with different
324     % compressibilities, which are typically problematic for traditional affine transform methods. We have had
325     % success applying this method to several different systems including bare metal nanoparticles, liquid water
326     % clusters, and explicitly solvated nanoparticles. Calculated physical properties such as the isothermal
327     % compressibility of water and the bulk modulus of gold nanoparticles are in good agreement with previous
328     % theoretical and experimental results. The Langevin Hull uses a Delaunay tesselation to create a dynamic convex
329     % hull composed of triangular facets with vertices at atomic sites. Atomic sites included in the hull are coupled
330     % to an external bath defined by a temperature, pressure and viscosity. Atoms not included in the hull are
331     % subject to standard Newtonian dynamics.
332 kstocke1 3947
333 kstocke1 4009 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
334     % SIMULATION PROTOCOL
335     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
336     \subsection{Simulation protocol}
337 kstocke1 3947
338 gezelter 4063 In all cases, systems were equilibrated under non-periodic
339     isobaric-isothermal (NPT) conditions -- using the Langevin Hull
340     methodology\cite{Vardeman2011} -- before any non-equilibrium methods
341     were introduced. For heterogeneous systems, the gold nanoparticles and
342     ellipsoids were created from a bulk fcc lattice and were thermally
343     equilibrated before being solvated in hexane. Packmol\cite{packmol}
344     was used to solvate previously equilibrated gold nanostructures within
345     a spherical droplet of hexane.
346 kstocke1 3947
347 gezelter 4063 Once equilibrated, thermal or angular momentum fluxes were applied for
348     1 - 2 ns, until stable temperature or angular velocity gradients had
349     developed. Systems containing liquids were run under moderate pressure
350     (5 atm) and temperatures (230 K) to avoid the formation of a vapor
351     layer at the boundary of the cluster. Pressure was applied to the
352     system via the non-periodic Langevin Hull.\cite{Vardeman2011} However,
353     thermal coupling to the external temperature and pressure bath was
354     removed to avoid interference with the imposed RNEMD flux.
355 kstocke1 3947
356 gezelter 4063 Because the method conserves \emph{total} angular momentum, systems
357     which contain a metal nanoparticle embedded in a significant volume of
358     solvent will still experience nanoparticle diffusion inside the
359     solvent droplet. To aid in computing the rotational friction in these
360     systems, a single gold atom at the origin of the coordinate system was
361     assigned a mass $10,000 \times$ its original mass. The bonded and
362     nonbonded interactions for this atom remain unchanged and the heavy
363     atom is excluded from the RNEMD exchanges. The only effect of this
364     gold atom is to effectively pin the nanoparticle at the origin of the
365     coordinate system, while still allowing for rotation. For rotation of
366     the gold ellipsoids we added two of these heavy atoms along the axis
367     of rotation, separated by an equal distance from the origin of the
368     coordinate system. These heavy atoms prevent off-axis tumbling of the
369     nanoparticle and allow for measurement of rotational friction relative
370     to a particular axis of the ellipsoid.
371 kstocke1 3947
372 gezelter 4063 Angular velocity data was collected for the heterogeneous systems
373     after a brief period of imposed flux to initialize rotation of the
374     solvated nanostructure. Doing so ensures that we overcome the initial
375     static friction and calculate only the \emph{dynamic} interfacial
376     rotational friction.
377    
378 kstocke1 3947 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
379     % THERMAL CONDUCTIVITIES
380     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
381     \subsection{Thermal conductivities}
382 gezelter 4064 \label{sec:thermal}
383 kstocke1 3947
384 gezelter 4064 To compute the thermal conductivities of bulk materials, the
385     integrated form of Fourier's Law of heat conduction in radial
386     coordinates can be used to obtain an expression for the heat transfer
387     rate between concentric spherical shells:
388 kstocke1 3947 \begin{equation}
389 gezelter 4064 q_r = - \frac{4 \pi \lambda (T_b - T_a)}{\frac{1}{r_a} - \frac{1}{r_b}}
390 kstocke1 4003 \label{eq:Q}
391 kstocke1 3947 \end{equation}
392 gezelter 4064 The heat transfer rate, $q_r$, is constant in spherical geometries,
393     while the heat flux, $J_r$ depends on the surface area of the two
394     shells. $\lambda$ is the thermal conductivity, and $T_{a,b}$ and
395     $r_{a,b}$ are the temperatures and radii of the two concentric RNEMD
396     regions, respectively.
397 kstocke1 3947
398 gezelter 4064 A kinetic energy flux is created using VSS-RNEMD moves, and the
399     temperature in each of the radial shells is recorded. The resulting
400     temperature profiles are analyzed to yield information about the
401     interfacial thermal conductance. As the simulation progresses, the
402     VSS moves are performed on a regular basis, and the system develops a
403     thermal or velocity gradient in response to the applied flux. Once a
404     stable thermal gradient has been established between the two regions,
405     the thermal conductivity, $\lambda$, can be calculated using a linear
406 gezelter 4063 regression of the thermal gradient, $\langle \frac{dT}{dr} \rangle$:
407 kstocke1 3991
408     \begin{equation}
409 gezelter 4064 \lambda = \frac{r_a}{r_b} \frac{q_r}{4 \pi \langle \frac{dT}{dr} \rangle}
410 kstocke1 4003 \label{eq:lambda}
411 kstocke1 3991 \end{equation}
412    
413 gezelter 4064 The rate of heat transfer, $q_r$, between the two RNEMD regions is
414     easily obtained from either the applied kinetic energy flux and the
415     area of the smaller of the two regions, or from the total amount of
416     transferred kinetic energy and the run time of the simulation.
417 kstocke1 3991 \begin{equation}
418 gezelter 4064 q_r = J_r A = \frac{KE}{t}
419 kstocke1 4003 \label{eq:heat}
420 kstocke1 3991 \end{equation}
421    
422 gezelter 4065 \subsubsection{Thermal conductivity of nanocrystalline gold}
423     Calculated values for the thermal conductivity of a 40 \AA$~$ radius
424     gold nanoparticle (15707 atoms) at a range of kinetic energy flux
425     values are shown in Table \ref{table:goldTC}. For these calculations,
426     the hot and cold slabs were excluded from the linear regression of the
427     thermal gradient.
428    
429 gezelter 4076 \begin{table}
430     \caption{Calculated thermal gradients of a crystalline gold
431     nanoparticle of radius 40 \AA\ subject to a range of applied
432     kinetic energy fluxes. Calculations were performed at an average
433     temperature of 300 K. Gold-gold interactions are described by the
434 gezelter 4065 Quantum Sutton-Chen potential.}
435 gezelter 4076 \label{table:goldTC}
436     \begin{tabular}{cc}
437     \\ \hline \hline
438     {$J_r$} & {$\langle dT/dr \rangle$} \\
439     {\footnotesize(kcal / fs $\cdot$ \AA$^{2}$)} & {\footnotesize(K /
440     \AA)} \\ \hline \\
441     3.25$\times 10^{-6}$ & 0.114 \\
442     6.50$\times 10^{-6}$ & 0.232 \\
443     1.30$\times 10^{-5}$ & 0.449 \\
444     3.25$\times 10^{-5}$ & 1.180 \\
445     6.50$\times 10^{-5}$ & 2.339 \\ \hline \hline
446     \end{tabular}
447     \end{table}
448 gezelter 4065
449 gezelter 4076 The measured thermal gradients $\langle dT/dr \rangle$ are linearly
450     dependent on the applied kinetic energy flux $J_r$. The calculated
451     thermal conductivity value, $\lambda = 1.004 \pm
452     0.009$~W~/~m~$\cdot$~K compares well with previous {\it bulk} QSC
453     values of 1.08~--~1.26~W~/~m~$\cdot$~K\cite{Kuang:2010if}, though
454     still significantly lower than the experimental value of
455     320~W~/~m~$\cdot$~K, as the QSC force field neglects the significant
456     electronic contributions to thermal conductivity. We note that there
457     is only a minimal effect on the computed thermal conductivity of gold
458     when comparing periodic (bulk) simulations carried out at the same
459     densities as those used here.
460 gezelter 4065
461     \subsubsection{Thermal conductivity of a droplet of SPC/E water}
462    
463     Calculated values for the thermal conductivity of a cluster of 6912
464 gezelter 4076 SPC/E water molecules were computed with a range of applied kinetic
465     energy fluxes. As with the gold nanoparticle, the measured slopes were
466     linearly dependent on the applied kinetic energy flux $J_r$, and the
467     RNEMD regions were excluded from the $\langle dT/dr \rangle$ fit (see
468     Fig. \ref{fig:lambda_G}).
469 gezelter 4065
470 gezelter 4076 The computed mean value of the thermal conductivity, $\lambda = 0.884
471     \pm 0.013$~W~/~m~$\cdot$~K, compares well with previous
472     non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations of bulk SPC/E that were
473     carried out in periodic geometries.\cite{Zhang2005,Romer2012} These
474     simualtions gave conductivity values from 0.81--0.87~W~/~m~$\cdot$~K,
475     and all of the simulated values are approximately 30-45\% higher than the
476     experimental thermal conductivity of water, which has been measured at
477     0.61~W~/~m~$\cdot$~K.\cite{WagnerKruse}
478 gezelter 4065
479 kstocke1 4072 \begin{figure}
480 gezelter 4076 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/lambda_G}
481     \caption{Upper panel: temperature profile of a typical SPC/E water
482     droplet. The RNEMD simulation transfers kinetic energy from region
483     A to region B, and the system responds by creating a temperature
484     gradient (circles). The fit to determine $\langle dT/dr \rangle$ is
485     carried out between the two RNEMD exchange regions. Lower panel:
486     temperature profile for a solvated Au nanoparticle ($r = 20$\AA).
487     The temperature differences used to compute the total Kapitza
488     resistance (and interfacial thermal conductance) are indicated with
489     arrows.}
490     \label{fig:lambda_G}
491 kstocke1 4072 \end{figure}
492 gezelter 4065
493 kstocke1 4072
494 gezelter 4076 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
495 kstocke1 3947 % INTERFACIAL THERMAL CONDUCTANCE
496 gezelter 4076 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
497 kstocke1 3947 \subsection{Interfacial thermal conductance}
498 gezelter 4064 \label{sec:interfacial}
499 kstocke1 3947
500 gezelter 4064 The interfacial thermal conductance, $G$, of a heterogeneous interface
501     located at $r_0$ can be understood as the change in thermal
502     conductivity in a direction normal $(\mathbf{\hat{n}})$ to the
503     interface,
504     \begin{equation}
505 gezelter 4076 G = \left(\nabla\lambda \cdot \mathbf{\hat{n}}\right)_{r_0}
506 gezelter 4064 \end{equation}
507     For heterogeneous systems such as the solvated nanoparticle shown in
508     Figure \ref{fig:NP20}, the interfacial thermal conductance at the
509     surface of the nanoparticle can be determined using a kinetic energy
510 gezelter 4076 flux applied using the RNEMD method developed above.
511    
512     In spherical geometries, it is most convenient to begin by finding the
513     Kapitza or interfacial thermal resistance for a thin spherical shell,
514 gezelter 4064 \begin{equation}
515 gezelter 4076 R_K = \frac{1}{G} = \frac{\Delta
516     T}{J_r}
517 gezelter 4064 \end{equation}
518     where $\Delta T$ is the temperature drop from the interior to the
519 gezelter 4076 exterior of the shell. For two concentric shells, the kinetic energy
520 gezelter 4064 flux ($J_r$) is not the same (as the surface areas are not the same),
521     but the heat transfer rate, $q_r = J_r A$ is constant. The thermal
522     resistance of a shell with interior radius $r$ is most conveniently
523     written as
524     \begin{equation}
525 gezelter 4076 R_K = \frac{1}{q_r} \Delta T 4 \pi r^2.
526     \label{eq:RK}
527 gezelter 4064 \end{equation}
528    
529 kstocke1 4009 \begin{figure}
530 gezelter 4076 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/NP20}
531     \caption{A gold nanoparticle with a radius of 20 \AA$\,$ solvated in
532     TraPPE-UA hexane. A kinetic energy flux is applied between the
533     nanoparticle and an outer shell of solvent to obtain the interfacial
534     thermal conductance, $G$, and the interfacial rotational resistance
535     $\Xi^{rr}$ is determined using an angular momentum flux. }
536     \label{fig:NP20}
537 kstocke1 4009 \end{figure}
538 kstocke1 4003
539 gezelter 4076 To model the thermal conductance across a wide interface (or multiple
540     interfaces) it is useful to consider concentric shells as resistors
541     wired in series. The resistance of the shells is then additive, and
542     the interfacial thermal conductance is the inverse of the total
543     Kapitza resistance:
544 kstocke1 3947 \begin{equation}
545 gezelter 4076 \frac{1}{G} = R_\mathrm{total} = \frac{1}{q_r} \sum_i \left(T_{i+i} -
546     T_i\right) 4 \pi r_i^2
547 kstocke1 3947 \end{equation}
548 gezelter 4076 This series can be extended for any number of adjacent shells,
549 gezelter 4064 allowing for the calculation of the interfacial thermal conductance
550     for interfaces of considerable thickness, such as self-assembled
551     ligand monolayers on a metal surface.
552 kstocke1 3947
553 gezelter 4065 \subsubsection{Interfacial thermal conductance of solvated gold
554     nanoparticles}
555     Calculated interfacial thermal conductance ($G$) values for three
556     sizes of gold nanoparticles and a flat Au(111) surface solvated in
557 gezelter 4076 TraPPE-UA hexane~\cite{Stocker:2013cl} are shown in Table
558     \ref{table:G}.
559 kstocke1 4003
560 gezelter 4076 \begin{table}
561 gezelter 4065 \caption{Calculated interfacial thermal conductance ($G$) values for
562     gold nanoparticles of varying radii solvated in TraPPE-UA
563     hexane. The nanoparticle $G$ values are compared to previous
564     simulation results for a Au(111) interface in TraPPE-UA hexane.}
565 gezelter 4076 \label{table:G}
566     \begin{tabular}{cc}
567     \hline \hline
568     {Nanoparticle Radius} & {$G$}\\
569     {\footnotesize(\AA)} & {\footnotesize(MW / m$^{2}$ $\cdot$ K)}\\ \hline
570     20 & {47.1 $\pm$ 5.0} \\
571     30 & {45.4 $\pm$ 1.2} \\
572     40 & {46.5 $\pm$ 2.1} \\
573     \hline
574     Au(111) & {30.2} \\
575     \hline \hline
576     \end{tabular}
577     \end{table}
578 gezelter 4065
579     The introduction of surface curvature increases the interfacial
580     thermal conductance by a factor of approximately $1.5$ relative to the
581 gezelter 4076 flat interface, although there is no apparent size-dependence in the
582     $G$ values obtained from our calculations. This is quite different
583     behavior than the size-dependence observed by Lervik \textit{et
584 gezelter 4077 al.}\cite{Lervik:2009fk} in their NEMD simulations of decane
585     droplets in water. In the liquid/liquid case, the surface tension is
586     strongly dependent on the droplet size, and the interfacial
587     resistivity increases with surface tension. In our case, the surface
588     tension of the solid / liquid interface does not have a strong
589     dependence on the particle radius at these particle sizes.
590 gezelter 4065
591 gezelter 4076 Simulations of larger nanoparticles may yet demonstrate limiting $G$
592     values close to the flat Au(111) slab, although any spherical particle
593     will have a significant fraction of the surface atoms in non-111
594     facets. It is not clear at this point whether the increase in thermal
595     conductance for the spherical particles is due to the increased
596     population of undercoordinated surface atoms, or to increased solid
597     angle space available for phonon scattering into the solvent. These
598     two possibilities do open up some interesting avenues for
599     investigation.
600    
601 kstocke1 3947 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
602 kstocke1 4009 % INTERFACIAL ROTATIONAL FRICTION
603 kstocke1 3947 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
604 kstocke1 4009 \subsection{Interfacial rotational friction}
605 gezelter 4064 \label{sec:rotation}
606     The interfacial rotational resistance tensor, $\Xi^{rr}$, can be
607     calculated for heterogeneous nanostructure/solvent systems by applying
608     an angular momentum flux between the solvated nanostructure and a
609     spherical shell of solvent at the outer edge of the cluster. An
610     angular velocity gradient develops in response to the applied flux,
611     causing the nanostructure and solvent shell to rotate in opposite
612     directions about a given axis.
613 kstocke1 3947
614 kstocke1 4009 \begin{figure}
615     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/E25-75}
616 gezelter 4064 \caption{A gold prolate ellipsoid of length 65 \AA$\,$ and width 25
617     \AA$\,$ solvated by TraPPE-UA hexane. An angular momentum flux is
618     applied between the ellipsoid and an outer shell of solvent.}
619 kstocke1 4009 \label{fig:E25-75}
620     \end{figure}
621    
622 gezelter 4064 Analytical solutions for the diagonal elements of the rotational
623     resistance tensor for solvated spherical body of radius $r$ under
624     ideal stick boundary conditions can be estimated using Stokes' law
625 kstocke1 3947 \begin{equation}
626 gezelter 4064 \Xi^{rr}_{stick} = 8 \pi \eta r^3,
627     \label{eq:Xisphere}
628 kstocke1 3947 \end{equation}
629 gezelter 4064 where $\eta$ is the dynamic viscosity of the surrounding solvent.
630 kstocke1 3947
631 gezelter 4064 For general ellipsoids with semiaxes $\alpha$, $\beta$, and $\gamma$,
632     Perrin's extension of Stokes' law provides exact solutions for
633     symmetric prolate $(\alpha \geq \beta = \gamma)$ and oblate $(\alpha <
634 gezelter 4076 \beta = \gamma)$ ellipsoids under ideal stick conditions. The Perrin
635     elliptic integral parameter,
636 kstocke1 3947 \begin{equation}
637 gezelter 4064 S = \frac{2}{\sqrt{\alpha^2 - \beta^2}} \ln \left[ \frac{\alpha + \sqrt{\alpha^2 - \beta^2}}{\beta} \right].
638 kstocke1 4003 \label{eq:S}
639 kstocke1 3947 \end{equation}
640    
641 gezelter 4064 For a prolate ellipsoidal nanoparticle (see Fig. \ref{fig:E25-75}),
642     the rotational resistance tensor $\Xi^{rr}$ is a $3 \times 3$ diagonal
643     matrix with elements
644 gezelter 4066 \begin{align}
645     \Xi^{rr}_\alpha =& \frac{32 \pi}{3} \eta \frac{ \left(
646     \alpha^2 - \beta^2 \right) \beta^2}{2\alpha - \beta^2 S}
647     \\ \nonumber \\
648     \Xi^{rr}_{\beta,\gamma} =& \frac{32 \pi}{3} \eta \frac{ \left( \alpha^4 - \beta^4 \right)}{ \left( 2\alpha^2 - \beta^2 \right)S - 2\alpha},
649     \label{eq:Xirr}
650     \end{align}
651 gezelter 4064 corresponding to rotation about the long axis ($\alpha$), and each of
652     the equivalent short axes ($\beta$ and $\gamma$), respectively.
653 kstocke1 3991
654 gezelter 4064 Previous VSS-RNEMD simulations of the interfacial friction of the
655 gezelter 4076 planar Au(111) / hexane interface have shown that the flat interface
656     exists within slip boundary conditions.\cite{Kuang:2012fe} Hu and
657 gezelter 4064 Zwanzig\cite{Zwanzig} investigated the rotational friction
658     coefficients for spheroids under slip boundary conditions and obtained
659     numerial results for a scaling factor to be applied to
660 gezelter 4076 $\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{stick}}$ as a function of ratio of the shorter
661     semiaxes to the longer. Under slip conditions, rotation of any
662     sphere, and rotation of a prolate ellipsoid about its long axis does
663     not displace any solvent, so the resulting $\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{slip}}$
664     approaches $0$. For rotation of a prolate ellipsoid (with the aspect
665     ratio shown here) about its short axis, Hu and Zwanzig obtained
666     $\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{slip}}$ values of $35.9\%$ of the analytical
667     $\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{stick}}$ result. This reduced rotational
668     resistance accounts for the reduced interfacial friction under slip
669     boundary conditions.
670 kstocke1 3991
671 gezelter 4076 The measured rotational friction coefficient,
672     $\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{meas}}$ at the interface can be extracted from
673     non-periodic VSS-RNEMD simulations quite easily using the total
674     applied torque ($\tau$) and the observed angular velocity of the solid
675     structure ($\omega_\mathrm{solid}$),
676 kstocke1 3947 \begin{equation}
677 gezelter 4076 \Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{meas}} = \frac{\tau}{\omega_\mathrm{solid}}
678 kstocke1 4003 \label{eq:Xieff}
679 kstocke1 3947 \end{equation}
680    
681 gezelter 4076 The total applied torque required to overcome the interfacial friction
682     and maintain constant rotation of the gold is
683 kstocke1 3991 \begin{equation}
684 gezelter 4076 \tau = \frac{j_r(\mathbf{L}) \cdot A}{2}
685 kstocke1 4003 \label{eq:tau}
686 kstocke1 3991 \end{equation}
687 gezelter 4076 where $j_r(\mathbf{L})$ is the applied angular momentum flux, $A$ is
688     the surface area of the solid nanoparticle, and the factor of $2$ is
689     present because the torque is exerted on both the particle and the
690     counter-rotating solvent shell.
691 kstocke1 3991
692 gezelter 4076 \subsubsection{Rotational friction for gold nanostructures in hexane}
693 kstocke1 3991
694 gezelter 4076 Table \ref{table:couple} shows the calculated rotational friction
695     coefficients $\Xi^{rr}$ for spherical gold nanoparticles and a prolate
696     ellipsoidal gold nanorod solvated in TraPPE-UA hexane. An angular
697     momentum flux was applied between an outer shell of solvent that was
698     at least 20 \AA\ away from the surface of the particle (region $A$)
699     and the gold nanostructure (region $B$). Dynamic viscosity estimates
700     $(\eta)$ for TraPPE-UA hexane under these particular temperature and
701     pressure conditions was determined by applying a traditional VSS-RNEMD
702     linear momentum flux to a periodic box of this solvent.
703 kstocke1 3927
704 gezelter 4076 \begin{table}
705     \caption{Comparison of rotational friction coefficients under ideal stick
706     ($\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{stick}}$) and
707     slip ($\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{slip}}$) conditions, along with the measured
708     ($\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{meas}}$) rotational friction coefficients of gold
709     nanostructures solvated in TraPPE-UA hexane at 230 K. The ellipsoid
710     is oriented with the long axis along the $z$ direction.}
711     \label{table:couple}
712     \begin{tabular}{lccccc}
713 kstocke1 3927 \\ \hline \hline
714 gezelter 4076 {Structure} & {Axis of Rotation} & {$\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{stick}}$} & {$\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{slip}}$} & {$\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{meas}}$} & {$\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{meas}}$ / $\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{stick}}$}\\
715 kstocke1 4003 {} & {} & {\footnotesize(amu A$^2$ / fs)} & {\footnotesize(amu A$^2$ / fs)} & {\footnotesize(amu A$^2$ / fs)} & \\ \hline
716 gezelter 4076 Sphere (r = 20 \AA) & {$x = y = z$} & {3314} & 0 & {2386 $\pm$ 14} & {0.720 $\pm$ 0.004}\\
717     Sphere (r = 30 \AA) & {$x = y = z$} & {11749}& 0 & {8415 $\pm$ 274} & {0.716 $\pm$ 0.023}\\
718     Sphere (r = 40 \AA) & {$x = y = z$} & {34464}& 0 & {47544 $\pm$ 3051} & {1.380 $\pm$ 0.089}\\
719     Prolate Ellipsoid & {$x = y$} & {4991} & {1792} & {3128 $\pm$ 166} & {0.627 $\pm$ 0.033}\\
720     Prolate Ellipsoid & {$z$} & {1993} & 0 & {1590 $\pm$ 30} & {0.798 $\pm$ 0.015}
721 kstocke1 4003 \\ \hline \hline
722 gezelter 4076 \end{tabular}
723     \end{table}
724 kstocke1 3927
725 gezelter 4076 The results for $\Xi^{rr}_{\mathit{meas}}$ show that, in contrast with
726     the flat Au(111) / hexane interface, gold nanostructures solvated by
727 gezelter 4077 hexane are closer to stick than slip boundary conditions. At these
728     length scales, the nanostructures are not perfect spheroids due to
729 gezelter 4076 atomic `roughening' of the surface and therefore experience increased
730 gezelter 4077 interfacial friction, deviating significantly from the ideal slip
731     case. The 20 and 30~\AA\ radius nanoparticles experience approximately
732     70\% of the ideal stick boundary interfacial friction. Rotation of the
733     ellipsoid about its long axis more closely approaches the stick limit
734     than rotation about the short axis, which at first seems
735     counterintuitive. However, the `propellor' motion caused by rotation
736     around the short axis may exclude solvent from the rotation cavity or
737     move a sufficient amount of solvent along with the gold that a smaller
738     interfacial friction is actually experienced. The largest nanoparticle
739     (40 \AA$\,$ radius) appears to experience interfacial friction in
740     excess of the ideal stick conditions. Although the solvent velocity
741     field does not appear in the calculation of $\Xi^{rr}$, we do note
742     that the largest particle has a solvent velocity field that requires
743     fitting to the $v(r,\theta) = \sin\theta \left( \frac{A}{r} + B r^2
744     \right)$ whereas the solvent velocity fields for the other particles
745     can be fit with just the first term. CHECK THIS.
746 kstocke1 3994
747 kstocke1 3927 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
748     % **DISCUSSION**
749     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
750     \section{Discussion}
751    
752 gezelter 4077 We have adapted the VSS-RNEMD methodology so that it can be used to
753     apply kinetic energy and angular momentum fluxes in explicitly
754     non-periodic simulation geometries. Non-periodic VSS-RNEMD preserves
755     the strengths of the original periodic variant, specifically Boltzmann
756     velocity distributions and minimal thermal anisotropy, while extending
757     the constraints to conserve total energy and total \emph{angular}
758     momentum. This method also maintains the ability to impose the kinetic
759     energy and angular momentum fluxes either jointly or individually.
760 kstocke1 3927
761 gezelter 4077 This method enables steady-state calculation of interfacial thermal
762     conductance and interfacial rotational friction in heterogeneous
763     clusters. We have demonstrated the abilities of the method on some
764     familiar systems (nanocrystalline gold, SPC/E water) as well as on
765     interfaces that have been studied only in planar geometries. For the
766     bulk systems that are well-understood in periodic geometries, the
767     nonperiodic VSS-RNEMD provides very similar estimates of the thermal
768     conductivity to other simulation methods.
769 kstocke1 4009
770 gezelter 4077 For nanoparticle-to-solvent heat transfer, we have observed that the
771     interfacial conductance exhibits a $1.5\times$ increase over the
772     planar Au(111) interface, although we do not see any dependence of the
773     conductance on the particle size. Because the surface tension effects
774     present in liquid/liquid heat transfer are not strong contributors
775     here, we suggest two possible mechanisms for the $1.5\times$ increase
776     over the planar surface: (1) the nanoparticles have an increased
777     population of undercoordinated surface atoms that are more efficient
778     at transferring vibrational energy to the solvent, or (2) there is
779     increased solid angle space available for phonon scattering into the
780     solvent. The second of these explanations would have a significant
781     dependence on the radius of spherical particles, although crystalline
782     faceting of the particles may be enough to reduce this dependence on
783     particle radius. These two possibilities do open up some interesting
784     avenues for further exploration.
785    
786     One area that this method opens up that was not available for periodic
787     simulation cells is direct computation of the solid/liquid rotational
788     friction coefficients of nanostructures. The systems we have
789     investigated (gold nanospheres and prolate ellipsoids) have analytic
790     stick and approximate slip solutions provided via hydrodynamics, and
791     our molecular simulations indicate that the bare metallic
792     nanoparticles are closer to the stick than they are to slip
793     conditions. This is markedly different behavior than we see for the
794     solid / liquid friction at planar Au(111) interfaces, where the
795     solvents experience a nearly-laminar flow over the surface in previous
796     simulations. Schmidt and Skinner previously computed the behavior of
797     spherical tag particles in molecular dynamics simulations, and showed
798     that {\it slip} boundary conditions for translational resistance may
799     be more appropriate for molecule-sized spheres embedded in a sea of
800     spherical solvent particles.\cite{Schmidt:2004fj,Schmidt:2003kx} The
801     size of the gold nanoparticles studied here and the structuring of the
802     surfaces of the particles appears to bring the behavior closer to
803     stick boundaries. Exactly where the slip-stick crossover takes place
804     is also an interesting avenue for exploration.
805    
806     The ability to interrogate explicitly non-periodic effects
807     (e.g. surface curvature, edge effects between facets, and the splay of
808     ligand surface groups) on interfacial transport means that this method
809     can be applied to systems of broad experimental and theoretical
810     interest.
811    
812 kstocke1 3927 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
813     % **ACKNOWLEDGMENTS**
814     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
815 gezelter 4063 \begin{acknowledgement}
816     The authors thank Dr. Shenyu Kuang for helpful discussions. Support
817     for this project was provided by the National Science Foundation
818     under grant CHE-0848243. Computational time was provided by the
819     Center for Research Computing (CRC) at the University of Notre Dame.
820     \end{acknowledgement}
821 kstocke1 3927
822    
823     \newpage
824    
825     \bibliography{nonperiodicVSS}
826    
827 gezelter 4063 %\end{doublespace}
828 kstocke1 3934 \end{document}

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