| 1 | %\documentclass[prb,aps,times,twocolumn,tabularx]{revtex4} | 
| 2 | \documentclass[11pt]{article} | 
| 3 | \usepackage{endfloat} | 
| 4 | \usepackage{amsmath} | 
| 5 | \usepackage{epsf} | 
| 6 | \usepackage{berkeley} | 
| 7 | \usepackage{setspace} | 
| 8 | \usepackage{tabularx} | 
| 9 | \usepackage{graphicx} | 
| 10 | \usepackage[ref]{overcite} | 
| 11 | %\usepackage{berkeley} | 
| 12 | %\usepackage{curves} | 
| 13 | \pagestyle{plain} | 
| 14 | \pagenumbering{arabic} | 
| 15 | \oddsidemargin 0.0cm \evensidemargin 0.0cm | 
| 16 | \topmargin -21pt \headsep 10pt | 
| 17 | \textheight 9.0in \textwidth 6.5in | 
| 18 | \brokenpenalty=10000 | 
| 19 | \renewcommand{\baselinestretch}{1.2} | 
| 20 | \renewcommand\citemid{\ } % no comma in optional reference note | 
| 21 |  | 
| 22 | \begin{document} | 
| 23 |  | 
| 24 | \title{On the structural and transport properties of the soft sticky | 
| 25 | dipole (SSD) and related single point water models} | 
| 26 |  | 
| 27 | \author{Christopher J. Fennell and J. Daniel Gezelter\footnote{Corresponding author. \ Electronic mail: gezelter@nd.edu} \\ | 
| 28 | Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry\\ University of Notre Dame\\ | 
| 29 | Notre Dame, Indiana 46556} | 
| 30 |  | 
| 31 | \date{\today} | 
| 32 |  | 
| 33 | \maketitle | 
| 34 |  | 
| 35 | \begin{abstract} | 
| 36 | The density maximum and temperature dependence of the self-diffusion | 
| 37 | constant were investigated for the soft sticky dipole (SSD) water | 
| 38 | model and two related re-parameterizations of this single-point model. | 
| 39 | A combination of microcanonical and isobaric-isothermal molecular | 
| 40 | dynamics simulations were used to calculate these properties, both | 
| 41 | with and without the use of reaction field to handle long-range | 
| 42 | electrostatics.  The isobaric-isothermal (NPT) simulations of the | 
| 43 | melting of both ice-$I_h$ and ice-$I_c$ showed a density maximum near | 
| 44 | 260 K.  In most cases, the use of the reaction field resulted in | 
| 45 | calculated densities which were were significantly lower than | 
| 46 | experimental densities.  Analysis of self-diffusion constants shows | 
| 47 | that the original SSD model captures the transport properties of | 
| 48 | experimental water very well in both the normal and super-cooled | 
| 49 | liquid regimes.  We also present our re-parameterized versions of SSD | 
| 50 | for use both with the reaction field or without any long-range | 
| 51 | electrostatic corrections.  These are called the SSD/RF and SSD/E | 
| 52 | models respectively.  These modified models were shown to maintain or | 
| 53 | improve upon the experimental agreement with the structural and | 
| 54 | transport properties that can be obtained with either the original SSD | 
| 55 | or the density corrected version of the original model (SSD1). | 
| 56 | Additionally, a novel low-density ice structure is presented | 
| 57 | which appears to be the most stable ice structure for the entire SSD | 
| 58 | family. | 
| 59 | \end{abstract} | 
| 60 |  | 
| 61 | \newpage | 
| 62 |  | 
| 63 | %\narrowtext | 
| 64 |  | 
| 65 |  | 
| 66 | %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | 
| 67 | %                              BODY OF TEXT | 
| 68 | %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | 
| 69 |  | 
| 70 | \section{Introduction} | 
| 71 |  | 
| 72 | One of the most important tasks in the simulation of biochemical | 
| 73 | systems is the proper depiction of the aqueous environment of the | 
| 74 | molecules of interest.  In some cases (such as in the simulation of | 
| 75 | phospholipid bilayers), the majority of the calculations that are | 
| 76 | performed involve interactions with or between solvent molecules. | 
| 77 | Thus, the properties one may observe in biochemical simulations are | 
| 78 | going to be highly dependent on the physical properties of the water | 
| 79 | model that is chosen. | 
| 80 |  | 
| 81 | There is an especially delicate balance between computational | 
| 82 | efficiency and the ability of the water model to accurately predict | 
| 83 | the properties of bulk | 
| 84 | water.\cite{Jorgensen83,Berendsen87,Jorgensen00} For example, the | 
| 85 | TIP5P model improves on the structural and transport properties of | 
| 86 | water relative to the previous TIP models, yet this comes at a greater | 
| 87 | than 50\% increase in computational | 
| 88 | cost.\cite{Jorgensen01,Jorgensen00} | 
| 89 |  | 
| 90 | One recently developed model that largely succeeds in retaining the | 
| 91 | accuracy of bulk properties while greatly reducing the computational | 
| 92 | cost is the Soft Sticky Dipole (SSD) water | 
| 93 | model.\cite{Ichiye96,Ichiye96b,Ichiye99,Ichiye03} The SSD model was | 
| 94 | developed by Ichiye \emph{et al.} as a modified form of the | 
| 95 | hard-sphere water model proposed by Bratko, Blum, and | 
| 96 | Luzar.\cite{Bratko85,Bratko95} SSD is a {\it single point} model which | 
| 97 | has an interaction site that is both a point dipole along with a | 
| 98 | Lennard-Jones core.  However, since the normal aligned and | 
| 99 | anti-aligned geometries favored by point dipoles are poor mimics of | 
| 100 | local structure in liquid water, a short ranged ``sticky'' potential | 
| 101 | is also added.  The sticky potential directs the molecules to assume | 
| 102 | the proper hydrogen bond orientation in the first solvation | 
| 103 | shell. | 
| 104 |  | 
| 105 | The interaction between two SSD water molecules \emph{i} and \emph{j} | 
| 106 | is given by the potential | 
| 107 | \begin{equation} | 
| 108 | u_{ij} = u_{ij}^{LJ} (r_{ij})\ + u_{ij}^{dp} | 
| 109 | ({\bf r}_{ij},{\bf \Omega}_i,{\bf \Omega}_j)\ + | 
| 110 | u_{ij}^{sp} | 
| 111 | ({\bf r}_{ij},{\bf \Omega}_i,{\bf \Omega}_j), | 
| 112 | \end{equation} | 
| 113 | where the ${\bf r}_{ij}$ is the position vector between molecules | 
| 114 | \emph{i} and \emph{j} with magnitude $r_{ij}$, and | 
| 115 | ${\bf \Omega}_i$ and ${\bf \Omega}_j$ represent the orientations of | 
| 116 | the two molecules. The Lennard-Jones and dipole interactions are given | 
| 117 | by the following familiar forms: | 
| 118 | \begin{equation} | 
| 119 | u_{ij}^{LJ}(r_{ij}) = 4\epsilon | 
| 120 | \left[\left(\frac{\sigma}{r_{ij}}\right)^{12}-\left(\frac{\sigma}{r_{ij}}\right)^{6}\right] | 
| 121 | \ , | 
| 122 | \end{equation} | 
| 123 | and | 
| 124 | \begin{equation} | 
| 125 | u_{ij}^{dp} = \frac{|\mu_i||\mu_j|}{4 \pi \epsilon_0 r_{ij}^3} \left( | 
| 126 | \hat{\bf u}_i \cdot \hat{\bf u}_j - 3(\hat{\bf u}_i\cdot\hat{\bf | 
| 127 | r}_{ij})(\hat{\bf u}_j\cdot\hat{\bf r}_{ij}) \right)\ , | 
| 128 | \end{equation} | 
| 129 | where $\hat{\bf u}_i$ and $\hat{\bf u}_j$ are the unit vectors along | 
| 130 | the dipoles of molecules $i$ and $j$ respectively. $|\mu_i|$ and | 
| 131 | $|\mu_j|$ are the strengths of the dipole moments, and $\hat{\bf | 
| 132 | r}_{ij}$ is the unit vector pointing from molecule $j$ to molecule | 
| 133 | $i$. | 
| 134 |  | 
| 135 | The sticky potential is somewhat less familiar: | 
| 136 | \begin{equation} | 
| 137 | u_{ij}^{sp} | 
| 138 | ({\bf r}_{ij},{\bf \Omega}_i,{\bf \Omega}_j) = | 
| 139 | \frac{\nu_0}{2}[s(r_{ij})w({\bf r}_{ij},{\bf \Omega}_i,{\bf \Omega}_j) | 
| 140 | + s^\prime(r_{ij})w^\prime({\bf r}_{ij},{\bf \Omega}_i,{\bf | 
| 141 | \Omega}_j)]\ . | 
| 142 | \label{stickyfunction} | 
| 143 | \end{equation} | 
| 144 | Here, $\nu_0$ is a strength parameter for the sticky potential, and | 
| 145 | $s$ and $s^\prime$ are cubic switching functions which turn off the | 
| 146 | sticky interaction beyond the first solvation shell. The $w$ function | 
| 147 | can be thought of as an attractive potential with tetrahedral | 
| 148 | geometry: | 
| 149 | \begin{equation} | 
| 150 | w({\bf r}_{ij},{\bf \Omega}_i,{\bf \Omega}_j)=\sin\theta_{ij}\sin2\theta_{ij}\cos2\phi_{ij}, | 
| 151 | \end{equation} | 
| 152 | while the $w^\prime$ function counters the normal aligned and | 
| 153 | anti-aligned structures favored by point dipoles: | 
| 154 | \begin{equation} | 
| 155 | w^\prime({\bf r}_{ij},{\bf \Omega}_i,{\bf \Omega}_j) = (\cos\theta_{ij}-0.6)^2(\cos\theta_{ij}+0.8)^2-w^\circ, | 
| 156 | \end{equation} | 
| 157 | It should be noted that $w$ is proportional to the sum of the $Y_3^2$ | 
| 158 | and $Y_3^{-2}$ spherical harmonics (a linear combination which | 
| 159 | enhances the tetrahedral geometry for hydrogen bonded structures), | 
| 160 | while $w^\prime$ is a purely empirical function.  A more detailed | 
| 161 | description of the functional parts and variables in this potential | 
| 162 | can be found in the original SSD | 
| 163 | articles.\cite{Ichiye96,Ichiye96b,Ichiye99,Ichiye03} | 
| 164 |  | 
| 165 | Since SSD is a single-point {\it dipolar} model, the force | 
| 166 | calculations are simplified significantly relative to the standard | 
| 167 | {\it charged} multi-point models. In the original Monte Carlo | 
| 168 | simulations using this model, Ichiye {\it et al.} reported that using | 
| 169 | SSD decreased computer time by a factor of 6-7 compared to other | 
| 170 | models.\cite{Ichiye96} What is most impressive is that this savings | 
| 171 | did not come at the expense of accurate depiction of the liquid state | 
| 172 | properties.  Indeed, SSD maintains reasonable agreement with the Soper | 
| 173 | data for the structural features of liquid | 
| 174 | water.\cite{Soper86,Ichiye96} Additionally, the dynamical properties | 
| 175 | exhibited by SSD agree with experiment better than those of more | 
| 176 | computationally expensive models (like TIP3P and | 
| 177 | SPC/E).\cite{Ichiye99} The combination of speed and accurate depiction | 
| 178 | of solvent properties makes SSD a very attractive model for the | 
| 179 | simulation of large scale biochemical simulations. | 
| 180 |  | 
| 181 | One feature of the SSD model is that it was parameterized for use with | 
| 182 | the Ewald sum to handle long-range interactions.  This would normally | 
| 183 | be the best way of handling long-range interactions in systems that | 
| 184 | contain other point charges.  However, our group has recently become | 
| 185 | interested in systems with point dipoles as mimics for neutral, but | 
| 186 | polarized regions on molecules (e.g. the zwitterionic head group | 
| 187 | regions of phospholipids).  If the system of interest does not contain | 
| 188 | point charges, the Ewald sum and even particle-mesh Ewald become | 
| 189 | computational bottlenecks.  Their respective ideal $N^\frac{3}{2}$ and | 
| 190 | $N\log N$ calculation scaling orders for $N$ particles can become | 
| 191 | prohibitive when $N$ becomes large.\cite{Darden99} In applying this | 
| 192 | water model in these types of systems, it would be useful to know its | 
| 193 | properties and behavior under the more computationally efficient | 
| 194 | reaction field (RF) technique, or even with a simple cutoff. This | 
| 195 | study addresses these issues by looking at the structural and | 
| 196 | transport behavior of SSD over a variety of temperatures with the | 
| 197 | purpose of utilizing the RF correction technique.  We then suggest | 
| 198 | modifications to the parameters that result in more realistic bulk | 
| 199 | phase behavior.  It should be noted that in a recent publication, some | 
| 200 | of the original investigators of the SSD water model have suggested | 
| 201 | adjustments to the SSD water model to address abnormal density | 
| 202 | behavior (also observed here), calling the corrected model | 
| 203 | SSD1.\cite{Ichiye03} In what follows, we compare our | 
| 204 | reparamaterization of SSD with both the original SSD and SSD1 models | 
| 205 | with the goal of improving the bulk phase behavior of an SSD-derived | 
| 206 | model in simulations utilizing the Reaction Field. | 
| 207 |  | 
| 208 | \section{Methods} | 
| 209 |  | 
| 210 | Long-range dipole-dipole interactions were accounted for in this study | 
| 211 | by using either the reaction field method or by resorting to a simple | 
| 212 | cubic switching function at a cutoff radius.  Under the first method, | 
| 213 | the magnitude of the reaction field acting on dipole $i$ is | 
| 214 | \begin{equation} | 
| 215 | \mathcal{E}_{i} = \frac{2(\varepsilon_{s} - 1)}{2\varepsilon_{s} + 1} | 
| 216 | \frac{1}{r_{c}^{3}} \sum_{j\in{\mathcal{R}}} {\bf \mu}_{j} f(r_{ij})\  , | 
| 217 | \label{rfequation} | 
| 218 | \end{equation} | 
| 219 | where $\mathcal{R}$ is the cavity defined by the cutoff radius | 
| 220 | ($r_{c}$), $\varepsilon_{s}$ is the dielectric constant imposed on the | 
| 221 | system (80 in the case of liquid water), ${\bf \mu}_{j}$ is the dipole | 
| 222 | moment vector of particle $j$ and $f(r_{ij})$ is a cubic switching | 
| 223 | function.\cite{AllenTildesley} The reaction field contribution to the | 
| 224 | total energy by particle $i$ is given by $-\frac{1}{2}{\bf | 
| 225 | \mu}_{i}\cdot\mathcal{E}_{i}$ and the torque on dipole $i$ by ${\bf | 
| 226 | \mu}_{i}\times\mathcal{E}_{i}$.\cite{AllenTildesley}  Use of the reaction | 
| 227 | field is known to alter the bulk orientational properties, such as the | 
| 228 | dielectric relaxation time.  There is particular sensitivity of this | 
| 229 | property on changes in the length of the cutoff | 
| 230 | radius.\cite{Berendsen98} This variable behavior makes reaction field | 
| 231 | a less attractive method than the Ewald sum.  However, for very large | 
| 232 | systems, the computational benefit of reaction field is dramatic. | 
| 233 |  | 
| 234 | We have also performed a companion set of simulations {\it without} a | 
| 235 | surrounding dielectric (i.e. using a simple cubic switching function | 
| 236 | at the cutoff radius) and as a result we have two reparamaterizations | 
| 237 | of SSD which could be used either with or without the Reaction Field | 
| 238 | turned on. | 
| 239 |  | 
| 240 | Simulations to obtain the preferred density were performed in the | 
| 241 | isobaric-isothermal (NPT) ensemble, while all dynamical properties | 
| 242 | were obtained from microcanonical (NVE) simulations done at densities | 
| 243 | matching the NPT density for a particular target temperature.  The | 
| 244 | constant pressure simulations were implemented using an integral | 
| 245 | thermostat and barostat as outlined by Hoover.\cite{Hoover85,Hoover86} | 
| 246 | All molecules were treated as non-linear rigid bodies. Vibrational | 
| 247 | constraints are not necessary in simulations of SSD, because there are | 
| 248 | no explicit hydrogen atoms, and thus no molecular vibrational modes | 
| 249 | need to be considered. | 
| 250 |  | 
| 251 | Integration of the equations of motion was carried out using the | 
| 252 | symplectic splitting method proposed by Dullweber {\it et | 
| 253 | al.}\cite{Dullweber1997} Our reason for selecting this integrator | 
| 254 | centers on poor energy conservation of rigid body dynamics using | 
| 255 | traditional quaternion integration.\cite{Evans77,Evans77b} While quaternions | 
| 256 | may work well for orientational motion under NVT or NPT integrators, | 
| 257 | our limits on energy drift in the microcanonical ensemble were quite | 
| 258 | strict, and the drift under quaternions was substantially greater than | 
| 259 | in the symplectic splitting method.  This steady drift in the total | 
| 260 | energy has also been observed by Kol {\it et al.}\cite{Laird97} | 
| 261 |  | 
| 262 | The key difference in the integration method proposed by Dullweber | 
| 263 | \emph{et al.} is that the entire rotation matrix is propagated from | 
| 264 | one time step to the next.  The additional memory required by the | 
| 265 | algorithm is inconsequential on modern computers, and translating the | 
| 266 | rotation matrix into quaternions for storage purposes makes trajectory | 
| 267 | data quite compact. | 
| 268 |  | 
| 269 | The symplectic splitting method allows for Verlet style integration of | 
| 270 | both translational and orientational motion of rigid bodies. In this | 
| 271 | integration method, the orientational propagation involves a sequence | 
| 272 | of matrix evaluations to update the rotation | 
| 273 | matrix.\cite{Dullweber1997} These matrix rotations are more costly | 
| 274 | than the simpler arithmetic quaternion propagation. With the same time | 
| 275 | step, a 1000 SSD particle simulation shows an average 7\% increase in | 
| 276 | computation time using the symplectic step method in place of | 
| 277 | quaternions. The additional expense per step is justified when one | 
| 278 | considers the ability to use time steps that are nearly twice as large | 
| 279 | under symplectic splitting than would be usable under quaternion | 
| 280 | dynamics.  The energy conservation of the two methods using a number | 
| 281 | of different time steps is illustrated in figure | 
| 282 | \ref{timestep}. | 
| 283 |  | 
| 284 | \begin{figure} | 
| 285 | \begin{center} | 
| 286 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 287 | \epsfbox{timeStep.epsi} | 
| 288 | \caption{Energy conservation using both quaternion based integration and | 
| 289 | the symplectic step method proposed by Dullweber \emph{et al.} with | 
| 290 | increasing time step. The larger time step plots are shifted from the | 
| 291 | true energy baseline (that of $\Delta t$ = 0.1 fs) for clarity.} | 
| 292 | \label{timestep} | 
| 293 | \end{center} | 
| 294 | \end{figure} | 
| 295 |  | 
| 296 | In figure \ref{timestep}, the resulting energy drift at various time | 
| 297 | steps for both the symplectic step and quaternion integration schemes | 
| 298 | is compared.  All of the 1000 SSD particle simulations started with | 
| 299 | the same configuration, and the only difference was the method used to | 
| 300 | handle orientational motion. At time steps of 0.1 and 0.5 fs, both | 
| 301 | methods for propagating the orientational degrees of freedom conserve | 
| 302 | energy fairly well, with the quaternion method showing a slight energy | 
| 303 | drift over time in the 0.5 fs time step simulation. At time steps of 1 | 
| 304 | and 2 fs, the energy conservation benefits of the symplectic step | 
| 305 | method are clearly demonstrated. Thus, while maintaining the same | 
| 306 | degree of energy conservation, one can take considerably longer time | 
| 307 | steps, leading to an overall reduction in computation time. | 
| 308 |  | 
| 309 | Energy drift in the symplectic step simulations was unnoticeable for | 
| 310 | time steps up to 3 fs. A slight energy drift on the | 
| 311 | order of 0.012 kcal/mol per nanosecond was observed at a time step of | 
| 312 | 4 fs, and as expected, this drift increases dramatically | 
| 313 | with increasing time step. To insure accuracy in our microcanonical | 
| 314 | simulations, time steps were set at 2 fs and kept at this value for | 
| 315 | constant pressure simulations as well. | 
| 316 |  | 
| 317 | Proton-disordered ice crystals in both the $I_h$ and $I_c$ lattices | 
| 318 | were generated as starting points for all simulations. The $I_h$ | 
| 319 | crystals were formed by first arranging the centers of mass of the SSD | 
| 320 | particles into a ``hexagonal'' ice lattice of 1024 particles. Because | 
| 321 | of the crystal structure of $I_h$ ice, the simulation box assumed an | 
| 322 | orthorhombic shape with an edge length ratio of approximately | 
| 323 | 1.00$\times$1.06$\times$1.23. The particles were then allowed to | 
| 324 | orient freely about fixed positions with angular momenta randomized at | 
| 325 | 400 K for varying times. The rotational temperature was then scaled | 
| 326 | down in stages to slowly cool the crystals to 25 K. The particles were | 
| 327 | then allowed to translate with fixed orientations at a constant | 
| 328 | pressure of 1 atm for 50 ps at 25 K. Finally, all constraints were | 
| 329 | removed and the ice crystals were allowed to equilibrate for 50 ps at | 
| 330 | 25 K and a constant pressure of 1 atm.  This procedure resulted in | 
| 331 | structurally stable $I_h$ ice crystals that obey the Bernal-Fowler | 
| 332 | rules.\cite{Bernal33,Rahman72} This method was also utilized in the | 
| 333 | making of diamond lattice $I_c$ ice crystals, with each cubic | 
| 334 | simulation box consisting of either 512 or 1000 particles. Only | 
| 335 | isotropic volume fluctuations were performed under constant pressure, | 
| 336 | so the ratio of edge lengths remained constant throughout the | 
| 337 | simulations. | 
| 338 |  | 
| 339 | \section{Results and discussion} | 
| 340 |  | 
| 341 | Melting studies were performed on the randomized ice crystals using | 
| 342 | isobaric-isothermal (NPT) dynamics. During melting simulations, the | 
| 343 | melting transition and the density maximum can both be observed, | 
| 344 | provided that the density maximum occurs in the liquid and not the | 
| 345 | supercooled regime. An ensemble average from five separate melting | 
| 346 | simulations was acquired, each starting from different ice crystals | 
| 347 | generated as described previously. All simulations were equilibrated | 
| 348 | for 100 ps prior to a 200 ps data collection run at each temperature | 
| 349 | setting. The temperature range of study spanned from 25 to 400 K, with | 
| 350 | a maximum degree increment of 25 K. For regions of interest along this | 
| 351 | stepwise progression, the temperature increment was decreased from 25 | 
| 352 | K to 10 and 5 K.  The above equilibration and production times were | 
| 353 | sufficient in that fluctuations in the volume autocorrelation function | 
| 354 | were damped out in all simulations in under 20 ps. | 
| 355 |  | 
| 356 | \subsection{Density Behavior} | 
| 357 |  | 
| 358 | Our initial simulations focused on the original SSD water model, and | 
| 359 | an average density versus temperature plot is shown in figure | 
| 360 | \ref{dense1}. Note that the density maximum when using a reaction | 
| 361 | field appears between 255 and 265 K.  There were smaller fluctuations | 
| 362 | in the density at 260 K than at either 255 or 265, so we report this | 
| 363 | value as the location of the density maximum. Figure \ref{dense1} was | 
| 364 | constructed using ice $I_h$ crystals for the initial configuration; | 
| 365 | though not pictured, the simulations starting from ice $I_c$ crystal | 
| 366 | configurations showed similar results, with a liquid-phase density | 
| 367 | maximum in this same region (between 255 and 260 K). | 
| 368 |  | 
| 369 | \begin{figure} | 
| 370 | \begin{center} | 
| 371 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 372 | \epsfbox{denseSSD.eps} | 
| 373 | \caption{Density versus temperature for TIP4P [Ref. \citen{Jorgensen98b}], | 
| 374 | TIP3P [Ref. \citen{Jorgensen98b}], SPC/E [Ref. \citen{Clancy94}], SSD | 
| 375 | without Reaction Field, SSD, and experiment [Ref. \citen{CRC80}]. The | 
| 376 | arrows indicate the change in densities observed when turning off the | 
| 377 | reaction field. The the lower than expected densities for the SSD | 
| 378 | model were what prompted the original reparameterization of SSD1 | 
| 379 | [Ref. \citen{Ichiye03}].} | 
| 380 | \label{dense1} | 
| 381 | \end{center} | 
| 382 | \end{figure} | 
| 383 |  | 
| 384 | The density maximum for SSD compares quite favorably to other simple | 
| 385 | water models. Figure \ref{dense1} also shows calculated densities of | 
| 386 | several other models and experiment obtained from other | 
| 387 | sources.\cite{Jorgensen98b,Clancy94,CRC80} Of the listed simple water | 
| 388 | models, SSD has a temperature closest to the experimentally observed | 
| 389 | density maximum. Of the {\it charge-based} models in | 
| 390 | Fig. \ref{dense1}, TIP4P has a density maximum behavior most like that | 
| 391 | seen in SSD. Though not included in this plot, it is useful | 
| 392 | to note that TIP5P has a density maximum nearly identical to the | 
| 393 | experimentally measured temperature. | 
| 394 |  | 
| 395 | It has been observed that liquid state densities in water are | 
| 396 | dependent on the cutoff radius used both with and without the use of | 
| 397 | reaction field.\cite{Berendsen98} In order to address the possible | 
| 398 | effect of cutoff radius, simulations were performed with a dipolar | 
| 399 | cutoff radius of 12.0 \AA\ to complement the previous SSD simulations, | 
| 400 | all performed with a cutoff of 9.0 \AA. All of the resulting densities | 
| 401 | overlapped within error and showed no significant trend toward lower | 
| 402 | or higher densities as a function of cutoff radius, for simulations | 
| 403 | both with and without reaction field. These results indicate that | 
| 404 | there is no major benefit in choosing a longer cutoff radius in | 
| 405 | simulations using SSD. This is advantageous in that the use of a | 
| 406 | longer cutoff radius results in a significant increase in the time | 
| 407 | required to obtain a single trajectory. | 
| 408 |  | 
| 409 | The key feature to recognize in figure \ref{dense1} is the density | 
| 410 | scaling of SSD relative to other common models at any given | 
| 411 | temperature. SSD assumes a lower density than any of the other listed | 
| 412 | models at the same pressure, behavior which is especially apparent at | 
| 413 | temperatures greater than 300 K. Lower than expected densities have | 
| 414 | been observed for other systems using a reaction field for long-range | 
| 415 | electrostatic interactions, so the most likely reason for the | 
| 416 | significantly lower densities seen in these simulations is the | 
| 417 | presence of the reaction field.\cite{Berendsen98,Nezbeda02} In order | 
| 418 | to test the effect of the reaction field on the density of the | 
| 419 | systems, the simulations were repeated without a reaction field | 
| 420 | present. The results of these simulations are also displayed in figure | 
| 421 | \ref{dense1}. Without the reaction field, the densities increase | 
| 422 | to more experimentally reasonable values, especially around the | 
| 423 | freezing point of liquid water. The shape of the curve is similar to | 
| 424 | the curve produced from SSD simulations using reaction field, | 
| 425 | specifically the rapidly decreasing densities at higher temperatures; | 
| 426 | however, a shift in the density maximum location, down to 245 K, is | 
| 427 | observed. This is a more accurate comparison to the other listed water | 
| 428 | models, in that no long range corrections were applied in those | 
| 429 | simulations.\cite{Clancy94,Jorgensen98b} However, even without the | 
| 430 | reaction field, the density around 300 K is still significantly lower | 
| 431 | than experiment and comparable water models. This anomalous behavior | 
| 432 | was what lead Ichiye {\it et al.} to recently reparameterize | 
| 433 | SSD.\cite{Ichiye03} Throughout the remainder of the paper our | 
| 434 | reparamaterizations of SSD will be compared with the newer SSD1 model. | 
| 435 |  | 
| 436 | \subsection{Transport Behavior} | 
| 437 |  | 
| 438 | Accurate dynamical properties of a water model are particularly | 
| 439 | important when using the model to study permeation or transport across | 
| 440 | biological membranes.  In order to probe transport in bulk water, | 
| 441 | constant energy (NVE) simulations were performed at the average | 
| 442 | density obtained by the NPT simulations at an identical target | 
| 443 | temperature. Simulations started with randomized velocities and | 
| 444 | underwent 50 ps of temperature scaling and 50 ps of constant energy | 
| 445 | equilibration before a 200 ps data collection run. Diffusion constants | 
| 446 | were calculated via linear fits to the long-time behavior of the | 
| 447 | mean-square displacement as a function of time. The averaged results | 
| 448 | from five sets of NVE simulations are displayed in figure | 
| 449 | \ref{diffuse}, alongside experimental, SPC/E, and TIP5P | 
| 450 | results.\cite{Gillen72,Mills73,Clancy94,Jorgensen01} | 
| 451 |  | 
| 452 | \begin{figure} | 
| 453 | \begin{center} | 
| 454 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 455 | \epsfbox{betterDiffuse.epsi} | 
| 456 | \caption{Average self-diffusion constant as a function of temperature for | 
| 457 | SSD, SPC/E [Ref. \citen{Clancy94}], TIP5P [Ref. \citen{Jorgensen01}], | 
| 458 | and Experimental data [Refs. \citen{Gillen72} and \citen{Mills73}]. Of | 
| 459 | the three water models shown, SSD has the least deviation from the | 
| 460 | experimental values. The rapidly increasing diffusion constants for | 
| 461 | TIP5P and SSD correspond to significant decrease in density at the | 
| 462 | higher temperatures.} | 
| 463 | \label{diffuse} | 
| 464 | \end{center} | 
| 465 | \end{figure} | 
| 466 |  | 
| 467 | The observed values for the diffusion constant point out one of the | 
| 468 | strengths of the SSD model. Of the three models shown, the SSD model | 
| 469 | has the most accurate depiction of self-diffusion in both the | 
| 470 | supercooled and liquid regimes.  SPC/E does a respectable job by | 
| 471 | reproducing values similar to experiment around 290 K; however, it | 
| 472 | deviates at both higher and lower temperatures, failing to predict the | 
| 473 | correct thermal trend. TIP5P and SSD both start off low at colder | 
| 474 | temperatures and tend to diffuse too rapidly at higher temperatures. | 
| 475 | This behavior at higher temperatures is not particularly surprising | 
| 476 | since the densities of both TIP5P and SSD are lower than experimental | 
| 477 | water densities at higher temperatures.  When calculating the | 
| 478 | diffusion coefficients for SSD at experimental densities (instead of | 
| 479 | the densities from the NPT simulations), the resulting values fall | 
| 480 | more in line with experiment at these temperatures. | 
| 481 |  | 
| 482 | \subsection{Structural Changes and Characterization} | 
| 483 |  | 
| 484 | By starting the simulations from the crystalline state, the melting | 
| 485 | transition and the ice structure can be obtained along with the liquid | 
| 486 | phase behavior beyond the melting point. The constant pressure heat | 
| 487 | capacity (C$_\text{p}$) was monitored to locate the melting transition | 
| 488 | in each of the simulations. In the melting simulations of the 1024 | 
| 489 | particle ice $I_h$ simulations, a large spike in C$_\text{p}$ occurs | 
| 490 | at 245 K, indicating a first order phase transition for the melting of | 
| 491 | these ice crystals. When the reaction field is turned off, the melting | 
| 492 | transition occurs at 235 K.  These melting transitions are | 
| 493 | considerably lower than the experimental value. | 
| 494 |  | 
| 495 | \begin{figure} | 
| 496 | \begin{center} | 
| 497 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 498 | \epsfbox{corrDiag.eps} | 
| 499 | \caption{Two dimensional illustration of angles involved in the | 
| 500 | correlations observed in Fig. \ref{contour}.} | 
| 501 | \label{corrAngle} | 
| 502 | \end{center} | 
| 503 | \end{figure} | 
| 504 |  | 
| 505 | \begin{figure} | 
| 506 | \begin{center} | 
| 507 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 508 | \epsfbox{fullContours.eps} | 
| 509 | \caption{Contour plots of 2D angular g($r$)'s for 512 SSD systems at | 
| 510 | 100 K (A \& B) and 300 K (C \& D). Contour colors are inverted for | 
| 511 | clarity: dark areas signify peaks while light areas signify | 
| 512 | depressions. White areas have $g(r)$ values below 0.5 and black | 
| 513 | areas have values above 1.5.} | 
| 514 | \label{contour} | 
| 515 | \end{center} | 
| 516 | \end{figure} | 
| 517 |  | 
| 518 | Additional analysis of the melting process was performed using | 
| 519 | two-dimensional structure and dipole angle correlations. Expressions | 
| 520 | for these correlations are as follows: | 
| 521 |  | 
| 522 | \begin{equation} | 
| 523 | g_{\text{AB}}(r,\cos\theta) = \frac{V}{N_\text{A}N_\text{B}}\langle\sum_{i\in\text{A}}\sum_{j\in\text{B}}\delta(\cos\theta-\cos\theta_{ij})\delta(r-\left|{\bf r}_{ij}\right|)\rangle\ , | 
| 524 | \end{equation} | 
| 525 | \begin{equation} | 
| 526 | g_{\text{AB}}(r,\cos\omega) = | 
| 527 | \frac{V}{N_\text{A}N_\text{B}}\langle\sum_{i\in\text{A}}\sum_{j\in\text{B}}\delta(\cos\omega-\cos\omega_{ij})\delta(r-\left|{\bf r}_{ij}\right|)\rangle\ , | 
| 528 | \end{equation} | 
| 529 | where $\theta$ and $\omega$ refer to the angles shown in figure | 
| 530 | \ref{corrAngle}. By binning over both distance and the cosine of the | 
| 531 | desired angle between the two dipoles, the $g(r)$ can be analyzed to | 
| 532 | determine the common dipole arrangements that constitute the peaks and | 
| 533 | troughs in the standard one-dimensional $g(r)$ plots. Frames A and B | 
| 534 | of figure \ref{contour} show results from an ice $I_c$ simulation. The | 
| 535 | first peak in the $g(r)$ consists primarily of the preferred hydrogen | 
| 536 | bonding arrangements as dictated by the tetrahedral sticky potential - | 
| 537 | one peak for the hydrogen bond donor and the other for the hydrogen | 
| 538 | bond acceptor.  Due to the high degree of crystallinity of the sample, | 
| 539 | the second and third solvation shells show a repeated peak arrangement | 
| 540 | which decays at distances around the fourth solvation shell, near the | 
| 541 | imposed cutoff for the Lennard-Jones and dipole-dipole interactions. | 
| 542 | In the higher temperature simulation shown in frames C and D, these | 
| 543 | long-range features deteriorate rapidly. The first solvation shell | 
| 544 | still shows the strong effect of the sticky-potential, although it | 
| 545 | covers a larger area, extending to include a fraction of aligned | 
| 546 | dipole peaks within the first solvation shell. The latter peaks lose | 
| 547 | due to thermal motion and as the competing dipole force overcomes the | 
| 548 | sticky potential's tight tetrahedral structuring of the crystal. | 
| 549 |  | 
| 550 | This complex interplay between dipole and sticky interactions was | 
| 551 | remarked upon as a possible reason for the split second peak in the | 
| 552 | oxygen-oxygen $g_\mathrm{OO}(r)$.\cite{Ichiye96} At low temperatures, | 
| 553 | the second solvation shell peak appears to have two distinct | 
| 554 | components that blend together to form one observable peak. At higher | 
| 555 | temperatures, this split character alters to show the leading 4 \AA\ | 
| 556 | peak dominated by equatorial anti-parallel dipole orientations. There | 
| 557 | is also a tightly bunched group of axially arranged dipoles that most | 
| 558 | likely consist of the smaller fraction of aligned dipole pairs. The | 
| 559 | trailing component of the split peak at 5 \AA\ is dominated by aligned | 
| 560 | dipoles that assume hydrogen bond arrangements similar to those seen | 
| 561 | in the first solvation shell. This evidence indicates that the dipole | 
| 562 | pair interaction begins to dominate outside of the range of the | 
| 563 | dipolar repulsion term.  The energetically favorable dipole | 
| 564 | arrangements populate the region immediately outside this repulsion | 
| 565 | region (around 4 \AA), while arrangements that seek to satisfy both | 
| 566 | the sticky and dipole forces locate themselves just beyond this | 
| 567 | initial buildup (around 5 \AA). | 
| 568 |  | 
| 569 | From these findings, the split second peak is primarily the product of | 
| 570 | the dipolar repulsion term of the sticky potential. In fact, the inner | 
| 571 | peak can be pushed out and merged with the outer split peak just by | 
| 572 | extending the switching function ($s^\prime(r_{ij})$) from its normal | 
| 573 | 4.0 \AA\ cutoff to values of 4.5 or even 5 \AA. This type of | 
| 574 | correction is not recommended for improving the liquid structure, | 
| 575 | since the second solvation shell would still be shifted too far | 
| 576 | out. In addition, this would have an even more detrimental effect on | 
| 577 | the system densities, leading to a liquid with a more open structure | 
| 578 | and a density considerably lower than the already low SSD density.  A | 
| 579 | better correction would be to include the quadrupole-quadrupole | 
| 580 | interactions for the water particles outside of the first solvation | 
| 581 | shell, but this would remove the simplicity and speed advantage of | 
| 582 | SSD. | 
| 583 |  | 
| 584 | \subsection{Adjusted Potentials: SSD/RF and SSD/E} | 
| 585 |  | 
| 586 | The propensity of SSD to adopt lower than expected densities under | 
| 587 | varying conditions is troubling, especially at higher temperatures. In | 
| 588 | order to correct this model for use with a reaction field, it is | 
| 589 | necessary to adjust the force field parameters for the primary | 
| 590 | intermolecular interactions. In undergoing a reparameterization, it is | 
| 591 | important not to focus on just one property and neglect the other | 
| 592 | important properties. In this case, it would be ideal to correct the | 
| 593 | densities while maintaining the accurate transport behavior. | 
| 594 |  | 
| 595 | The parameters available for tuning include the $\sigma$ and | 
| 596 | $\epsilon$ Lennard-Jones parameters, the dipole strength ($\mu$), the | 
| 597 | strength of the sticky potential ($\nu_0$), and the sticky attractive | 
| 598 | and dipole repulsive cubic switching function cutoffs ($r_l$, $r_u$ | 
| 599 | and $r_l^\prime$, $r_u^\prime$ respectively). The results of the | 
| 600 | reparameterizations are shown in table \ref{params}. We are calling | 
| 601 | these reparameterizations the Soft Sticky Dipole / Reaction Field | 
| 602 | (SSD/RF - for use with a reaction field) and Soft Sticky Dipole | 
| 603 | Extended (SSD/E - an attempt to improve the liquid structure in | 
| 604 | simulations without a long-range correction). | 
| 605 |  | 
| 606 | \begin{table} | 
| 607 | \begin{center} | 
| 608 | \caption{Parameters for the original and adjusted models} | 
| 609 | \begin{tabular}{ l  c  c  c  c } | 
| 610 | \hline \\[-3mm] | 
| 611 | \ \ \ Parameters\ \ \  & \ \ \ SSD [Ref. \citen{Ichiye96}] \ \ \ | 
| 612 | & \ SSD1 [Ref. \citen{Ichiye03}]\ \  & \ SSD/E\ \  & \ SSD/RF \\ | 
| 613 | \hline \\[-3mm] | 
| 614 | \ \ \ $\sigma$ (\AA)  & 3.051 & 3.016 & 3.035 & 3.019\\ | 
| 615 | \ \ \ $\epsilon$ (kcal/mol) & 0.152 & 0.152 & 0.152 & 0.152\\ | 
| 616 | \ \ \ $\mu$ (D) & 2.35 & 2.35 & 2.42 & 2.48\\ | 
| 617 | \ \ \ $\nu_0$ (kcal/mol) & 3.7284 & 3.6613 & 3.90 & 3.90\\ | 
| 618 | \ \ \ $\omega^\circ$ & 0.07715 & 0.07715 & 0.07715 & 0.07715\\ | 
| 619 | \ \ \ $r_l$ (\AA) & 2.75 & 2.75 & 2.40 & 2.40\\ | 
| 620 | \ \ \ $r_u$ (\AA) & 3.35 & 3.35 & 3.80 & 3.80\\ | 
| 621 | \ \ \ $r_l^\prime$ (\AA) & 2.75 & 2.75 & 2.75 & 2.75\\ | 
| 622 | \ \ \ $r_u^\prime$ (\AA) & 4.00 & 4.00 & 3.35 & 3.35\\ | 
| 623 | \end{tabular} | 
| 624 | \label{params} | 
| 625 | \end{center} | 
| 626 | \end{table} | 
| 627 |  | 
| 628 | \begin{figure} | 
| 629 | \begin{center} | 
| 630 | \epsfxsize=5in | 
| 631 | \epsfbox{GofRCompare.epsi} | 
| 632 | \caption{Plots comparing experiment [Ref. \citen{Head-Gordon00_1}] with SSD/E | 
| 633 | and SSD1 without reaction field (top), as well as SSD/RF and SSD1 with | 
| 634 | reaction field turned on (bottom). The insets show the respective | 
| 635 | first peaks in detail. Note how the changes in parameters have lowered | 
| 636 | and broadened the first peak of SSD/E and SSD/RF.} | 
| 637 | \label{grcompare} | 
| 638 | \end{center} | 
| 639 | \end{figure} | 
| 640 |  | 
| 641 | \begin{figure} | 
| 642 | \begin{center} | 
| 643 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 644 | \epsfbox{dualsticky.ps} | 
| 645 | \caption{Isosurfaces of the sticky potential for SSD1 (left) and SSD/E \& | 
| 646 | SSD/RF (right). Light areas correspond to the tetrahedral attractive | 
| 647 | component, and darker areas correspond to the dipolar repulsive | 
| 648 | component.} | 
| 649 | \label{isosurface} | 
| 650 | \end{center} | 
| 651 | \end{figure} | 
| 652 |  | 
| 653 | In the original paper detailing the development of SSD, Liu and Ichiye | 
| 654 | placed particular emphasis on an accurate description of the first | 
| 655 | solvation shell. This resulted in a somewhat tall and narrow first | 
| 656 | peak in $g(r)$ that integrated to give similar coordination numbers to | 
| 657 | the experimental data obtained by Soper and | 
| 658 | Phillips.\cite{Ichiye96,Soper86} New experimental x-ray scattering | 
| 659 | data from the Head-Gordon lab indicates a slightly lower and shifted | 
| 660 | first peak in the g$_\mathrm{OO}(r)$, so our adjustments to SSD were | 
| 661 | made while taking into consideration the new experimental | 
| 662 | findings.\cite{Head-Gordon00_1} Figure \ref{grcompare} shows the | 
| 663 | relocation of the first peak of the oxygen-oxygen $g(r)$ by comparing | 
| 664 | the revised SSD model (SSD1), SSD/E, and SSD/RF to the new | 
| 665 | experimental results. Both modified water models have shorter peaks | 
| 666 | that match more closely to the experimental peak (as seen in the | 
| 667 | insets of figure \ref{grcompare}).  This structural alteration was | 
| 668 | accomplished by the combined reduction in the Lennard-Jones $\sigma$ | 
| 669 | variable and adjustment of the sticky potential strength and cutoffs. | 
| 670 | As can be seen in table \ref{params}, the cutoffs for the tetrahedral | 
| 671 | attractive and dipolar repulsive terms were nearly swapped with each | 
| 672 | other.  Isosurfaces of the original and modified sticky potentials are | 
| 673 | shown in figure \ref{isosurface}. In these isosurfaces, it is easy to | 
| 674 | see how altering the cutoffs changes the repulsive and attractive | 
| 675 | character of the particles. With a reduced repulsive surface (darker | 
| 676 | region), the particles can move closer to one another, increasing the | 
| 677 | density for the overall system.  This change in interaction cutoff also | 
| 678 | results in a more gradual orientational motion by allowing the | 
| 679 | particles to maintain preferred dipolar arrangements before they begin | 
| 680 | to feel the pull of the tetrahedral restructuring. As the particles | 
| 681 | move closer together, the dipolar repulsion term becomes active and | 
| 682 | excludes unphysical nearest-neighbor arrangements. This compares with | 
| 683 | how SSD and SSD1 exclude preferred dipole alignments before the | 
| 684 | particles feel the pull of the ``hydrogen bonds''. Aside from | 
| 685 | improving the shape of the first peak in the g(\emph{r}), this | 
| 686 | modification improves the densities considerably by allowing the | 
| 687 | persistence of full dipolar character below the previous 4.0 \AA\ | 
| 688 | cutoff. | 
| 689 |  | 
| 690 | While adjusting the location and shape of the first peak of $g(r)$ | 
| 691 | improves the densities, these changes alone are insufficient to bring | 
| 692 | the system densities up to the values observed experimentally.  To | 
| 693 | further increase the densities, the dipole moments were increased in | 
| 694 | both of our adjusted models. Since SSD is a dipole based model, the | 
| 695 | structure and transport are very sensitive to changes in the dipole | 
| 696 | moment. The original SSD simply used the dipole moment calculated from | 
| 697 | the TIP3P water model, which at 2.35 D is significantly greater than | 
| 698 | the experimental gas phase value of 1.84 D. The larger dipole moment | 
| 699 | is a more realistic value and improves the dielectric properties of | 
| 700 | the fluid. Both theoretical and experimental measurements indicate a | 
| 701 | liquid phase dipole moment ranging from 2.4 D to values as high as | 
| 702 | 3.11 D, providing a substantial range of reasonable values for a | 
| 703 | dipole moment.\cite{Sprik91,Kusalik02,Badyal00,Barriol64} Moderately | 
| 704 | increasing the dipole moments to 2.42 and 2.48 D for SSD/E and SSD/RF, | 
| 705 | respectively, leads to significant changes in the density and | 
| 706 | transport of the water models. | 
| 707 |  | 
| 708 | In order to demonstrate the benefits of these reparameterizations, a | 
| 709 | series of NPT and NVE simulations were performed to probe the density | 
| 710 | and transport properties of the adapted models and compare the results | 
| 711 | to the original SSD model. This comparison involved full NPT melting | 
| 712 | sequences for both SSD/E and SSD/RF, as well as NVE transport | 
| 713 | calculations at the calculated self-consistent densities. Again, the | 
| 714 | results are obtained from five separate simulations of 1024 particle | 
| 715 | systems, and the melting sequences were started from different ice | 
| 716 | $I_h$ crystals constructed as described previously. Each NPT | 
| 717 | simulation was equilibrated for 100 ps before a 200 ps data collection | 
| 718 | run at each temperature step, and the final configuration from the | 
| 719 | previous temperature simulation was used as a starting point. All NVE | 
| 720 | simulations had the same thermalization, equilibration, and data | 
| 721 | collection times as stated previously. | 
| 722 |  | 
| 723 | \begin{figure} | 
| 724 | \begin{center} | 
| 725 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 726 | \epsfbox{ssdeDense.epsi} | 
| 727 | \caption{Comparison of densities calculated with SSD/E to SSD1 without a | 
| 728 | reaction field, TIP3P [Ref. \citen{Jorgensen98b}], TIP5P | 
| 729 | [Ref. \citen{Jorgensen00}], SPC/E [Ref. \citen{Clancy94}] and | 
| 730 | experiment [Ref. \citen{CRC80}]. The window shows a expansion around | 
| 731 | 300 K with error bars included to clarify this region of | 
| 732 | interest. Note that both SSD1 and SSD/E show good agreement with | 
| 733 | experiment when the long-range correction is neglected.} | 
| 734 | \label{ssdedense} | 
| 735 | \end{center} | 
| 736 | \end{figure} | 
| 737 |  | 
| 738 | Fig. \ref{ssdedense} shows the density profile for the SSD/E model | 
| 739 | in comparison to SSD1 without a reaction field, other common water | 
| 740 | models, and experimental results. The calculated densities for both | 
| 741 | SSD/E and SSD1 have increased significantly over the original SSD | 
| 742 | model (see fig. \ref{dense1}) and are in better agreement with the | 
| 743 | experimental values. At 298 K, the densities of SSD/E and SSD1 without | 
| 744 | a long-range correction are 0.996$\pm$0.001 g/cm$^3$ and | 
| 745 | 0.999$\pm$0.001 g/cm$^3$ respectively.  These both compare well with | 
| 746 | the experimental value of 0.997 g/cm$^3$, and they are considerably | 
| 747 | better than the SSD value of 0.967$\pm$0.003 g/cm$^3$. The changes to | 
| 748 | the dipole moment and sticky switching functions have improved the | 
| 749 | structuring of the liquid (as seen in figure \ref{grcompare}, but they | 
| 750 | have shifted the density maximum to much lower temperatures. This | 
| 751 | comes about via an increase in the liquid disorder through the | 
| 752 | weakening of the sticky potential and strengthening of the dipolar | 
| 753 | character. However, this increasing disorder in the SSD/E model has | 
| 754 | little effect on the melting transition. By monitoring $C_p$ | 
| 755 | throughout these simulations, the melting transition for SSD/E was | 
| 756 | shown to occur at 235 K.  The same transition temperature observed | 
| 757 | with SSD and SSD1. | 
| 758 |  | 
| 759 | \begin{figure} | 
| 760 | \begin{center} | 
| 761 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 762 | \epsfbox{ssdrfDense.epsi} | 
| 763 | \caption{Comparison of densities calculated with SSD/RF to SSD1 with a | 
| 764 | reaction field, TIP3P [Ref. \citen{Jorgensen98b}], TIP5P | 
| 765 | [Ref. \citen{Jorgensen00}], SPC/E [Ref. \citen{Clancy94}], and | 
| 766 | experiment [Ref. \citen{CRC80}]. The inset shows the necessity of | 
| 767 | reparameterization when utilizing a reaction field long-ranged | 
| 768 | correction - SSD/RF provides significantly more accurate densities | 
| 769 | than SSD1 when performing room temperature simulations.} | 
| 770 | \label{ssdrfdense} | 
| 771 | \end{center} | 
| 772 | \end{figure} | 
| 773 |  | 
| 774 | Including the reaction field long-range correction in the simulations | 
| 775 | results in a more interesting comparison.  A density profile including | 
| 776 | SSD/RF and SSD1 with an active reaction field is shown in figure | 
| 777 | \ref{ssdrfdense}.  As observed in the simulations without a reaction | 
| 778 | field, the densities of SSD/RF and SSD1 show a dramatic increase over | 
| 779 | normal SSD (see figure \ref{dense1}). At 298 K, SSD/RF has a density | 
| 780 | of 0.997$\pm$0.001 g/cm$^3$, directly in line with experiment and | 
| 781 | considerably better than the original SSD value of 0.941$\pm$0.001 | 
| 782 | g/cm$^3$ and the SSD1 value of 0.972$\pm$0.002 g/cm$^3$. These results | 
| 783 | further emphasize the importance of reparameterization in order to | 
| 784 | model the density properly under different simulation conditions. | 
| 785 | Again, these changes have only a minor effect on the melting point, | 
| 786 | which observed at 245 K for SSD/RF, is identical to SSD and only 5 K | 
| 787 | lower than SSD1 with a reaction field. Additionally, the difference in | 
| 788 | density maxima is not as extreme, with SSD/RF showing a density | 
| 789 | maximum at 255 K, fairly close to the density maxima of 260 K and 265 | 
| 790 | K, shown by SSD and SSD1 respectively. | 
| 791 |  | 
| 792 | \begin{figure} | 
| 793 | \begin{center} | 
| 794 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 795 | \epsfbox{ssdeDiffuse.epsi} | 
| 796 | \caption{The diffusion constants calculated from SSD/E and SSD1, | 
| 797 | both without a reaction field, along with experimental results | 
| 798 | [Refs. \citen{Gillen72} and \citen{Holz00}]. The NVE calculations | 
| 799 | were performed at the average densities observed in the 1 atm NPT | 
| 800 | simulations for the respective models. SSD/E is slightly more mobile | 
| 801 | than experiment at all of the temperatures, but it is closer to | 
| 802 | experiment at biologically relavent temperatures than SSD1 without a | 
| 803 | long-range correction.} | 
| 804 | \label{ssdediffuse} | 
| 805 | \end{center} | 
| 806 | \end{figure} | 
| 807 |  | 
| 808 | The reparameterization of the SSD water model, both for use with and | 
| 809 | without an applied long-range correction, brought the densities up to | 
| 810 | what is expected for simulating liquid water. In addition to improving | 
| 811 | the densities, it is important that the excellent diffusive behavior | 
| 812 | of SSD be maintained or improved. Figure \ref{ssdediffuse} compares | 
| 813 | the temperature dependence of the diffusion constant of SSD/E to SSD1 | 
| 814 | without an active reaction field at the densities calculated from the | 
| 815 | NPT simulations at 1 atm. The diffusion constant for SSD/E is | 
| 816 | consistently higher than experiment, while SSD1 remains lower than | 
| 817 | experiment until relatively high temperatures (around 360 K). Both | 
| 818 | models follow the shape of the experimental curve well below 300 K but | 
| 819 | tend to diffuse too rapidly at higher temperatures, as seen in SSD1's | 
| 820 | crossing above 360 K.  This increasing diffusion relative to the | 
| 821 | experimental values is caused by the rapidly decreasing system density | 
| 822 | with increasing temperature.  Both SSD1 and SSD/E show this deviation | 
| 823 | in diffusive behavior, but this trend has different implications on | 
| 824 | the diffusive behavior of the models.  While SSD1 shows more | 
| 825 | experimentally accurate diffusive behavior in the high temperature | 
| 826 | regimes, SSD/E shows more accurate behavior in the supercooled and | 
| 827 | biologically relavent temperature ranges.  Thus, the changes made to | 
| 828 | improve the liquid structure may have had an adverse affect on the | 
| 829 | density maximum, but they improve the transport behavior of SSD/E | 
| 830 | relative to SSD1 under the most commonly simulated conditions. | 
| 831 |  | 
| 832 | \begin{figure} | 
| 833 | \begin{center} | 
| 834 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 835 | \epsfbox{ssdrfDiffuse.epsi} | 
| 836 | \caption{The diffusion constants calculated from SSD/RF and SSD1, | 
| 837 | both with an active reaction field, along with experimental results | 
| 838 | [Refs. \citen{Gillen72} and \citen{Holz00}]. The NVE calculations | 
| 839 | were performed at the average densities observed in the 1 atm NPT | 
| 840 | simulations for both of the models. Note how accurately SSD/RF | 
| 841 | simulates the diffusion of water throughout this temperature | 
| 842 | range. The more rapidly increasing diffusion constants at high | 
| 843 | temperatures for both models is attributed to lower calculated | 
| 844 | densities than those observed in experiment.} | 
| 845 | \label{ssdrfdiffuse} | 
| 846 | \end{center} | 
| 847 | \end{figure} | 
| 848 |  | 
| 849 | In figure \ref{ssdrfdiffuse}, the diffusion constants for SSD/RF are | 
| 850 | compared to SSD1 with an active reaction field. Note that SSD/RF | 
| 851 | tracks the experimental results quantitatively, identical within error | 
| 852 | throughout most of the temperature range shown and exhibiting only a | 
| 853 | slight increasing trend at higher temperatures. SSD1 tends to diffuse | 
| 854 | more slowly at low temperatures and deviates to diffuse too rapidly at | 
| 855 | temperatures greater than 330 K.  As stated above, this deviation away | 
| 856 | from the ideal trend is due to a rapid decrease in density at higher | 
| 857 | temperatures. SSD/RF does not suffer from this problem as much as SSD1 | 
| 858 | because the calculated densities are closer to the experimental | 
| 859 | values. These results again emphasize the importance of careful | 
| 860 | reparameterization when using an altered long-range correction. | 
| 861 |  | 
| 862 | \begin{table} | 
| 863 | \begin{center} | 
| 864 | \caption{Calculated and experimental properties of the single point waters and liquid water at 298 K and 1 atm. (a) Ref. [\citen{Mills73}]. (b) Calculated by integrating the data in ref. \citen{Head-Gordon00_1}. (c) Calculated by integrating the data in ref. \citen{Soper86}. (d) Ref. [\citen{Eisenberg69}]. (e) Calculated for 298 K from data in ref. \citen{Krynicki66}.} | 
| 865 | \begin{tabular}{ l  c  c  c  c  c } | 
| 866 | \hline \\[-3mm] | 
| 867 | \ \ \ \ \ \  & \ \ \ SSD1 \ \ \ & \ SSD/E \ \ \ & \ SSD1 (RF) \ \ | 
| 868 | \ & \ SSD/RF \ \ \ & \ Expt. \\ | 
| 869 | \hline \\[-3mm] | 
| 870 | \ \ \ $\rho$ (g/cm$^3$) & 0.999 $\pm$0.001 & 0.996 $\pm$0.001 & 0.972 $\pm$0.002 & 0.997 $\pm$0.001 & 0.997 \\ | 
| 871 | \ \ \ $C_p$ (cal/mol K) & 28.80 $\pm$0.11 & 25.45 $\pm$0.09 & 28.28 $\pm$0.06 & 23.83 $\pm$0.16 & 17.98 \\ | 
| 872 | \ \ \ $D$ ($10^{-5}$ cm$^2$/s) & 1.78 $\pm$0.07 & 2.51 $\pm$0.18 & 2.00 $\pm$0.17 & 2.32 $\pm$0.06 & 2.299$^\text{a}$ \\ | 
| 873 | \ \ \ Coordination Number & 3.9 & 4.3 & 3.8 & 4.4 & 4.7$^\text{b}$ \\ | 
| 874 | \ \ \ H-bonds per particle & 3.7 & 3.6 & 3.7 & 3.7 & 3.4$^\text{c}$ \\ | 
| 875 | \ \ \ $\tau_1^\mu$ (ps) & 10.9 $\pm$0.6 & 7.3 $\pm$0.4 & 7.5 $\pm$0.7 & 7.2 $\pm$0.4 & 4.76$^\text{d}$ \\ | 
| 876 | \ \ \ $\tau_2^\mu$ (ps) & 4.7 $\pm$0.4 & 3.1 $\pm$0.2 & 3.5 $\pm$0.3 & 3.2 $\pm$0.2 & 2.3$^\text{e}$ \\ | 
| 877 | \end{tabular} | 
| 878 | \label{liquidproperties} | 
| 879 | \end{center} | 
| 880 | \end{table} | 
| 881 |  | 
| 882 | Table \ref{liquidproperties} gives a synopsis of the liquid state | 
| 883 | properties of the water models compared in this study along with the | 
| 884 | experimental values for liquid water at ambient conditions. The | 
| 885 | coordination number and hydrogen bonds per particle were calculated by | 
| 886 | integrating the following relation: | 
| 887 | \begin{equation} | 
| 888 | 4\pi\rho\int_{0}^{a}r^2\text{g}(r)dr, | 
| 889 | \end{equation} | 
| 890 | where $\rho$ is the number density of pair interactions, $a$ is the | 
| 891 | radial location of the minima following the first solvation shell | 
| 892 | peak, and g$(r)$ is either g$_\text{OO}(r)$ or g$_\text{OH}(r)$ for | 
| 893 | calculation of the coordination number or hydrogen bonds per particle | 
| 894 | respectively. | 
| 895 |  | 
| 896 | The time constants for the self orientational autocorrelation function | 
| 897 | are also displayed in Table \ref{liquidproperties}. The dipolar | 
| 898 | orientational time correlation function ($\Gamma_{l}$) is described | 
| 899 | by: | 
| 900 | \begin{equation} | 
| 901 | \Gamma_{l}(t) = \langle P_l[\mathbf{u}_j(0)\cdot\mathbf{u}_j(t)]\rangle, | 
| 902 | \end{equation} | 
| 903 | where $P_l$ is a Legendre polynomial of order $l$ and $\mathbf{u}_j$ | 
| 904 | is the unit vector of the particle dipole.\cite{Rahman71} From these | 
| 905 | correlation functions, the orientational relaxation time of the dipole | 
| 906 | vector can be calculated from an exponential fit in the long-time | 
| 907 | regime ($t > \tau_l^\mu$).\cite{Rothschild84} Calculation of these | 
| 908 | time constants were averaged from five detailed NVE simulations | 
| 909 | performed at the STP density for each of the respective models. | 
| 910 |  | 
| 911 | \subsection{Additional Observations} | 
| 912 |  | 
| 913 | \begin{figure} | 
| 914 | \begin{center} | 
| 915 | \epsfxsize=6in | 
| 916 | \epsfbox{povIce.ps} | 
| 917 | \caption{A water lattice built from the crystal structure assumed by | 
| 918 | SSD/E when undergoing an extremely restricted temperature NPT | 
| 919 | simulation. This form of ice is referred to as ice-{\it i} to | 
| 920 | emphasize its simulation origins. This image was taken of the (001) | 
| 921 | face of the crystal.} | 
| 922 | \label{weirdice} | 
| 923 | \end{center} | 
| 924 | \end{figure} | 
| 925 |  | 
| 926 | While performing a series of melting simulations on an early iteration | 
| 927 | of SSD/E not discussed in this paper, we observed recrystallization | 
| 928 | into a novel structure not previously known for water.  After melting | 
| 929 | at 235 K, two of five systems underwent crystallization events near | 
| 930 | 245 K.  The two systems remained crystalline up to 320 and 330 K, | 
| 931 | respectively.  The crystal exhibits an expanded zeolite-like structure | 
| 932 | that does not correspond to any known form of ice.  This appears to be | 
| 933 | an artifact of the point dipolar models, so to distinguish it from the | 
| 934 | experimentally observed forms of ice, we have denoted the structure | 
| 935 | Ice-$\sqrt{\smash[b]{-\text{I}}}$ (ice-{\it i}).  A large enough | 
| 936 | portion of the sample crystallized that we have been able to obtain a | 
| 937 | near ideal crystal structure of ice-{\it i}. Figure \ref{weirdice} | 
| 938 | shows the repeating crystal structure of a typical crystal at 5 | 
| 939 | K. Each water molecule is hydrogen bonded to four others; however, the | 
| 940 | hydrogen bonds are bent rather than perfectly straight. This results | 
| 941 | in a skewed tetrahedral geometry about the central molecule.  In | 
| 942 | figure \ref{isosurface}, it is apparent that these flexed hydrogen | 
| 943 | bonds are allowed due to the conical shape of the attractive regions, | 
| 944 | with the greatest attraction along the direct hydrogen bond | 
| 945 | configuration. Though not ideal, these flexed hydrogen bonds are | 
| 946 | favorable enough to stabilize an entire crystal generated around them. | 
| 947 |  | 
| 948 | Initial simulations indicated that ice-{\it i} is the preferred ice | 
| 949 | structure for at least the SSD/E model. To verify this, a comparison | 
| 950 | was made between near ideal crystals of ice~$I_h$, ice~$I_c$, and | 
| 951 | ice-{\it i} at constant pressure with SSD/E, SSD/RF, and | 
| 952 | SSD1. Near-ideal versions of the three types of crystals were cooled | 
| 953 | to 1 K, and the enthalpies of each were compared using all three water | 
| 954 | models. With every model in the SSD family, ice-{\it i} had the lowest | 
| 955 | calculated enthalpy: 5\% lower than $I_h$ with SSD1, 6.5\% lower with | 
| 956 | SSD/E, and 7.5\% lower with SSD/RF.  The enthalpy data is summarized | 
| 957 | in Table \ref{iceenthalpy}. | 
| 958 |  | 
| 959 | \begin{table} | 
| 960 | \begin{center} | 
| 961 | \caption{Enthalpies (in kcal / mol) of the three crystal structures (at 1 | 
| 962 | K) exhibited by the SSD family of water models} | 
| 963 | \begin{tabular}{ l  c  c  c  } | 
| 964 | \hline \\[-3mm] | 
| 965 | \ \ \ Water Model \ \ \  & \ \ \ Ice-$I_h$ \ \ \ & \ Ice-$I_c$\ \  & \ | 
| 966 | Ice-{\it i} \\ | 
| 967 | \hline \\[-3mm] | 
| 968 | \ \ \ SSD/E & -12.286 & -12.292 & -13.590 \\ | 
| 969 | \ \ \ SSD/RF & -12.935 & -12.917 & -14.022 \\ | 
| 970 | \ \ \ SSD1 & -12.496 & -12.411 & -13.417 \\ | 
| 971 | \ \ \ SSD1 (RF) & -12.504 & -12.411 & -13.134 \\ | 
| 972 | \end{tabular} | 
| 973 | \label{iceenthalpy} | 
| 974 | \end{center} | 
| 975 | \end{table} | 
| 976 |  | 
| 977 | In addition to these energetic comparisons, melting simulations were | 
| 978 | performed with ice-{\it i} as the initial configuration using SSD/E, | 
| 979 | SSD/RF, and SSD1 both with and without a reaction field. The melting | 
| 980 | transitions for both SSD/E and SSD1 without reaction field occurred at | 
| 981 | temperature in excess of 375~K.  SSD/RF and SSD1 with a reaction field | 
| 982 | showed more reasonable melting transitions near 325~K.  These melting | 
| 983 | point observations clearly show that all of the SSD-derived models | 
| 984 | prefer the ice-{\it i} structure. | 
| 985 |  | 
| 986 | \section{Conclusions} | 
| 987 |  | 
| 988 | The density maximum and temperature dependence of the self-diffusion | 
| 989 | constant were studied for the SSD water model, both with and without | 
| 990 | the use of reaction field, via a series of NPT and NVE | 
| 991 | simulations. The constant pressure simulations showed a density | 
| 992 | maximum near 260 K. In most cases, the calculated densities were | 
| 993 | significantly lower than the densities obtained from other water | 
| 994 | models (and experiment). Analysis of self-diffusion showed SSD to | 
| 995 | capture the transport properties of water well in both the liquid and | 
| 996 | super-cooled liquid regimes. | 
| 997 |  | 
| 998 | In order to correct the density behavior, the original SSD model was | 
| 999 | reparameterized for use both with and without a reaction field (SSD/RF | 
| 1000 | and SSD/E), and comparisons were made with SSD1, Ichiye's density | 
| 1001 | corrected version of SSD. Both models improve the liquid structure, | 
| 1002 | densities, and diffusive properties under their respective simulation | 
| 1003 | conditions, indicating the necessity of reparameterization when | 
| 1004 | changing the method of calculating long-range electrostatic | 
| 1005 | interactions.  In general, however, these simple water models are | 
| 1006 | excellent choices for representing explicit water in large scale | 
| 1007 | simulations of biochemical systems. | 
| 1008 |  | 
| 1009 | The existence of a novel low-density ice structure that is preferred | 
| 1010 | by the SSD family of water models is somewhat troubling, since liquid | 
| 1011 | simulations on this family of water models at room temperature are | 
| 1012 | effectively simulations of super-cooled or metastable liquids.  One | 
| 1013 | way to de-stabilize this unphysical ice structure would be to make the | 
| 1014 | range of angles preferred by the attractive part of the sticky | 
| 1015 | potential much narrower.  This would require extensive | 
| 1016 | reparameterization to maintain the same level of agreement with the | 
| 1017 | experiments. | 
| 1018 |  | 
| 1019 | Additionally, our initial calculations show that the ice-{\it i} | 
| 1020 | structure may also be a preferred crystal structure for at least one | 
| 1021 | other popular multi-point water model (TIP3P), and that much of the | 
| 1022 | simulation work being done using this popular model could also be at | 
| 1023 | risk for crystallization into this unphysical structure.  A future | 
| 1024 | publication will detail the relative stability of the known ice | 
| 1025 | structures for a wide range of popular water models. | 
| 1026 |  | 
| 1027 | \section{Acknowledgments} | 
| 1028 | Support for this project was provided by the National Science | 
| 1029 | Foundation under grant CHE-0134881. Computation time was provided by | 
| 1030 | the Notre Dame Bunch-of-Boxes (B.o.B) computer cluster under NSF grant | 
| 1031 | DMR-0079647. | 
| 1032 |  | 
| 1033 | \newpage | 
| 1034 |  | 
| 1035 | \bibliographystyle{jcp} | 
| 1036 | \bibliography{nptSSD} | 
| 1037 |  | 
| 1038 | %\pagebreak | 
| 1039 |  | 
| 1040 | \end{document} |