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1 %% This BibTeX bibliography file was created using BibDesk.
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5 %% Created for Shenyu Kuang at 2011-07-29 10:10:06 -0400
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8 %% Saved with string encoding Unicode (UTF-8)
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10
11
12 @article{doi:10.1080/0026897031000068578,
13 Abstract = { Using equilibrium and non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations, we determine the Kapitza resistance (or thermal contact resistance) at a model liquid-solid interface. The Kapitza resistance (or the associated Kapitza length) can reach appreciable values when the liquid does not wet the solid. The analogy with the hydrodynamic slip length is discussed. },
14 Author = {BARRAT, JEAN-LOUIS and CHIARUTTINI, FRAN{\c C}OIS},
15 Date-Added = {2011-07-29 10:04:36 -0400},
16 Date-Modified = {2011-07-29 10:04:36 -0400},
17 Doi = {10.1080/0026897031000068578},
18 Eprint = {http://tandfprod.literatumonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/0026897031000068578},
19 Journal = {Molecular Physics},
20 Number = {11},
21 Pages = {1605-1610},
22 Title = {Kapitza resistance at the liquid---solid interface},
23 Url = {http://tandfprod.literatumonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0026897031000068578},
24 Volume = {101},
25 Year = {2003},
26 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://tandfprod.literatumonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0026897031000068578},
27 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0026897031000068578}}
28
29 @article{doi:10.1021/jp020581+,
30 Abstract = { The rate of energy dissipation from Au nanoparticles to their surroundings has been examined by pump−probe spectroscopy. These experiments were performed for particles suspended in aqueous solution, with average sizes ranging from 4 to 50 nm in diameter. The results show that energy relaxation is a very nonexponential process. Fitting the data to a stretched exponential function yields a characteristic time scale for relaxation that varies from ca. 10 ps for the smallest particles examined (∼4 nm diameter) to almost 400 ps for the 50 nm diameter particles. The relaxation times are proportional to the square of the radius, but do not depend on the initial temperature of the particles (i.e., the pump laser power). For very small particles, the time scale for energy dissipation is comparable to the time scale for electron−phonon coupling, which implies that significant energy loss occurs before the electrons and phonons reach thermal equilibrium within the particle. },
31 Author = {Hu, Min and Hartland, Gregory V.},
32 Date-Added = {2011-07-28 17:46:33 -0400},
33 Date-Modified = {2011-07-28 17:46:33 -0400},
34 Doi = {10.1021/jp020581+},
35 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp020581%2B},
36 Journal = {The Journal of Physical Chemistry B},
37 Number = {28},
38 Pages = {7029-7033},
39 Title = {Heat Dissipation for Au Particles in Aqueous Solution:  Relaxation Time versus Size},
40 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp020581%2B},
41 Volume = {106},
42 Year = {2002},
43 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp020581+},
44 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp020581+}}
45
46 @article{PhysRevLett.96.186101,
47 Author = {Ge, Zhenbin and Cahill, David G. and Braun, Paul V.},
48 Date-Added = {2011-07-28 15:41:43 -0400},
49 Date-Modified = {2011-07-28 15:41:43 -0400},
50 Doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.186101},
51 Journal = {Phys. Rev. Lett.},
52 Month = {May},
53 Number = {18},
54 Numpages = {4},
55 Pages = {186101},
56 Publisher = {American Physical Society},
57 Title = {Thermal Conductance of Hydrophilic and Hydrophobic Interfaces},
58 Volume = {96},
59 Year = {2006},
60 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.186101}}
61
62 @article{doi:10.1021/jp048375k,
63 Abstract = { Water- and alcohol-soluble AuPd nanoparticles have been investigated to determine the effect of the organic stabilizing group on the thermal conductance G of the particle/fluid interface. The thermal decays of tiopronin-stabilized 3−5-nm diameter AuPd alloy nanoparticles, thioalkylated ethylene glycol-stabilized 3−5-nm diameter AuPd nanoparticles, and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide-stabilized 22-nm diameter Au-core/AuPd-shell nanoparticles give thermal conductances G ≈ 100−300 MW m-2 K-1 for the particle/water interfaces, approximately an order of magnitude larger than the conductance of the interfaces between alkanethiol-terminated AuPd nanoparticles and toluene. The similar values of G for particles ranging in size from 3 to 24 nm with widely varying surface chemistry indicate that the thermal coupling between AuPd nanoparticles and water is strong regardless of the self-assembled stabilizing group. },
64 Author = {Ge, Zhenbin and Cahill, David G. and Braun, Paul V.},
65 Date-Added = {2011-07-28 15:41:14 -0400},
66 Date-Modified = {2011-07-28 15:59:32 -0400},
67 Doi = {10.1021/jp048375k},
68 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp048375k},
69 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
70 Number = {49},
71 Pages = {18870-18875},
72 Title = {AuPd Metal Nanoparticles as Probes of Nanoscale Thermal Transport in Aqueous Solution},
73 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp048375k},
74 Volume = {108},
75 Year = {2004},
76 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp048375k},
77 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp048375k}}
78
79 @article{PhysRevB.67.054302,
80 Author = {Costescu, Ruxandra M. and Wall, Marcel A. and Cahill, David G.},
81 Date-Added = {2011-07-28 15:40:29 -0400},
82 Date-Modified = {2011-07-28 15:40:29 -0400},
83 Doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.67.054302},
84 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
85 Month = {Feb},
86 Number = {5},
87 Numpages = {5},
88 Pages = {054302},
89 Publisher = {American Physical Society},
90 Title = {Thermal conductance of epitaxial interfaces},
91 Volume = {67},
92 Year = {2003},
93 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.67.054302}}
94
95 @article{garde:nl2005,
96 Abstract = { Systems with nanoscopic features contain a high density of interfaces. Thermal transport in such systems can be governed by the resistance to heat transfer, the Kapitza resistance (RK), at the interface. Although soft interfaces, such as those between immiscible liquids or between a biomolecule and solvent, are ubiquitous, few studies of thermal transport at such interfaces have been reported. Here we characterize the interfacial conductance, 1/RK, of soft interfaces as a function of molecular architecture, chemistry, and the strength of cross-interfacial intermolecular interactions through detailed molecular dynamics simulations. The conductance of various interfaces studied here, for example, water−organic liquid, water−surfactant, surfactant−organic liquid, is relatively high (in the range of 65−370 MW/m2 K) compared to that for solid−liquid interfaces (∼10 MW/m2 K). Interestingly, the dependence of interfacial conductance on the chemistry and molecular architecture cannot be explained solely in terms of either bulk property mismatch or the strength of intermolecular attraction between the two phases. The observed trends can be attributed to a combination of strong cross-interface intermolecular interactions and good thermal coupling via soft vibration modes present at liquid−liquid interfaces. },
97 Author = {Patel, Harshit A. and Garde, Shekhar and Keblinski, Pawel},
98 Date-Added = {2011-07-26 13:56:59 -0400},
99 Date-Modified = {2011-07-26 13:57:47 -0400},
100 Doi = {10.1021/nl051526q},
101 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/nl051526q},
102 Journal = {Nano Lett.},
103 Note = {PMID: 16277458},
104 Number = {11},
105 Pages = {2225-2231},
106 Title = {Thermal Resistance of Nanoscopic Liquid−Liquid Interfaces:  Dependence on Chemistry and Molecular Architecture},
107 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nl051526q},
108 Volume = {5},
109 Year = {2005},
110 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nl051526q},
111 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl051526q}}
112
113 @article{garde:PhysRevLett2009,
114 Author = {Shenogina, Natalia and Godawat, Rahul and Keblinski, Pawel and Garde, Shekhar},
115 Date-Added = {2011-07-25 16:06:12 -0400},
116 Date-Modified = {2011-07-26 13:58:33 -0400},
117 Doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.156101},
118 Journal = {Phys. Rev. Lett.},
119 Month = {Apr},
120 Number = {15},
121 Numpages = {4},
122 Pages = {156101},
123 Publisher = {American Physical Society},
124 Title = {How Wetting and Adhesion Affect Thermal Conductance of a Range of Hydrophobic to Hydrophilic Aqueous Interfaces},
125 Volume = {102},
126 Year = {2009},
127 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.156101}}
128
129 @article{doi:10.1021/cr9801317,
130 Author = {Takano, Hajime and Kenseth, Jeremy R. and Wong, Sze-Shun and O'Brie, Janese C. and Porter, Marc D.},
131 Date-Added = {2011-07-25 14:50:24 -0400},
132 Date-Modified = {2011-07-25 14:50:24 -0400},
133 Doi = {10.1021/cr9801317},
134 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/cr9801317},
135 Journal = {Chem. Rev.},
136 Number = {10},
137 Pages = {2845-2890},
138 Title = {Chemical and Biochemical Analysis Using Scanning Force Microscopy},
139 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/cr9801317},
140 Volume = {99},
141 Year = {1999},
142 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/cr9801317},
143 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cr9801317}}
144
145 @article{doi:10.1021/ja00008a001,
146 Author = {Widrig, Cindra A. and Alves, Carla A. and Porter, Marc D.},
147 Date-Added = {2011-07-25 14:49:37 -0400},
148 Date-Modified = {2011-07-25 14:49:37 -0400},
149 Doi = {10.1021/ja00008a001},
150 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ja00008a001},
151 Journal = {J. Am. Chem. Soc.},
152 Number = {8},
153 Pages = {2805-2810},
154 Title = {Scanning tunneling microscopy of ethanethiolate and n-octadecanethiolate monolayers spontaneously absorbed at gold surfaces},
155 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja00008a001},
156 Volume = {113},
157 Year = {1991},
158 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja00008a001},
159 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja00008a001}}
160
161 @article{doi:10.1021/la026493y,
162 Abstract = { We have studied butanethiol self-assembled monolayers on Au(100) using cyclic voltammetry and in situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). The butanethiol adlayer shows ordered domains with a striped structure, the stripes running parallel to the main crystallographic axes of the substrate. After modification the surface reveals a 50% coverage of monoatomic high gold islands, but no vacancy islands were observed. Reductive and oxidative desorption of the film, previously studied by electrochemistry, were monitored by STM. },
163 Author = {Loglio, F. and Schweizer, M. and Kolb, D. M.},
164 Date-Added = {2011-07-12 17:52:01 -0400},
165 Date-Modified = {2011-07-12 17:52:01 -0400},
166 Doi = {10.1021/la026493y},
167 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/la026493y},
168 Journal = {Langmuir},
169 Number = {3},
170 Pages = {830-834},
171 Title = {In Situ Characterization of Self-Assembled Butanethiol Monolayers on Au(100) Electrodes},
172 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/la026493y},
173 Volume = {19},
174 Year = {2003},
175 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/la026493y},
176 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la026493y}}
177
178 @article{doi:10.1021/j100035a033,
179 Author = {McDermott, Christie A. and McDermott, Mark T. and Green, John-Bruce and Porter, Marc D.},
180 Date-Added = {2011-07-12 17:51:55 -0400},
181 Date-Modified = {2011-07-12 17:51:55 -0400},
182 Doi = {10.1021/j100035a033},
183 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/j100035a033},
184 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem.},
185 Number = {35},
186 Pages = {13257-13267},
187 Title = {Structural Origins of the Surface Depressions at Alkanethiolate Monolayers on Au(111): A Scanning Tunneling and Atomic Force Microscopic Investigation},
188 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/j100035a033},
189 Volume = {99},
190 Year = {1995},
191 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/j100035a033},
192 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/j100035a033}}
193
194 @article{hautman:4994,
195 Author = {Joseph Hautman and Michael L. Klein},
196 Date-Added = {2011-07-11 18:27:57 -0400},
197 Date-Modified = {2011-07-11 18:27:57 -0400},
198 Doi = {10.1063/1.457621},
199 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
200 Keywords = {MOLECULAR DYNAMICS CALCULATIONS; SIMULATION; MONOLAYERS; THIOLS; ALKYL COMPOUNDS; CHAINS; SURFACE STRUCTURE; GOLD; SUBSTRATES; CHEMISORPTION; SURFACE PROPERTIES},
201 Number = {8},
202 Pages = {4994-5001},
203 Publisher = {AIP},
204 Title = {Simulation of a monolayer of alkyl thiol chains},
205 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/91/4994/1},
206 Volume = {91},
207 Year = {1989},
208 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/91/4994/1},
209 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.457621}}
210
211 @article{landman:1998,
212 Abstract = { Equilibrium structures and thermodynamic properties of dodecanethiol self-assembled monolayers on small (Au140) and larger (Au1289) gold nanocrystallites were investigated with the use of molecular dynamics simulations. Compact passivating monolayers are formed on the (111) and (100) facets of the nanocrystallites, with adsorption site geometries differing from those found on extended flat Au(111) and Au(100) surfaces, as well as with higher packing densities. At lower temperatures the passivating molecules organize into preferentially oriented molecular bundles with the molecules in the bundles aligned approximately parallel to each other. Thermal disordering starts at T ≳200 K, initiating at the boundaries of the bundles and involving generation of intramolecular conformational (gauche) defects which occur first at bonds near the chains' outer terminus and propagate inward toward the underlying gold nanocrystalline surface as the temperature is increased. The disordering process culminates in melting of the molecular bundles, resulting in a uniform orientational distribution of the molecules around the gold nanocrystallites. From the inflection points in the calculated caloric curves, melting temperatures were determined as 280 and 294 K for the monolayers adsorbed on the smaller and larger gold nanocrystallites, respectively. These temperatures are significantly lower than the melting temperature estimated for a self-assembled monolayer of dodecanethiol adsorbed on an extended Au(111) surface. The theoretically predicted disordering mechanisms and melting scenario, resulting in a temperature-broadened transition, support recent experimental investigations. },
213 Author = {Luedtke, W. D. and Landman, Uzi},
214 Date-Added = {2011-07-11 18:22:20 -0400},
215 Date-Modified = {2011-07-11 18:22:54 -0400},
216 Doi = {10.1021/jp981745i},
217 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp981745i},
218 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
219 Number = {34},
220 Pages = {6566-6572},
221 Title = {Structure and Thermodynamics of Self-Assembled Monolayers on Gold Nanocrystallites},
222 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp981745i},
223 Volume = {102},
224 Year = {1998},
225 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp981745i},
226 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp981745i}}
227
228 @article{hase:2010,
229 Abstract = {Model non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are presented of heat transfer from a hot Au {111} substrate to an alkylthiolate self-assembled monolayer (H-SAM) to assist in obtaining an atomic-level understanding of experiments by Wang et al. (Z. Wang{,} J. A. Carter{,} A. Lagutchev{,} Y. K. Koh{,} N.-H. Seong{,} D. G. Cahill{,} and D. D. Dlott{,} Science{,} 2007{,} 317{,} 787). Different models are considered to determine how they affect the heat transfer dynamics. They include temperature equilibrated (TE) and temperature gradient (TG) thermostat models for the Au(s) surface{,} and soft and stiff S/Au(s) models for bonding of the S-atoms to the Au(s) surface. A detailed analysis of the non-equilibrium heat transfer at the heterogeneous interface is presented. There is a short time temperature gradient within the top layers of the Au(s) surface. The S-atoms heat rapidly{,} much faster than do the C-atoms in the alkylthiolate chains. A high thermal conductivity in the H-SAM{,} perpendicular to the interface{,} results in nearly identical temperatures for the CH2 and CH3 groups versus time. Thermal-induced disorder is analyzed for the Au(s) substrate{,} the S/Au(s) interface and the H-SAM. Before heat transfer occurs from the hot Au(s) substrate to the H-SAM{,} there is disorder at the S/Au(s) interface and within the alkylthiolate chains arising from heat-induced disorder near the surface of hot Au(s). The short-time rapid heating of the S-atoms enhances this disorder. The increasing disorder of H-SAM chains with time results from both disorder at the Au/S interface and heat transfer to the H-SAM chains.},
230 Author = {Zhang, Yue and Barnes, George L. and Yan, Tianying and Hase, William L.},
231 Date-Added = {2011-07-11 16:02:11 -0400},
232 Date-Modified = {2011-07-11 16:06:39 -0400},
233 Doi = {10.1039/B923858C},
234 Issue = {17},
235 Journal = {Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.},
236 Pages = {4435-4445},
237 Publisher = {The Royal Society of Chemistry},
238 Title = {Model non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations of heat transfer from a hot gold surface to an alkylthiolate self-assembled monolayer},
239 Url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/B923858C},
240 Volume = {12},
241 Year = {2010},
242 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/B923858C}}
243
244 @article{jiang:2002,
245 Abstract = { A review is presented of this group's recent molecular simulation studies of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of alkanethiols on Au(111) surfaces. SAMs are very useful for the systematic alteration of the chemical and structural properties of a surface by varying chain length, tail group and composition. The scientific and technological importance of SAMs cannot be overestimated. The present work has been centred on studies of atomic scale surface properties of SAMs. First, configurational-bias Monte Carlo simulations were performed in both semigrand canonical and canonical ensembles to investigate the preferential adsorption and phase behaviour of mixed SAMs on Au(111) surfaces. Second, a novel hybrid molecular simulation technique was developed to simulate atomic force microscopy (AFM) over experimental timescales. The method combines a dynamic element model for the tip-cantilever system in AFM and a molecular dynamics relaxation approach for the sample. The hybrid simulation technique was applied to investigate atomic scale friction and adhesion properties of SAMs as a function of chain length. Third, dual-control-volume grand canonical molecular dynamics (DCV-GCMD) simulations were performed of transport diffusion of liquid water and methanol through a slit pore with both inner walls consisting of Au(111) surfaces covered by SAMs under a chemical potential gradient. Surface hydrophobicity was adjusted by varying the terminal group of CH3 (hydrophobic) or OH (hydrophilic) of the SAMs. Finally, ab initio quantum chemical calculations were performed on both clusters and periodic systems of methylthiols on Au(111) surfaces. Based on the ab initio results, an accurate force field capable of predicting c(4×2) superlattice structures over a wide range of temepratures for alkanethiols on Au(111) was developed. The extension of current work is discussed briefly. },
246 Author = {JIANG, SHAOYI},
247 Date-Added = {2011-07-08 17:51:59 -0400},
248 Date-Modified = {2011-07-11 16:11:38 -0400},
249 Doi = {10.1080/00268970210130948},
250 Eprint = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/00268970210130948},
251 Journal = {Molecular Physics},
252 Number = {14},
253 Pages = {2261-2275},
254 Title = {Molecular simulation studies of self-assembled monolayers of alkanethiols on Au(111)},
255 Url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00268970210130948},
256 Volume = {100},
257 Year = {2002},
258 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00268970210130948},
259 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00268970210130948}}
260
261 @article{doi:10.1021/la904855s,
262 Author = {Alper, Joshua and Hamad-Schifferli, Kimberly},
263 Date-Added = {2011-07-08 17:18:53 -0400},
264 Date-Modified = {2011-07-08 17:18:53 -0400},
265 Doi = {10.1021/la904855s},
266 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/la904855s},
267 Journal = {Langmuir},
268 Note = {PMID: 20166728},
269 Number = {6},
270 Pages = {3786-3789},
271 Title = {Effect of Ligands on Thermal Dissipation from Gold Nanorods},
272 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/la904855s},
273 Volume = {26},
274 Year = {2010},
275 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/la904855s},
276 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la904855s}}
277
278 @article{doi:10.1021/jp8051888,
279 Abstract = { Thermal transport between CTAB passivated gold nanorods and solvent is studied by an optical pump−probe technique. Increasing the free CTAB concentration from 1 mM to 10 mM causes a ∼3× increase in the CTAB layer's effective thermal interface conductance and a corresponding shift in the longitudinal surface plasmon resonance. The transition occurs near the CTAB critical micelle concentration, revealing the importance of the role of free ligand on thermal transport. },
280 Author = {Schmidt, Aaron J. and Alper, Joshua D. and Chiesa, Matteo and Chen, Gang and Das, Sarit K. and Hamad-Schifferli, Kimberly},
281 Date-Added = {2011-07-08 17:04:34 -0400},
282 Date-Modified = {2011-07-08 17:04:34 -0400},
283 Doi = {10.1021/jp8051888},
284 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp8051888},
285 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. C},
286 Number = {35},
287 Pages = {13320-13323},
288 Title = {Probing the Gold Nanorod−Ligand−Solvent Interface by Plasmonic Absorption and Thermal Decay},
289 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp8051888},
290 Volume = {112},
291 Year = {2008},
292 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp8051888},
293 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp8051888}}
294
295 @article{PhysRevB.80.195406,
296 Author = {Juv\'e, Vincent and Scardamaglia, Mattia and Maioli, Paolo and Crut, Aur\'elien and Merabia, Samy and Joly, Laurent and Del Fatti, Natalia and Vall\'ee, Fabrice},
297 Date-Added = {2011-07-08 16:36:39 -0400},
298 Date-Modified = {2011-07-08 16:36:39 -0400},
299 Doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.80.195406},
300 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
301 Month = {Nov},
302 Number = {19},
303 Numpages = {6},
304 Pages = {195406},
305 Publisher = {American Physical Society},
306 Title = {Cooling dynamics and thermal interface resistance of glass-embedded metal nanoparticles},
307 Volume = {80},
308 Year = {2009},
309 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.80.195406}}
310
311 @article{Wang10082007,
312 Abstract = {At the level of individual molecules, familiar concepts of heat transport no longer apply. When large amounts of heat are transported through a molecule, a crucial process in molecular electronic devices, energy is carried by discrete molecular vibrational excitations. We studied heat transport through self-assembled monolayers of long-chain hydrocarbon molecules anchored to a gold substrate by ultrafast heating of the gold with a femtosecond laser pulse. When the heat reached the methyl groups at the chain ends, a nonlinear coherent vibrational spectroscopy technique detected the resulting thermally induced disorder. The flow of heat into the chains was limited by the interface conductance. The leading edge of the heat burst traveled ballistically along the chains at a velocity of 1 kilometer per second. The molecular conductance per chain was 50 picowatts per kelvin.},
313 Author = {Wang, Zhaohui and Carter, Jeffrey A. and Lagutchev, Alexei and Koh, Yee Kan and Seong, Nak-Hyun and Cahill, David G. and Dlott, Dana D.},
314 Date-Added = {2011-07-08 16:20:05 -0400},
315 Date-Modified = {2011-07-08 16:20:05 -0400},
316 Doi = {10.1126/science.1145220},
317 Eprint = {http://www.sciencemag.org/content/317/5839/787.full.pdf},
318 Journal = {Science},
319 Number = {5839},
320 Pages = {787-790},
321 Title = {Ultrafast Flash Thermal Conductance of Molecular Chains},
322 Url = {http://www.sciencemag.org/content/317/5839/787.abstract},
323 Volume = {317},
324 Year = {2007},
325 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.sciencemag.org/content/317/5839/787.abstract},
326 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1145220}}
327
328 @article{hase:2011,
329 Abstract = { In a previous article (Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.2010, 12, 4435), nonequilibrium molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of heat transfer from a hot Au{111} substrate to an alkylthiolate self-assembled monolayer (H-SAM) were presented. The simulations were performed for an H-SAM chain length of eight carbon atoms, and a qualitative agreement with the experiments of Wang et al. (Science2007, 317, 787) was found. Here, simulation results are presented for heat transfer to H-SAM surfaces with carbon chain lengths of 10--20 carbon atoms. Relaxation times for heat transfer are extracted, compared with experiment, and a qualitative agreement is obtained. The same relaxation time is found from either the temperature of the H-SAM or the orientational disorder of the H-SAM versus time. For a simulation model with the Au substrate thermally equilibrated, the relaxation times determined from the simulations are approximately a factor of 4 larger than the experimental values. },
330 Author = {Manikandan, Paranjothy and Carter, Jeffrey A. and Dlott, Dana D. and Hase, William L.},
331 Date-Added = {2011-07-08 13:36:39 -0400},
332 Date-Modified = {2011-07-11 16:07:01 -0400},
333 Doi = {10.1021/jp200672e},
334 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp200672e},
335 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. C},
336 Number = {19},
337 Pages = {9622-9628},
338 Title = {Effect of Carbon Chain Length on the Dynamics of Heat Transfer at a Gold/Hydrocarbon Interface: Comparison of Simulation with Experiment},
339 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp200672e},
340 Volume = {115},
341 Year = {2011},
342 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp200672e},
343 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp200672e}}
344
345 @article{UFF.rappe92,
346 Author = {Rappe, A. K. and Casewit, C. J. and Colwell, K. S. and Goddard, W. A. and Skiff, W. M.},
347 Date-Added = {2011-06-29 14:04:33 -0400},
348 Date-Modified = {2011-07-26 18:53:04 -0400},
349 Doi = {10.1021/ja00051a040},
350 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ja00051a040},
351 Journal = {Journal of the American Chemical Society},
352 Number = {25},
353 Pages = {10024-10035},
354 Title = {UFF, a full periodic table force field for molecular mechanics and molecular dynamics simulations},
355 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja00051a040},
356 Volume = {114},
357 Year = {1992},
358 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja00051a040},
359 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja00051a040}}
360
361 @article{doi:10.1021/jp034405s,
362 Abstract = { We use the universal force field (UFF) developed by Rapp{\'e} et al. (Rapp{\'e}, A. K.; Casewit, C. J.; Colwell, K. S.; Goddard, W. A.; Skiff, W. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1992, 114, 10024) and the specific classical potentials developed from ab initio calculations for Au−benzenedithiol (BDT) molecule interaction to perform molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of a BDT monolayer on an extended Au(111) surface. The simulation system consists of 100 BDT molecules and three rigid Au layers in a simulation box that is rhombic in the plane of the Au surface. A multiple time scale algorithm, the double-reversible reference system propagator algorithm (double RESPA) based on the Nos{\'e}−Hoover dynamics scheme, and the Ewald summation with a boundary correction term for the treatment of long-range electrostatic interactions in a 2-D slab have been incorporated into the simulation technique. We investigate the local bonding properties of Au−BDT contacts and molecular orientation distributions of BDT molecules. These results show that whereas different basis sets from ab initio calculations may generate different local bonding geometric parameters (the bond length, etc.) the packing structures of BDT molecules maintain approximately the same well-ordered herringbone structure with small peak differences in the probability distributions of global geometric parameters. The methodology developed here opens an avenue for classical simulations of a metal−molecule−metal complex in molecular electronics devices. },
363 Author = {Leng, Y. and Keffer, David J. and Cummings, Peter T.},
364 Date-Added = {2011-04-28 11:23:28 -0400},
365 Date-Modified = {2011-04-28 11:23:28 -0400},
366 Doi = {10.1021/jp034405s},
367 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp034405s},
368 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
369 Number = {43},
370 Pages = {11940-11950},
371 Title = {Structure and Dynamics of a Benzenedithiol Monolayer on a Au(111) Surface},
372 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp034405s},
373 Volume = {107},
374 Year = {2003},
375 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp034405s},
376 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp034405s}}
377
378 @article{OPLSAA,
379 Abstract = {null},
380 Annote = {doi: 10.1021/ja9621760},
381 Author = {Jorgensen, William L. and Maxwell, David S. and Tirado-Rives, Julian},
382 Date = {1996/01/01},
383 Date-Added = {2011-02-04 18:54:58 -0500},
384 Date-Modified = {2011-02-04 18:54:58 -0500},
385 Do = {10.1021/ja9621760},
386 Isbn = {0002-7863},
387 Journal = {J. Am. Chem. Soc.},
388 M3 = {doi: 10.1021/ja9621760},
389 Month = {01},
390 Number = {45},
391 Pages = {11225--11236},
392 Publisher = {American Chemical Society},
393 Title = {Development and Testing of the OPLS All-Atom Force Field on Conformational Energetics and Properties of Organic Liquids},
394 Ty = {JOUR},
395 Url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja9621760},
396 Volume = {118},
397 Year = {1996},
398 Year1 = {1996/01/01},
399 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja9621760}}
400
401 @article{TraPPE-UA.alkylbenzenes,
402 Author = {Wick, Collin D. and Martin, Marcus G. and Siepmann, J. Ilja},
403 Date-Added = {2011-02-04 18:31:46 -0500},
404 Date-Modified = {2011-02-04 18:32:22 -0500},
405 Doi = {10.1021/jp001044x},
406 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp001044x},
407 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
408 Number = {33},
409 Pages = {8008-8016},
410 Title = {Transferable Potentials for Phase Equilibria. 4. United-Atom Description of Linear and Branched Alkenes and Alkylbenzenes},
411 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp001044x},
412 Volume = {104},
413 Year = {2000},
414 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp001044x},
415 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp001044x}}
416
417 @article{TraPPE-UA.alkanes,
418 Author = {Martin, Marcus G. and Siepmann, J. Ilja},
419 Date-Added = {2011-02-04 18:01:31 -0500},
420 Date-Modified = {2011-02-04 18:02:19 -0500},
421 Doi = {10.1021/jp972543+},
422 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp972543%2B},
423 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
424 Number = {14},
425 Pages = {2569-2577},
426 Title = {Transferable Potentials for Phase Equilibria. 1. United-Atom Description of n-Alkanes},
427 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp972543%2B},
428 Volume = {102},
429 Year = {1998},
430 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp972543+},
431 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp972543+}}
432
433 @article{TraPPE-UA.thiols,
434 Author = {Lubna, Nusrat and Kamath, Ganesh and Potoff, Jeffrey J. and Rai, Neeraj and Siepmann, J. Ilja},
435 Date-Added = {2011-02-04 17:51:03 -0500},
436 Date-Modified = {2011-02-04 17:54:20 -0500},
437 Doi = {10.1021/jp0549125},
438 Eprint = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/jp0549125},
439 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
440 Number = {50},
441 Pages = {24100-24107},
442 Title = {Transferable Potentials for Phase Equilibria. 8. United-Atom Description for Thiols, Sulfides, Disulfides, and Thiophene},
443 Url = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp0549125},
444 Volume = {109},
445 Year = {2005},
446 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp0549125},
447 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp0549125}}
448
449 @article{vlugt:cpc2007154,
450 Author = {Philipp Schapotschnikow and Ren{\'e} Pool and Thijs J.H. Vlugt},
451 Date-Added = {2011-02-01 16:00:11 -0500},
452 Date-Modified = {2011-02-04 18:21:59 -0500},
453 Doi = {DOI: 10.1016/j.cpc.2007.02.028},
454 Issn = {0010-4655},
455 Journal = {Comput. Phys. Commun.},
456 Keywords = {Gold nanocrystals},
457 Note = {Proceedings of the Conference on Computational Physics 2006 - CCP 2006, Conference on Computational Physics 2006},
458 Number = {1-2},
459 Pages = {154 - 157},
460 Title = {Selective adsorption of alkyl thiols on gold in different geometries},
461 Url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6TJ5-4N3WYP0-1/2/66dbe8892f456c230b9b8fcd9c23f456},
462 Volume = {177},
463 Year = {2007},
464 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6TJ5-4N3WYP0-1/2/66dbe8892f456c230b9b8fcd9c23f456},
465 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cpc.2007.02.028}}
466
467 @article{packmol,
468 Author = {L. Mart\'{\i}nez and R. Andrade and Ernesto G. Birgin and Jos{\'e} Mario Mart\'{\i}nez},
469 Bibsource = {DBLP, http://dblp.uni-trier.de},
470 Date-Added = {2011-02-01 15:13:02 -0500},
471 Date-Modified = {2011-02-01 15:14:25 -0500},
472 Ee = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcc.21224},
473 Journal = {J. Comput. Chem.},
474 Number = {13},
475 Pages = {2157-2164},
476 Title = {PACKMOL: A package for building initial configurations for molecular dynamics simulations},
477 Volume = {30},
478 Year = {2009}}
479
480 @article{kuang:164101,
481 Author = {Shenyu Kuang and J. Daniel Gezelter},
482 Date-Added = {2011-01-31 17:12:35 -0500},
483 Date-Modified = {2011-01-31 17:12:35 -0500},
484 Doi = {10.1063/1.3499947},
485 Eid = {164101},
486 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
487 Keywords = {linear momentum; molecular dynamics method; thermal conductivity; total energy; viscosity},
488 Number = {16},
489 Numpages = {9},
490 Pages = {164101},
491 Publisher = {AIP},
492 Title = {A gentler approach to RNEMD: Nonisotropic velocity scaling for computing thermal conductivity and shear viscosity},
493 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/133/164101/1},
494 Volume = {133},
495 Year = {2010},
496 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/133/164101/1},
497 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3499947}}
498
499 @article{muller:014102,
500 Author = {Thomas J. Muller and Michael Al-Samman and Florian Muller-Plathe},
501 Date-Added = {2010-09-16 19:19:25 -0400},
502 Date-Modified = {2010-09-16 19:19:25 -0400},
503 Doi = {10.1063/1.2943312},
504 Eid = {014102},
505 Journal = {The Journal of Chemical Physics},
506 Keywords = {intramolecular mechanics; Lennard-Jones potential; molecular dynamics method; thermostats; viscosity},
507 Number = {1},
508 Numpages = {8},
509 Pages = {014102},
510 Publisher = {AIP},
511 Title = {The influence of thermostats and manostats on reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics calculations of fluid viscosities},
512 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/129/014102/1},
513 Volume = {129},
514 Year = {2008},
515 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/129/014102/1},
516 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2943312}}
517
518 @article{wolf:8254,
519 Author = {D. Wolf and P. Keblinski and S. R. Phillpot and J. Eggebrecht},
520 Date-Added = {2010-09-16 19:01:51 -0400},
521 Date-Modified = {2010-09-16 19:01:51 -0400},
522 Doi = {10.1063/1.478738},
523 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
524 Keywords = {POTENTIAL ENERGY; COULOMB FIELD; COULOMB ENERGY; LATTICE PARAMETERS; potential energy functions; lattice dynamics; lattice energy},
525 Number = {17},
526 Pages = {8254-8282},
527 Publisher = {AIP},
528 Title = {Exact method for the simulation of Coulombic systems by spherically truncated, pairwise r[sup -1] summation},
529 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/110/8254/1},
530 Volume = {110},
531 Year = {1999},
532 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/110/8254/1},
533 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.478738}}
534
535 @article{HeX:1993,
536 Abstract = {A recently developed non-equilibrium molecular dynamics algorithm for
537 heat conduction is used to compute the thermal conductivity, thermal
538 diffusion factor, and heat of transfer in binary Lennard-Jones
539 mixtures. An internal energy flux is established with local source and
540 sink terms for kinetic energy.
541 Simulations of isotope mixtures covering a range of densities and mass
542 ratios show that the lighter component prefers the hot side of the
543 system at stationary state. This implies a positive thermal diffusion
544 factor in the definition we have adopted here. The molecular basis for
545 the Soret effect is studied by analysing the energy flux through the
546 system. In all cases we found that there is a difference in the
547 relative contributions when we compare the hot and cold sides of the
548 system. The contribution from the lighter component is predominantly
549 flux of kinetic energy, and this contribution increases from the cold
550 to the hot side. The contribution from the heavier component is
551 predominantly energy transfer through molecular interactions, and it
552 increases from the hot to the cold side. This explains why the thermal
553 diffusion factor is positive; heal is conducted more effectively
554 through the system if the lighter component is enriched at the hot
555 side. Even for very large heat fluxes, we find a linear or almost
556 linear temperature profile through the system, and a constant thermal
557 conductivity. The entropy production per unit volume and unit time
558 increases from the hot to the cold side.},
559 Author = {Hafskjold, B and Ikeshoji, T and Ratkje, SK},
560 Date-Added = {2010-09-15 16:52:45 -0400},
561 Date-Modified = {2010-09-15 16:54:23 -0400},
562 Issn = {{0026-8976}},
563 Journal = {Mol. Phys.},
564 Month = {DEC},
565 Number = {6},
566 Pages = {1389-1412},
567 Title = {ON THE MOLECULAR MECHANISM OF THERMAL-DIFFUSION IN LIQUIDS},
568 Unique-Id = {ISI:A1993MQ34500009},
569 Volume = {80},
570 Year = {1993}}
571
572 @article{HeX:1994,
573 Abstract = {This paper presents a new algorithm for non-equilibrium molecular
574 dynamics, where a temperature gradient is established in a system with
575 periodic boundary conditions. At each time step in the simulation, a
576 fixed amount of energy is supplied to a hot region by scaling the
577 velocity of each particle in it, subject to conservation of total
578 momentum. An equal amount of energy is likewise withdrawn from a cold
579 region at each time step. Between the hot and cold regions is a region
580 through which an energy flux is established. Two configurations of hot
581 and cold regions are proposed. Using a stacked layer structure, the
582 instantaneous local energy flux for a 128-particle Lennard-Jones system
583 in liquid was found to be in good agreement with the macroscopic theory
584 of heat conduction at stationary state, except in and near the hot and
585 cold regions. Thermal conductivity calculated for the 128-particle
586 system was about 10\% smaller than the literature value obtained by
587 molecular dynamics calculations. One run with a 1024-particle system
588 showed an agreement with the literature value within statistical error
589 (1-2\%). Using a unit cell with a cold spherical region at the centre
590 and a hot region in the perimeter of the cube, an initial gaseous state
591 of argon was separated into gas and liquid phases. Energy fluxes due to
592 intermolecular energy transfer and transport of kinetic energy dominate
593 in the liquid and gas phases, respectively.},
594 Author = {Ikeshoji, T and Hafskjold, B},
595 Date-Added = {2010-09-15 16:52:45 -0400},
596 Date-Modified = {2010-09-15 16:54:37 -0400},
597 Issn = {0026-8976},
598 Journal = {Mol. Phys.},
599 Month = {FEB},
600 Number = {2},
601 Pages = {251-261},
602 Title = {NONEQUILIBRIUM MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS CALCULATION OF HEAT-CONDUCTION IN LIQUID AND THROUGH LIQUID-GAS INTERFACE},
603 Unique-Id = {ISI:A1994MY17400001},
604 Volume = {81},
605 Year = {1994}}
606
607 @article{plech:195423,
608 Author = {A. Plech and V. Kotaidis and S. Gresillon and C. Dahmen and G. von Plessen},
609 Date-Added = {2010-08-12 11:34:55 -0400},
610 Date-Modified = {2010-08-12 11:34:55 -0400},
611 Eid = {195423},
612 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
613 Keywords = {gold; laser materials processing; melting; nanoparticles; time resolved spectra; X-ray scattering; lattice dynamics; high-speed optical techniques; cooling; thermal resistance; thermal conductivity; long-range order},
614 Local-Url = {file://localhost/Users/charles/Documents/Papers/PhysRevB_70_195423.pdf},
615 Number = {19},
616 Numpages = {7},
617 Pages = {195423},
618 Publisher = {APS},
619 Title = {Laser-induced heating and melting of gold nanoparticles studied by time-resolved x-ray scattering},
620 Url = {http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v70/e195423},
621 Volume = {70},
622 Year = {2004},
623 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v70/e195423}}
624
625 @article{Wilson:2002uq,
626 Abstract = {We investigate suspensions of 3-10 nm diameter Au, Pt, and AuPd nanoparticles as probes of thermal transport in fluids and determine approximate values for the thermal conductance G of the particle/fluid interfaces. Subpicosecond lambda=770 nm optical pulses from a Ti:sapphire mode-locked laser are used to heat the particles and interrogate the decay of their temperature through time-resolved changes in optical absorption. The thermal decay of alkanethiol-terminated Au nanoparticles in toluene is partially obscured by other effects; we set a lower limit G>20 MW m(-2)K(-1). The thermal decay of citrate-stabilized Pt nanoparticles in water gives Gapproximate to130 MW m(-2) K-1. AuPd alloy nanoparticles in toluene and stabilized by alkanethiol termination give Gapproximate to5 MW m(-2) K-1. The measured G are within a factor of 2 of theoretical estimates based on the diffuse-mismatch model.},
627 Author = {Wilson, OM and Hu, XY and Cahill, DG and Braun, PV},
628 Date-Added = {2010-08-12 11:31:02 -0400},
629 Date-Modified = {2010-08-12 11:31:02 -0400},
630 Doi = {ARTN 224301},
631 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
632 Local-Url = {file://localhost/Users/charles/Documents/Papers/e2243010.pdf},
633 Pages = {224301},
634 Title = {Colloidal metal particles as probes of nanoscale thermal transport in fluids},
635 Volume = {66},
636 Year = {2002},
637 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/224301}}
638
639 @article{RevModPhys.61.605,
640 Author = {Swartz, E. T. and Pohl, R. O.},
641 Date-Added = {2010-08-06 17:03:01 -0400},
642 Date-Modified = {2010-08-06 17:03:01 -0400},
643 Doi = {10.1103/RevModPhys.61.605},
644 Journal = {Rev. Mod. Phys.},
645 Month = {Jul},
646 Number = {3},
647 Numpages = {63},
648 Pages = {605--668},
649 Publisher = {American Physical Society},
650 Title = {Thermal boundary resistance},
651 Volume = {61},
652 Year = {1989},
653 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.61.605}}
654
655 @article{cahill:793,
656 Author = {David G. Cahill and Wayne K. Ford and Kenneth E. Goodson and Gerald D. Mahan and Arun Majumdar and Humphrey J. Maris and Roberto Merlin and Simon R. Phillpot},
657 Date-Added = {2010-08-06 17:02:22 -0400},
658 Date-Modified = {2010-08-06 17:02:22 -0400},
659 Doi = {10.1063/1.1524305},
660 Journal = {J. Appl. Phys.},
661 Keywords = {nanostructured materials; reviews; thermal conductivity; interface phenomena; molecular dynamics method; thermal management (packaging); Boltzmann equation; carbon nanotubes; porosity; semiconductor superlattices; thermoreflectance; interface phonons; thermoelectricity; phonon-phonon interactions},
662 Number = {2},
663 Pages = {793-818},
664 Publisher = {AIP},
665 Title = {Nanoscale thermal transport},
666 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JAP/93/793/1},
667 Volume = {93},
668 Year = {2003},
669 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JAP/93/793/1},
670 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1524305}}
671
672 @inbook{Hoffman:2001sf,
673 Address = {New York},
674 Annote = {LDR 01107cam 2200253 a 4500
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681 010 $a 2001028633
682 020 $a0824704436 (acid-free paper)
683 040 $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC
684 050 00 $aQA297$b.H588 2001
685 082 00 $a519.4$221
686 100 1 $aHoffman, Joe D.,$d1934-
687 245 10 $aNumerical methods for engineers and scientists /$cJoe D. Hoffman.
688 250 $a2nd ed., rev. and expanded.
689 260 $aNew York :$bMarcel Dekker,$cc2001.
690 300 $axi, 823 p. :$bill. ;$c26 cm.
691 504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 775-777) and index.
692 650 0 $aNumerical analysis.
693 856 42 $3Publisher description$uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0743/2001028633-d.html
694 },
695 Author = {Hoffman, Joe D.},
696 Call-Number = {QA297},
697 Date-Added = {2010-07-15 16:32:02 -0400},
698 Date-Modified = {2010-07-19 16:49:37 -0400},
699 Dewey-Call-Number = {519.4},
700 Edition = {2nd ed., rev. and expanded},
701 Genre = {Numerical analysis},
702 Isbn = {0824704436 (acid-free paper)},
703 Library-Id = {2001028633},
704 Pages = {157},
705 Publisher = {Marcel Dekker},
706 Title = {Numerical methods for engineers and scientists},
707 Url = {http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0743/2001028633-d.html},
708 Year = {2001},
709 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0743/2001028633-d.html}}
710
711 @article{Vardeman:2008fk,
712 Abstract = {Using molecular dynamics simulations, we have simulated the rapid cooling experienced by bimetallic nanoparticles following laser excitation at the plasmon resonance and find evidence that glassy beads, specifically Ag-Cu bimetallic particles at the eutectic composition (60\% Ag, 40\% Cu), can be formed during these experiments. The bimetallic nanoparticles are embedded in an implicit solvent with a viscosity tuned to yield cooling curves that match the experimental cooling behavior as closely as possible. Because the nanoparticles have a large surface-to-volume ratio, experimentally realistic cooling rates are accessible via relatively short simulations. The presence of glassy structural features was verified using bond orientational order parameters that are sensitive to the formation of local icosahedral ordering in condensed phases. As the particles cool from the liquid droplet state into glassy beads, a silver-rich monolayer develops on the outer surface and local icosahedra can develop around the silver atoms in this monolayer. However, we observe a strong preference for the local icosahedral ordering around the copper atoms in the particles. As the particles cool, these local icosahedral structures grow to include a larger fraction of the atoms in the nanoparticle, eventually leading to a glassy nanosphere.},
713 Address = {1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA},
714 Author = {{Vardeman II}, Charles F. and Gezelter, J. Daniel},
715 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:48:22 -0400},
716 Date-Modified = {2010-07-19 16:20:01 -0400},
717 Doi = {DOI 10.1021/jp710063g},
718 Isi = {000253512400021},
719 Isi-Recid = {160903603},
720 Isi-Ref-Recids = {144152922 81445483 98913099 146167982 55512304 50985260 52031423 29272311 151055545 134895634 130292830 101988637 100757730 98524559 123952006 6025131 59492217 2078548 135495737 136941603 90709964 160903604 130558416 113800688 30137926 117888234 63632785 38926953 158293976 135246439 125693419 125789026 155583142 156430464 65888620 130160487 97576420 109490154 150229560 116057234 134425927 142869781 121706070 89390336 119150946 143383743 64066027 171282998 142688207 51429664 84591083 127696312 58160909 155366996 155654757 137551818 128633299 109033408 120457571 171282999 124947095 126857514 49630702 64115284 84689627 71842426 96309965 79034659 92658330 146168029 119238036 144824430 132319357 160903607 171283000 100274448},
721 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. C},
722 Month = mar,
723 Number = {9},
724 Pages = {3283-3293},
725 Publisher = {AMER CHEMICAL SOC},
726 Times-Cited = {0},
727 Title = {Simulations of laser-induced glass formation in Ag-Cu nanoparticles},
728 Volume = {112},
729 Year = {2008},
730 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://gateway.isiknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=Alerting&SrcApp=Alerting&DestApp=WOS&DestLinkType=FullRecord;KeyUT=000253512400021}}
731
732 @article{PhysRevB.59.3527,
733 Author = {Qi, Yue and \c{C}a\v{g}in, Tahir and Kimura, Yoshitaka and {Goddard III}, William A.},
734 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:44:08 -0400},
735 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:44:08 -0400},
736 Doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.59.3527},
737 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
738 Local-Url = {file://localhost/Users/charles/Documents/Papers/Qi/1999.pdf},
739 Month = {Feb},
740 Number = {5},
741 Numpages = {6},
742 Pages = {3527-3533},
743 Publisher = {American Physical Society},
744 Title = {Molecular-dynamics simulations of glass formation and crystallization in binary liquid metals:\quad{}{C}u-{A}g and {C}u-{N}i},
745 Volume = {59},
746 Year = {1999},
747 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.59.3527}}
748
749 @article{Medasani:2007uq,
750 Abstract = {We employ first-principles and empirical computational methods to study the surface energy and surface stress of silver nanoparticles. The structures, cohesive energies, and lattice contractions of spherical Ag nanoclusters in the size range 0.5-5.5 nm are analyzed using two different theoretical approaches: an ab initio density functional pseudopotential technique combined with the generalized gradient approximation and the embedded atom method. The surface energies and stresses obtained via the embedded atom method are found to be in good agreement with those predicted by the gradient-corrected ab initio density functional formalism. We estimate the surface energy of Ag nanoclusters to be in the range of 1.0-2.2 J/m(2). Our values are close to the bulk surface energy of silver, but are significantly lower than the recently reported value of 7.2 J/m(2) for free Ag nanoparticles derived from the Kelvin equation.},
751 Author = {Medasani, Bharat and Park, Young Ho and Vasiliev, Igor},
752 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:43:15 -0400},
753 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:43:15 -0400},
754 Doi = {ARTN 235436},
755 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
756 Local-Url = {file://localhost/Users/charles/Documents/Papers/PhysRevB_75_235436.pdf},
757 Title = {Theoretical study of the surface energy, stress, and lattice contraction of silver nanoparticles},
758 Volume = {75},
759 Year = {2007},
760 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/235436}}
761
762 @article{Wang:2005qy,
763 Abstract = {The surface structures of cubo-octahedral Pt-Mo nanoparticles have been investigated using the Monte Carlo method and modified embedded atom method potentials that we developed for Pt-Mo alloys. The cubo-octahedral Pt-Mo nanoparticles are constructed with disordered fcc configurations, with sizes from 2.5 to 5.0 nm, and with Pt concentrations from 60 to 90 atom \%. The equilibrium Pt-Mo nanoparticle configurations were generated through Monte Carlo simulations allowing both atomic displacements and element exchanges at 600 K. We predict that the Pt atoms weakly segregate to the surfaces of such nanoparticles. The Pt concentrations in the surface are calculated to be 5-14 atom \% higher than the Pt concentrations of the nanoparticles. Moreover, the Pt atoms preferentially segregate to the facet sites of the surface, while the Pt and Mo atoms tend to alternate along the edges and vertexes of these nanoparticles. We found that decreasing the size or increasing the Pt concentration leads to higher Pt concentrations but fewer Pt-Mo pairs in the Pt-Mo nanoparticle surfaces.},
764 Author = {Wang, GF and Van Hove, MA and Ross, PN and Baskes, MI},
765 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:42:50 -0400},
766 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:42:50 -0400},
767 Doi = {DOI 10.1021/jp050116n},
768 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
769 Pages = {11683-11692},
770 Title = {Surface structures of cubo-octahedral Pt-Mo catalyst nanoparticles from Monte Carlo simulations},
771 Volume = {109},
772 Year = {2005},
773 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp050116n}}
774
775 @article{Chui:2003fk,
776 Abstract = {Molecular dynamics simulations of a platinum nanocluster consisting 250 atoms were performed at different temperatures between 70 K and 298 K. The semi-empirical, many-body Sutton-Chen (SC) potential was used to model the interatomic interaction in the metallic system. Regions of core or bulk-like atoms and surface atoms can be defined from analyses of structures, atomic coordination, and the local density function of atoms as defined in the SC potential. The core atoms in the nanoparticle behave as bulk-like metal atoms with a predominant face centered cubic (fcc) packing. The interface between surface atoms and core atoms is marked by a peak in the local density function and corresponds to near surface atoms. The near surface atoms and surface atoms prefer a hexagonal closed packing (hcp). The temperature and size effects on structures of the nanoparticle and the dynamics of the surface region and the core region are discussed.},
777 Author = {Chui, YH and Chan, KY},
778 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:42:32 -0400},
779 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:42:32 -0400},
780 Doi = {DOI 10.1039/b302122j},
781 Journal = {Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.},
782 Pages = {2869-2874},
783 Title = {Analyses of surface and core atoms in a platinum nanoparticle},
784 Volume = {5},
785 Year = {2003},
786 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b302122j}}
787
788 @article{Sankaranarayanan:2005lr,
789 Abstract = {Bimetallic nanoclusters are of interest because of their utility in catalysis and sensors, The thermal characteristics of bimetallic Pt-Pd nanoclusters of different sizes and compositions were investigated through molecular dynamics simulations using quantum Sutton-Chen (QSC) many-body potentials, Monte Carlo simulations employing the bond order simulation model were used to generate minimum energy configurations, which were utilized as the starting point for molecular dynamics simulations. The calculated initial configurations of the Pt-Pd system consisted of surface segregated Pd atoms and a Pt-rich core, Melting characteristics were studied by following the changes in potential energy and heat capacity as functions of temperature, Structural changes accompanying the thermal evolution were studied by the bond order parameter method. The Pt-Pd clusters exhibited a two-stage melting: surface melting of the external Pd atoms followed by homogeneous melting of the Pt core. These transitions were found to depend on the composition and size of the nanocluster. Melting temperatures of the nanoclusters were found to be much lower than those of bulk Pt and Pd. Bulk melting temperatures of Pd and Pt simulated using periodic boundary conditions compare well with experimental values, thus providing justification for the use of QSC potentials in these simulations. Deformation parameters were calculated to characterize the structural evolution resulting from diffusion of Pd and Pt atoms, The results indicate that in Pd-Pt clusters, Pd atoms prefer to remain at the surface even after melting. In addition, Pt also tends to diffuse to the surface after melting due to reduction of its surface energy with temperature. This mixing pattern is different from those reported in some of the earlier Studies on melting of bimetallics.},
790 Author = {Sankaranarayanan, SKRS and Bhethanabotla, VR and Joseph, B},
791 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:42:13 -0400},
792 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:42:13 -0400},
793 Doi = {ARTN 195415},
794 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
795 Title = {Molecular dynamics simulation study of the melting of Pd-Pt nanoclusters},
796 Volume = {71},
797 Year = {2005},
798 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/195415}}
799
800 @article{Vardeman-II:2001jn,
801 Author = {C.~F. {Vardeman II} and J.~D. Gezelter},
802 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:41:50 -0400},
803 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:41:50 -0400},
804 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. A},
805 Local-Url = {file://localhost/Users/charles/Documents/Papers/Vardeman%20II/2001.pdf},
806 Number = {12},
807 Pages = {2568},
808 Title = {Comparing models for diffusion in supercooled liquids: The eutectic composition of the {A}g-{C}u alloy},
809 Volume = {105},
810 Year = {2001}}
811
812 @article{ShibataT._ja026764r,
813 Author = {Shibata, T. and Bunker, B.A. and Zhang, Z. and Meisel, D. and Vardeman, C.F. and Gezelter, J.D.},
814 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:41:36 -0400},
815 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:41:36 -0400},
816 Journal = {J. Amer. Chem. Soc.},
817 Local-Url = {file://localhost/Users/charles/Documents/Papers/ja026764r.pdf},
818 Number = {40},
819 Pages = {11989-11996},
820 Title = {Size-Dependent Spontaneous Alloying of {A}u-{A}g Nanoparticles},
821 Url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja026764r},
822 Volume = {124},
823 Year = {2002},
824 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja026764r}}
825
826 @article{Chen90,
827 Author = {A.~P. Sutton and J. Chen},
828 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:40:48 -0400},
829 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:40:48 -0400},
830 Journal = {Philos. Mag. Lett.},
831 Pages = {139-146},
832 Title = {Long-Range Finnis Sinclair Potentials},
833 Volume = 61,
834 Year = {1990}}
835
836 @article{PhysRevB.33.7983,
837 Author = {Foiles, S. M. and Baskes, M. I. and Daw, M. S.},
838 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:40:28 -0400},
839 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:40:28 -0400},
840 Doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.33.7983},
841 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
842 Local-Url = {file://localhost/Users/charles/Documents/Papers/p7983_1.pdf},
843 Month = {Jun},
844 Number = {12},
845 Numpages = {8},
846 Pages = {7983-7991},
847 Publisher = {American Physical Society},
848 Title = {Embedded-atom-method functions for the fcc metals {C}u, {A}g, {A}u, {N}i, {P}d, {P}t, and their alloys},
849 Volume = {33},
850 Year = {1986},
851 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.33.7983}}
852
853 @article{hoover85,
854 Author = {W.~G. Hoover},
855 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:24:30 -0400},
856 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:24:30 -0400},
857 Journal = pra,
858 Pages = 1695,
859 Title = {Canonical dynamics: Equilibrium phase-space distributions},
860 Volume = 31,
861 Year = 1985}
862
863 @article{melchionna93,
864 Author = {S. Melchionna and G. Ciccotti and B.~L. Holian},
865 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:22:17 -0400},
866 Date-Modified = {2010-07-13 11:22:17 -0400},
867 Journal = {Mol. Phys.},
868 Pages = {533-544},
869 Title = {Hoover {\sc npt} dynamics for systems varying in shape and size},
870 Volume = 78,
871 Year = 1993}
872
873 @misc{openmd,
874 Author = {J. Daniel Gezelter and Shenyu Kuang and James Marr and Kelsey Stocker and Chunlei Li and Charles F. Vardeman and Teng Lin and Christopher J. Fennell and Xiuquan Sun and Kyle Daily and Yang Zheng and Matthew A. Meineke},
875 Date-Added = {2010-07-13 11:16:00 -0400},
876 Date-Modified = {2010-07-19 16:27:45 -0400},
877 Howpublished = {Available at {\tt http://openmd.net}},
878 Title = {{OpenMD, an open source engine for molecular dynamics}}}
879
880 @inbook{AshcroftMermin,
881 Address = {Belmont, CA},
882 Author = {Neil W. Ashcroft and N.~David Mermin},
883 Date-Added = {2010-07-12 14:26:49 -0400},
884 Date-Modified = {2010-07-22 13:37:20 -0400},
885 Pages = {21},
886 Publisher = {Brooks Cole},
887 Title = {Solid State Physics},
888 Year = {1976}}
889
890 @book{WagnerKruse,
891 Address = {Berlin},
892 Author = {W. Wagner and A. Kruse},
893 Date-Added = {2010-07-12 14:10:29 -0400},
894 Date-Modified = {2010-07-12 14:13:44 -0400},
895 Publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
896 Title = {Properties of Water and Steam, the Industrial Standard IAPWS-IF97 for the Thermodynamic Properties and Supplementary Equations for Other Properties},
897 Year = {1998}}
898
899 @article{ISI:000266247600008,
900 Abstract = {Temperature dependence of viscosity of butyl-3-methylimidazolium
901 hexafluorophosphate is investigated by non-equilibrium molecular
902 dynamics simulations with cosine-modulated force in the temperature
903 range from 360 to 480K. It is shown that this method is able to
904 correctly predict the shear viscosity. The simulation setting and
905 choice of the force field are discussed in detail. The all-atom force
906 field exhibits a bad convergence and the shear viscosity is
907 overestimated, while the simple united atom model predicts the kinetics
908 very well. The results are compared with the equilibrium molecular
909 dynamics simulations. The relationship between the diffusion
910 coefficient and viscosity is examined by means of the hydrodynamic
911 radii calculated from the Stokes-Einstein equation and the solvation
912 properties are discussed.},
913 Address = {4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND},
914 Affiliation = {Kolafa, J (Reprint Author), Prague Inst Chem Technol, Dept Phys Chem, CR-16628 Prague, Czech Republic. {[}Picalek, Jan; Kolafa, Jiri] Prague Inst Chem Technol, Dept Phys Chem, CR-16628 Prague, Czech Republic.},
915 Author = {Picalek, Jan and Kolafa, Jiri},
916 Author-Email = {jiri.kolafa@vscht.cz},
917 Date-Added = {2010-04-16 13:19:12 -0400},
918 Date-Modified = {2010-04-16 13:19:12 -0400},
919 Doc-Delivery-Number = {448FD},
920 Doi = {10.1080/08927020802680703},
921 Funding-Acknowledgement = {Czech Science Foundation {[}203/07/1006]; Czech Ministry of Education {[}LC512]},
922 Funding-Text = {We gratefully acknowledge a support from the Czech Science Foundation (project 203/07/1006) and the computing facilities from the Czech Ministry of Education (Center for Biomolecules and Complex Molecular Systems, project LC512).},
923 Issn = {0892-7022},
924 Journal = {Mol. Simul.},
925 Journal-Iso = {Mol. Simul.},
926 Keywords = {room temperature ionic liquids; viscosity; non-equilibrium molecular dynamics; solvation; imidazolium},
927 Keywords-Plus = {1-N-BUTYL-3-METHYLIMIDAZOLIUM HEXAFLUOROPHOSPHATE; PHYSICOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES; COMPUTER-SIMULATION; PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; IMIDAZOLIUM CATION; FORCE-FIELD; AB-INITIO; TEMPERATURE; CHLORIDE; CONDUCTIVITY},
928 Language = {English},
929 Number = {8},
930 Number-Of-Cited-References = {50},
931 Pages = {685-690},
932 Publisher = {TAYLOR \& FRANCIS LTD},
933 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical; Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
934 Times-Cited = {2},
935 Title = {Shear viscosity of ionic liquids from non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulation},
936 Type = {Article},
937 Unique-Id = {ISI:000266247600008},
938 Volume = {35},
939 Year = {2009},
940 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08927020802680703%7D}}
941
942 @article{Vasquez:2004fk,
943 Abstract = {A method for fast calculation of viscosity from molecular dynamics simulation is revisited. The method consists of using a steady-state periodic perturbation. A methodology to choose the amplitude of the external perturbation, which is one of the major practical issues in the original technique of Gosling et al. {$[$}Mol. Phys. 26: 1475 (1973){$]$} is proposed. The amplitude of the perturbation required for fast caculations and the viscosity values for wide ranges of temperature and density of the Lennard-Jones (LJ) model fluid are reported. The viscosity results are in agreement with recent LJ viscosity calculations. Additionally, the simulations demonstrate that the proposed approach is suitable to efficiently generate viscosity data of good quality.},
944 Author = {Vasquez, V. R. and Macedo, E. A. and Zabaloy, M. S.},
945 Date = {2004/11/02/},
946 Date-Added = {2010-04-16 13:18:48 -0400},
947 Date-Modified = {2010-04-16 13:18:48 -0400},
948 Day = {02},
949 Journal = {Int. J. Thermophys.},
950 M3 = {10.1007/s10765-004-7736-3},
951 Month = {11},
952 Number = {6},
953 Pages = {1799--1818},
954 Title = {Lennard-Jones Viscosities in Wide Ranges of Temperature and Density: Fast Calculations Using a Steady--State Periodic Perturbation Method},
955 Ty = {JOUR},
956 Url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10765-004-7736-3},
957 Volume = {25},
958 Year = {2004},
959 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10765-004-7736-3}}
960
961 @article{hess:209,
962 Author = {Berk Hess},
963 Date-Added = {2010-04-16 12:37:37 -0400},
964 Date-Modified = {2010-04-16 12:37:37 -0400},
965 Doi = {10.1063/1.1421362},
966 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
967 Keywords = {viscosity; molecular dynamics method; liquid theory; shear flow},
968 Number = {1},
969 Pages = {209-217},
970 Publisher = {AIP},
971 Title = {Determining the shear viscosity of model liquids from molecular dynamics simulations},
972 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/116/209/1},
973 Volume = {116},
974 Year = {2002},
975 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/116/209/1},
976 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1421362}}
977
978 @article{backer:154503,
979 Author = {J. A. Backer and C. P. Lowe and H. C. J. Hoefsloot and P. D. Iedema},
980 Date-Added = {2010-04-16 12:37:37 -0400},
981 Date-Modified = {2010-04-16 12:37:37 -0400},
982 Doi = {10.1063/1.1883163},
983 Eid = {154503},
984 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
985 Keywords = {Poiseuille flow; flow simulation; Lennard-Jones potential; viscosity; boundary layers; computational fluid dynamics},
986 Number = {15},
987 Numpages = {6},
988 Pages = {154503},
989 Publisher = {AIP},
990 Title = {Poiseuille flow to measure the viscosity of particle model fluids},
991 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/122/154503/1},
992 Volume = {122},
993 Year = {2005},
994 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/122/154503/1},
995 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1883163}}
996
997 @article{daivis:541,
998 Author = {Peter J. Daivis and Denis J. Evans},
999 Date-Added = {2010-04-16 12:05:36 -0400},
1000 Date-Modified = {2010-04-16 12:05:36 -0400},
1001 Doi = {10.1063/1.466970},
1002 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1003 Keywords = {SHEAR; DECANE; FLOW MODELS; VOLUME; PRESSURE; NONEQUILIBRIUM; MOLECULAR DYNAMICS CALCULATIONS; COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS; SIMULATION; STRAIN RATE; VISCOSITY; KUBO FORMULA},
1004 Number = {1},
1005 Pages = {541-547},
1006 Publisher = {AIP},
1007 Title = {Comparison of constant pressure and constant volume nonequilibrium simulations of sheared model decane},
1008 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/100/541/1},
1009 Volume = {100},
1010 Year = {1994},
1011 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/100/541/1},
1012 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.466970}}
1013
1014 @article{mondello:9327,
1015 Author = {Maurizio Mondello and Gary S. Grest},
1016 Date-Added = {2010-04-16 12:05:36 -0400},
1017 Date-Modified = {2010-04-16 12:05:36 -0400},
1018 Doi = {10.1063/1.474002},
1019 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1020 Keywords = {organic compounds; viscosity; digital simulation; molecular dynamics method},
1021 Number = {22},
1022 Pages = {9327-9336},
1023 Publisher = {AIP},
1024 Title = {Viscosity calculations of [bold n]-alkanes by equilibrium molecular dynamics},
1025 Url = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/106/9327/1},
1026 Volume = {106},
1027 Year = {1997},
1028 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://link.aip.org/link/?JCP/106/9327/1},
1029 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.474002}}
1030
1031 @article{ISI:A1988Q205300014,
1032 Address = {ONE GUNDPOWDER SQUARE, LONDON, ENGLAND EC4A 3DE},
1033 Affiliation = {VOGELSANG, R (Reprint Author), RUHR UNIV BOCHUM,UNIV STR 150,D-4630 BOCHUM,FED REP GER. UNIV DUISBURG,THERMODYNAM,D-4100 DUISBURG,FED REP GER.},
1034 Author = {Vogelsang, R and Hoheisel, G and Luckas, M},
1035 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 16:20:24 -0400},
1036 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 16:20:24 -0400},
1037 Doc-Delivery-Number = {Q2053},
1038 Issn = {0026-8976},
1039 Journal = {Mol. Phys.},
1040 Journal-Iso = {Mol. Phys.},
1041 Language = {English},
1042 Month = {AUG 20},
1043 Number = {6},
1044 Number-Of-Cited-References = {14},
1045 Pages = {1203-1213},
1046 Publisher = {TAYLOR \& FRANCIS LTD},
1047 Subject-Category = {Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1048 Times-Cited = {12},
1049 Title = {SHEAR VISCOSITY AND THERMAL-CONDUCTIVITY OF THE LENNARD-JONES LIQUID COMPUTED USING MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS AND PREDICTED BY A MEMORY FUNCTION MODEL FOR A LARGE NUMBER OF STATES},
1050 Type = {Article},
1051 Unique-Id = {ISI:A1988Q205300014},
1052 Volume = {64},
1053 Year = {1988}}
1054
1055 @article{ISI:000261835100054,
1056 Abstract = {Transport properties of liquid methanol and ethanol are predicted by
1057 molecular dynamics simulation. The molecular models for the alcohols
1058 are rigid, nonpolarizable, and of united-atom type. They were developed
1059 in preceding work using experimental vapor-liquid equilibrium data
1060 only. Self- and Maxwell-Stefan diffusion coefficients as well as the
1061 shear viscosity of methanol, ethanol, and their binary mixture are
1062 determined using equilibrium molecular dynamics and the Green-Kubo
1063 formalism. Nonequilibrium molecular dynamics is used for predicting the
1064 thermal conductivity of the two pure substances. The transport
1065 properties of the fluids are calculated over a wide temperature range
1066 at ambient pressure and compared with experimental and simulation data
1067 from the literature. Overall, a very good agreement with the experiment
1068 is found. For instance, the self-diffusion coefficient and the shear
1069 viscosity are predicted with average deviations of less than 8\% for
1070 the pure alcohols and 12\% for the mixture. The predicted thermal
1071 conductivity agrees on average within 5\% with the experimental data.
1072 Additionally, some velocity and shear viscosity autocorrelation
1073 functions are presented and discussed. Radial distribution functions
1074 for ethanol are also presented. The predicted excess volume, excess
1075 enthalpy, and the vapor-liquid equilibrium of the binary mixture
1076 methanol + ethanol are assessed and agree well with experimental data.},
1077 Address = {1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA},
1078 Affiliation = {Vrabec, J (Reprint Author), Univ Stuttgart, Inst Thermodynam \& Thermal Proc Engn, D-70550 Stuttgart, Germany. {[}Vrabec, Jadran] Univ Stuttgart, Inst Thermodynam \& Thermal Proc Engn, D-70550 Stuttgart, Germany. {[}Guevara-Carrion, Gabriela; Hasse, Hans] Univ Kaiserslautern, Lab Engn Thermodynam, D-67663 Kaiserslautern, Germany. {[}Nieto-Draghi, Carlos] Inst Francais Petr, F-92852 Rueil Malmaison, France.},
1079 Author = {Guevara-Carrion, Gabriela and Nieto-Draghi, Carlos and Vrabec, Jadran and Hasse, Hans},
1080 Author-Email = {vrabec@itt.uni-stuttgart.de},
1081 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 15:43:29 -0400},
1082 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 15:43:29 -0400},
1083 Doc-Delivery-Number = {385SY},
1084 Doi = {10.1021/jp805584d},
1085 Issn = {1520-6106},
1086 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1087 Journal-Iso = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1088 Keywords-Plus = {STEFAN DIFFUSION-COEFFICIENTS; MONTE-CARLO CALCULATIONS; ATOM FORCE-FIELD; SELF-DIFFUSION; DYNAMICS SIMULATION; PHASE-EQUILIBRIA; LIQUID METHANOL; TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE; COMPUTER-SIMULATION; MONOHYDRIC ALCOHOLS},
1089 Language = {English},
1090 Month = {DEC 25},
1091 Number = {51},
1092 Number-Of-Cited-References = {86},
1093 Pages = {16664-16674},
1094 Publisher = {AMER CHEMICAL SOC},
1095 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical},
1096 Times-Cited = {5},
1097 Title = {Prediction of Transport Properties by Molecular Simulation: Methanol and Ethanol and Their Mixture},
1098 Type = {Article},
1099 Unique-Id = {ISI:000261835100054},
1100 Volume = {112},
1101 Year = {2008},
1102 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp805584d%7D}}
1103
1104 @article{ISI:000258460400020,
1105 Abstract = {Nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations with the nonpolarizable
1106 SPC/E (Berendsen et al., J. Phys. Chem. 1987, 91, 6269) and the
1107 polarizable COS/G2 (Yu and van Gunsteren, J. Chem. Phys. 2004, 121,
1108 9549) force fields have been employed to calculate the thermal
1109 conductivity and other associated properties of methane hydrate over a
1110 temperature range from 30 to 260 K. The calculated results are compared
1111 to experimental data over this same range. The values of the thermal
1112 conductivity calculated with the COS/G2 model are closer to the
1113 experimental values than are those calculated with the nonpolarizable
1114 SPC/E model. The calculations match the temperature trend in the
1115 experimental data at temperatures below 50 K; however, they exhibit a
1116 slight decrease in thermal conductivity at higher temperatures in
1117 comparison to an opposite trend in the experimental data. The
1118 calculated thermal conductivity values are found to be relatively
1119 insensitive to the occupancy of the cages except at low (T <= 50 K)
1120 temperatures, which indicates that the differences between the two
1121 lattice structures may have a more dominant role than generally thought
1122 in explaining the low thermal conductivity of methane hydrate compared
1123 to ice Ih. The introduction of defects into the water lattice is found
1124 to cause a reduction in the thermal conductivity but to have a
1125 negligible impact on its temperature dependence.},
1126 Address = {1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA},
1127 Affiliation = {Jordan, KD (Reprint Author), US DOE, Natl Energy Technol Lab, POB 10940, Pittsburgh, PA 15236 USA. {[}Jiang, Hao; Myshakin, Evgeniy M.; Jordan, Kenneth D.; Warzinski, Robert P.] US DOE, Natl Energy Technol Lab, Pittsburgh, PA 15236 USA. {[}Jiang, Hao; Jordan, Kenneth D.] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Chem, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA. {[}Jiang, Hao; Jordan, Kenneth D.] Univ Pittsburgh, Ctr Mol \& Mat Simulat, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA. {[}Myshakin, Evgeniy M.] Parsons Project Serv Inc, South Pk, PA 15129 USA.},
1128 Author = {Jiang, Hao and Myshakin, Evgeniy M. and Jordan, Kenneth D. and Warzinski, Robert P.},
1129 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 15:38:14 -0400},
1130 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 15:38:14 -0400},
1131 Doc-Delivery-Number = {337UG},
1132 Doi = {10.1021/jp802942v},
1133 Funding-Acknowledgement = {E.M.M. ; National Energy Technology Laboratory's Office of Research and Development {[}41817.660.01.03]; ORISE Part-Time Faculty Program ; {[}DE-AM26-04NT41817]; {[}41817.606.06.03]},
1134 Funding-Text = {We thank Drs. John Tse, Niall English, and Alan McGaughey for their comments. H.J. and K.D.J. performed this work under Contract DE-AM26-04NT41817, Subtask 41817.606.06.03, and E.M.M. performed this work under the same contract, Subtask 41817.660.01.03, in support of the National Energy Technology Laboratory's Office of Research and Development. K.D.J. was also supported at NETL by the ORISE Part-Time Faculty Program during the early stages of this work.},
1135 Issn = {1520-6106},
1136 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1137 Journal-Iso = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1138 Keywords-Plus = {LIQUID WATER; CLATHRATE HYDRATE; HEAT-CAPACITY; FORCE-FIELDS; ICE; ANHARMONICITY; SUMMATION; MODELS; SILICA},
1139 Language = {English},
1140 Month = {AUG 21},
1141 Number = {33},
1142 Number-Of-Cited-References = {51},
1143 Pages = {10207-10216},
1144 Publisher = {AMER CHEMICAL SOC},
1145 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical},
1146 Times-Cited = {8},
1147 Title = {Molecular dynamics Simulations of the thermal conductivity of methane hydrate},
1148 Type = {Article},
1149 Unique-Id = {ISI:000258460400020},
1150 Volume = {112},
1151 Year = {2008},
1152 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp802942v%7D}}
1153
1154 @article{ISI:000184808400018,
1155 Abstract = {A new non-equilibrium molecular dynamics algorithm is presented based
1156 on the original work of Willer-Plathe, (1997, J. chem. Phys., 106,
1157 6082), for the non-equilibrium simulation of heat transport maintaining
1158 fixed the total momentum as well as the total energy of the system. The
1159 presented scheme preserves these properties but, unlike the original
1160 algorithm, is able to deal with multicomponent systems, that is with
1161 particles of different mass independently of their relative
1162 concentration. The main idea behind the new procedure is to consider an
1163 exchange of momentum and energy between the particles in the hot and
1164 cold regions, to maintain the non-equilibrium conditions, as if they
1165 undergo a hypothetical elastic collision. The new algorithm can also be
1166 employed in multicomponent systems for molecular fluids and in a wide
1167 range of thermodynamic conditions.},
1168 Address = {4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND},
1169 Affiliation = {Nieto-Draghi, C (Reprint Author), Univ Rovira \& Virgili, ETSEQ, Dept Engn Quim, Avda Paisos Catalans 26, Tarragona 43007, Spain. Univ Rovira \& Virgili, ETSEQ, Dept Engn Quim, Tarragona 43007, Spain.},
1170 Author = {Nieto-Draghi, C and Avalos, JB},
1171 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 12:48:08 -0400},
1172 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 12:48:08 -0400},
1173 Doc-Delivery-Number = {712QM},
1174 Doi = {10.1080/0026897031000154338},
1175 Issn = {0026-8976},
1176 Journal = {Mol. Phys.},
1177 Journal-Iso = {Mol. Phys.},
1178 Keywords-Plus = {BINARY-LIQUID MIXTURES; THERMAL-CONDUCTIVITY; MATTER TRANSPORT; WATER},
1179 Language = {English},
1180 Month = {JUL 20},
1181 Number = {14},
1182 Number-Of-Cited-References = {20},
1183 Pages = {2303-2307},
1184 Publisher = {TAYLOR \& FRANCIS LTD},
1185 Subject-Category = {Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1186 Times-Cited = {13},
1187 Title = {Non-equilibrium momentum exchange algorithm for molecular dynamics simulation of heat flow in multicomponent systems},
1188 Type = {Article},
1189 Unique-Id = {ISI:000184808400018},
1190 Volume = {101},
1191 Year = {2003},
1192 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0026897031000154338%7D}}
1193
1194 @article{Bedrov:2000-1,
1195 Abstract = {The thermal conductivity of liquid
1196 octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine (HMX) has been
1197 determined from imposed heat flux non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
1198 (NEMD) simulations using a previously published quantum chemistry-based
1199 atomistic potential. The thermal conductivity was determined in the
1200 temperature domain 550 less than or equal to T less than or equal to
1201 800 K, which corresponds approximately to the existence limits of the
1202 liquid phase of HMX at atmospheric pressure. The NEMD predictions,
1203 which comprise the first reported values for thermal conductivity of
1204 HMX liquid, were found to be consistent with measured values for
1205 crystalline HMX. The thermal conductivity of liquid HMX was found to
1206 exhibit a much weaker temperature dependence than the shear viscosity
1207 and self-diffusion coefficients. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All
1208 rights reserved.},
1209 Address = {PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS},
1210 Affiliation = {Bedrov, D (Reprint Author), Univ Utah, Dept Mat Sci \& Engn, 122 S Cent Campus Dr,Room 304, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. Univ Utah, Dept Mat Sci \& Engn, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. Univ Utah, Dept Chem \& Fuels Engn, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. Univ Calif Los Alamos Natl Lab, Div Theoret, Los Alamos, NM 87545 USA.},
1211 Author = {Bedrov, D and Smith, GD and Sewell, TD},
1212 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 12:26:59 -0400},
1213 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 12:27:52 -0400},
1214 Doc-Delivery-Number = {330PF},
1215 Issn = {0009-2614},
1216 Journal = {Chem. Phys. Lett.},
1217 Journal-Iso = {Chem. Phys. Lett.},
1218 Keywords-Plus = {FORCE-FIELD},
1219 Language = {English},
1220 Month = {JUN 30},
1221 Number = {1-3},
1222 Number-Of-Cited-References = {17},
1223 Pages = {64-68},
1224 Publisher = {ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV},
1225 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical; Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1226 Times-Cited = {19},
1227 Title = {Thermal conductivity of liquid octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine (HMX) from molecular dynamics simulations},
1228 Type = {Article},
1229 Unique-Id = {ISI:000087969900011},
1230 Volume = {324},
1231 Year = {2000}}
1232
1233 @article{ISI:000258840700015,
1234 Abstract = {By using the embedded-atom method (EAM), a series of molecular dynamics
1235 (MD) simulations are carried out to calculate the viscosity and
1236 self-diffusion coefficient of liquid copper from the normal to the
1237 undercooled states. The simulated results are in reasonable agreement
1238 with the experimental values available above the melting temperature
1239 that is also predicted from a solid-liquid-solid sandwich structure.
1240 The relationship between the viscosity and the self-diffusion
1241 coefficient is evaluated. It is found that the Stokes-Einstein and
1242 Sutherland-Einstein relations qualitatively describe this relationship
1243 within the simulation temperature range. However, the predicted
1244 constant from MD simulation is close to 1/(3 pi), which is larger than
1245 the constants of the Stokes-Einstein and Sutherland-Einstein relations.},
1246 Address = {233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA},
1247 Affiliation = {Chen, M (Reprint Author), Tsinghua Univ, Dept Engn Mech, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China. {[}Han, X. J.; Chen, M.; Lue, Y. J.] Tsinghua Univ, Dept Engn Mech, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China.},
1248 Author = {Han, X. J. and Chen, M. and Lue, Y. J.},
1249 Author-Email = {mchen@tsinghua.edu.cn},
1250 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 12:00:38 -0400},
1251 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 12:00:38 -0400},
1252 Doc-Delivery-Number = {343GH},
1253 Doi = {10.1007/s10765-008-0489-7},
1254 Funding-Acknowledgement = {China Postdoctoral Science Foundation ; National Natural Science Foundation of China {[}50395101, 50371043]},
1255 Funding-Text = {This work was financially supported by China Postdoctoral Science Foundation and the National Natural Science Foundation of China under grant Nos. of 50395101 and 50371043. The computations are carried out at the Tsinghua National Laboratory for Information Science and Technology, China. The authors are grateful to Mr. D. Q. Yu for valuable discussions.},
1256 Issn = {0195-928X},
1257 Journal = {Int. J. Thermophys.},
1258 Journal-Iso = {Int. J. Thermophys.},
1259 Keywords = {copper; molecular simulation; self-diffusion coefficient; viscosity; undercooled},
1260 Keywords-Plus = {EMBEDDED-ATOM MODEL; THERMOPHYSICAL PROPERTIES; COMPUTER-SIMULATION; TRANSITION-METALS; SHEAR VISCOSITY; ALLOYS; TEMPERATURE; DIFFUSION; BINDING; SURFACE},
1261 Language = {English},
1262 Month = {AUG},
1263 Number = {4},
1264 Number-Of-Cited-References = {39},
1265 Pages = {1408-1421},
1266 Publisher = {SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS},
1267 Subject-Category = {Thermodynamics; Chemistry, Physical; Mechanics; Physics, Applied},
1268 Times-Cited = {2},
1269 Title = {Transport properties of undercooled liquid copper: A molecular dynamics study},
1270 Type = {Article},
1271 Unique-Id = {ISI:000258840700015},
1272 Volume = {29},
1273 Year = {2008},
1274 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10765-008-0489-7%7D}}
1275
1276 @article{Muller-Plathe:2008,
1277 Abstract = {Reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics and equilibrium molecular
1278 dynamics simulations were carried out to compute the shear viscosity of
1279 the pure ionic liquid system {[}bmim]{[}PF6] at 300 K. The two methods
1280 yielded consistent results which were also compared to experiments. The
1281 results showed that the reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics
1282 (RNEMD) methodology can successfully be applied to computation of
1283 highly viscous ionic liquids. Moreover, this study provides a
1284 validation of the atomistic force-field developed by Bhargava and
1285 Balasubramanian (J. Chem. Phys. 2007, 127, 114510) for dynamic
1286 properties.},
1287 Address = {1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA},
1288 Affiliation = {Wei, Z (Reprint Author), Tech Univ Darmstadt, Petersenstr 30, D-64287 Darmstadt, Germany. {[}Wei Zhao; Leroy, Frederic; Mueller-Plathe, Florian] Tech Univ Darmstadt, D-64287 Darmstadt, Germany. {[}Balasubramanian, Sundaram] Indian Inst Sci, Jawaharlal Nehru Ctr Adv Sci Res, Chem \& Phys Mat Unit, Bangalore 560064, Karnataka, India.},
1289 Author = {Wei Zhao and Leroy, Frederic and Balasubramanian, Sundaram and M\"{u}ller-Plathe, Florian},
1290 Author-Email = {w.zhao@theo.chemie.tu-darmstadt.de},
1291 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 11:53:37 -0400},
1292 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 11:54:20 -0400},
1293 Doc-Delivery-Number = {321VS},
1294 Doi = {10.1021/jp8017869},
1295 Issn = {1520-6106},
1296 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1297 Journal-Iso = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1298 Keywords-Plus = {TRANSPORT-PROPERTIES; FORCE-FIELD; TEMPERATURE; SIMULATION; IMIDAZOLIUM; FLUIDS; MODEL; BIS(TRIFLUOROMETHANESULFONYL)IMIDE; PYRIDINIUM; CHLORIDE},
1299 Language = {English},
1300 Month = {JUL 10},
1301 Number = {27},
1302 Number-Of-Cited-References = {49},
1303 Pages = {8129-8133},
1304 Publisher = {AMER CHEMICAL SOC},
1305 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical},
1306 Times-Cited = {2},
1307 Title = {Shear viscosity of the ionic liquid 1-n-butyl 3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate {[}bmim]{[}PF6] computed by reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics},
1308 Type = {Article},
1309 Unique-Id = {ISI:000257335200022},
1310 Volume = {112},
1311 Year = {2008},
1312 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp8017869%7D}}
1313
1314 @article{Muller-Plathe:2002,
1315 Abstract = {The reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics {[}F. Muller-Plathe,
1316 Phys. Rev. E 49, 359 (1999)] presented for the calculation of the shear
1317 viscosity of Lennard-Jones liquids has been extended to atomistic
1318 models of molecular liquids. The method is improved to overcome the
1319 problems due to the detailed molecular models. The new technique is
1320 besides a test with a Lennard-Jones fluid, applied on different
1321 realistic systems: liquid nitrogen, water, and hexane, in order to
1322 cover a large range of interactions and systems/architectures. We show
1323 that all the advantages of the method itemized previously are still
1324 valid, and that it has a very good efficiency and accuracy making it
1325 very competitive. (C) 2002 American Institute of Physics.},
1326 Address = {CIRCULATION \& FULFILLMENT DIV, 2 HUNTINGTON QUADRANGLE, STE 1 N O 1, MELVILLE, NY 11747-4501 USA},
1327 Affiliation = {Bordat, P (Reprint Author), Max Planck Inst Polymer Res, Ackermannweg 10, D-55128 Mainz, Germany. Max Planck Inst Polymer Res, D-55128 Mainz, Germany.},
1328 Author = {Bordat, P and M\"{u}ller-Plathe, F},
1329 Date-Added = {2010-04-14 11:34:42 -0400},
1330 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 11:35:35 -0400},
1331 Doc-Delivery-Number = {521QV},
1332 Doi = {10.1063/1.1436124},
1333 Issn = {0021-9606},
1334 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1335 Journal-Iso = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1336 Keywords-Plus = {TRANSPORT-PROPERTIES; PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; LIQUID ALKANES; N-HEPTADECANE; SIMULATION; WATER; FLOW; MIXTURES; BUTANE; NITROGEN},
1337 Language = {English},
1338 Month = {FEB 22},
1339 Number = {8},
1340 Number-Of-Cited-References = {47},
1341 Pages = {3362-3369},
1342 Publisher = {AMER INST PHYSICS},
1343 Subject-Category = {Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1344 Times-Cited = {33},
1345 Title = {The shear viscosity of molecular fluids: A calculation by reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics},
1346 Type = {Article},
1347 Unique-Id = {ISI:000173853600023},
1348 Volume = {116},
1349 Year = {2002},
1350 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1436124%7D}}
1351
1352 @article{ISI:000207079300006,
1353 Abstract = {Non-equilibrium Molecular Dynamics Simulation
1354 methods have been used to study the ability of
1355 Embedded Atom Method models of the metals copper and
1356 gold to reproduce the equilibrium and
1357 non-equilibrium behavior of metals at a stationary
1358 and at a moving solid/liquid interface. The
1359 equilibrium solid/vapor interface was shown to
1360 display a simple termination of the bulk until the
1361 temperature of the solid reaches approximate to 90\%
1362 of the bulk melting point. At and above such
1363 temperatures the systems exhibit a surface
1364 disodering known as surface melting. Non-equilibrium
1365 simulations emulating the action of a picosecond
1366 laser on the metal were performed to determine the
1367 regrowth velocity. For copper, the action of a 20 ps
1368 laser with an absorbed energy of 2-5 mJ/cm(2)
1369 produced a regrowth velocity of 83-100 m/s, in
1370 reasonable agreement with the value obtained by
1371 experiment (>60 m/s). For gold, similar conditions
1372 produced a slower regrowth velocity of 63 m/s at an
1373 absorbed energy of 5 mJ/cm(2). This is almost a
1374 factor of two too low in comparison to experiment
1375 (>100 m/s). The regrowth velocities of the metals
1376 seems unexpectedly close to experiment considering
1377 that the free-electron contribution is ignored in
1378 the Embeeded Atom Method models used.},
1379 Address = {4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND},
1380 Affiliation = {Clancy, P (Reprint Author), Cornell Univ, Sch Chem Engn, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA. {[}Richardson, Clifton F.; Clancy, Paulette] Cornell Univ, Sch Chem Engn, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.},
1381 Author = {Richardson, Clifton F. and Clancy, Paulette},
1382 Date-Added = {2010-04-07 11:24:36 -0400},
1383 Date-Modified = {2010-04-07 11:24:36 -0400},
1384 Doc-Delivery-Number = {V04SY},
1385 Issn = {0892-7022},
1386 Journal = {Mol. Simul.},
1387 Journal-Iso = {Mol. Simul.},
1388 Keywords = {Non-equilibrium computer simulation; molecular dynamics; crystal growth; Embedded Atom Method models of metals},
1389 Language = {English},
1390 Number = {5-6},
1391 Number-Of-Cited-References = {36},
1392 Pages = {335-355},
1393 Publisher = {TAYLOR \& FRANCIS LTD},
1394 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical; Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1395 Times-Cited = {7},
1396 Title = {PICOSECOND LASER PROCESSING OF COPPER AND GOLD: A COMPUTER SIMULATION STUDY},
1397 Type = {Article},
1398 Unique-Id = {ISI:000207079300006},
1399 Volume = {7},
1400 Year = {1991}}
1401
1402 @article{ISI:000167766600035,
1403 Abstract = {Molecular dynamics simulations are used to
1404 investigate the separation of water films adjacent
1405 to a hot metal surface. The simulations clearly show
1406 that the water layers nearest the surface overheat
1407 and undergo explosive boiling. For thick films, the
1408 expansion of the vaporized molecules near the
1409 surface forces the outer water layers to move away
1410 from the surface. These results are of interest for
1411 mass spectrometry of biological molecules, steam
1412 cleaning of surfaces, and medical procedures.},
1413 Address = {1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA},
1414 Affiliation = {Garrison, BJ (Reprint Author), Penn State Univ, Dept Chem, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. Penn State Univ, Dept Chem, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. Penn State Univ, Inst Mat Res, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. Univ Virginia, Dept Mat Sci \& Engn, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA.},
1415 Author = {Dou, YS and Zhigilei, LV and Winograd, N and Garrison, BJ},
1416 Date-Added = {2010-03-11 15:32:14 -0500},
1417 Date-Modified = {2010-03-11 15:32:14 -0500},
1418 Doc-Delivery-Number = {416ED},
1419 Issn = {1089-5639},
1420 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. A},
1421 Journal-Iso = {J. Phys. Chem. A},
1422 Keywords-Plus = {MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS; ASSISTED LASER-DESORPTION; FROZEN AQUEOUS-SOLUTIONS; COMPUTER-SIMULATION; ORGANIC-SOLIDS; VELOCITY DISTRIBUTIONS; PARTICLE BOMBARDMENT; MASS-SPECTROMETRY; PHASE EXPLOSION; LIQUID WATER},
1423 Language = {English},
1424 Month = {MAR 29},
1425 Number = {12},
1426 Number-Of-Cited-References = {65},
1427 Pages = {2748-2755},
1428 Publisher = {AMER CHEMICAL SOC},
1429 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical; Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1430 Times-Cited = {66},
1431 Title = {Explosive boiling of water films adjacent to heated surfaces: A microscopic description},
1432 Type = {Article},
1433 Unique-Id = {ISI:000167766600035},
1434 Volume = {105},
1435 Year = {2001}}
1436
1437 @article{Maginn:2010,
1438 Abstract = {The reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics
1439 (RNEMD) method calculates the shear viscosity of a
1440 fluid by imposing a nonphysical exchange of momentum
1441 and measuring the resulting shear velocity
1442 gradient. In this study we investigate the range of
1443 momentum flux values over which RNEMD yields usable
1444 (linear) velocity gradients. We find that nonlinear
1445 velocity profiles result primarily from gradients in
1446 fluid temperature and density. The temperature
1447 gradient results from conversion of heat into bulk
1448 kinetic energy, which is transformed back into heat
1449 elsewhere via viscous heating. An expression is
1450 derived to predict the temperature profile resulting
1451 from a specified momentum flux for a given fluid and
1452 simulation cell. Although primarily bounded above,
1453 we also describe milder low-flux limitations. RNEMD
1454 results for a Lennard-Jones fluid agree with
1455 equilibrium molecular dynamics and conventional
1456 nonequilibrium molecular dynamics calculations at
1457 low shear, but RNEMD underpredicts viscosity
1458 relative to conventional NEMD at high shear.},
1459 Address = {CIRCULATION \& FULFILLMENT DIV, 2 HUNTINGTON QUADRANGLE, STE 1 N O 1, MELVILLE, NY 11747-4501 USA},
1460 Affiliation = {Tenney, CM (Reprint Author), Univ Notre Dame, Dept Chem \& Biomol Engn, 182 Fitzpatrick Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA. {[}Tenney, Craig M.; Maginn, Edward J.] Univ Notre Dame, Dept Chem \& Biomol Engn, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.},
1461 Article-Number = {014103},
1462 Author = {Tenney, Craig M. and Maginn, Edward J.},
1463 Author-Email = {ed@nd.edu},
1464 Date-Added = {2010-03-09 13:08:41 -0500},
1465 Date-Modified = {2010-07-19 16:21:35 -0400},
1466 Doc-Delivery-Number = {542DQ},
1467 Doi = {10.1063/1.3276454},
1468 Funding-Acknowledgement = {U.S. Department of Energy {[}DE-FG36-08G088020]},
1469 Funding-Text = {Support for this work was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy (Grant No. DE-FG36-08G088020)},
1470 Issn = {0021-9606},
1471 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1472 Journal-Iso = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1473 Keywords = {Lennard-Jones potential; molecular dynamics method; Navier-Stokes equations; viscosity},
1474 Keywords-Plus = {CURRENT AUTOCORRELATION-FUNCTION; IONIC LIQUID; SIMULATIONS; TEMPERATURE},
1475 Language = {English},
1476 Month = {JAN 7},
1477 Number = {1},
1478 Number-Of-Cited-References = {20},
1479 Pages = {014103},
1480 Publisher = {AMER INST PHYSICS},
1481 Subject-Category = {Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1482 Times-Cited = {0},
1483 Title = {Limitations and recommendations for the calculation of shear viscosity using reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics},
1484 Type = {Article},
1485 Unique-Id = {ISI:000273472300004},
1486 Volume = {132},
1487 Year = {2010},
1488 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3276454}}
1489
1490 @article{Clancy:1992,
1491 Abstract = {The regrowth velocity of a crystal from a melt
1492 depends on contributions from the thermal
1493 conductivity, heat gradient, and latent heat. The
1494 relative contributions of these terms to the
1495 regrowth velocity of the pure metals copper and gold
1496 during liquid-phase epitaxy are evaluated. These
1497 results are used to explain how results from
1498 previous nonequilibrium molecular-dynamics
1499 simulations using classical potentials are able to
1500 predict regrowth velocities that are close to the
1501 experimental values. Results from equilibrium
1502 molecular dynamics showing the nature of the
1503 solid-vapor interface of an
1504 embedded-atom-method-modeled Cu57Ni43 alloy at a
1505 temperature corresponding to 62\% of the melting
1506 point are presented. The regrowth of this alloy
1507 following a simulation of a laser-processing
1508 experiment is also given, with use of nonequilibrium
1509 molecular-dynamics techniques. The thermal
1510 conductivity and temperature gradient in the
1511 simulation of the alloy are compared to those for
1512 the pure metals.},
1513 Address = {ONE PHYSICS ELLIPSE, COLLEGE PK, MD 20740-3844 USA},
1514 Affiliation = {CORNELL UNIV,SCH CHEM ENGN,ITHACA,NY 14853.},
1515 Author = {Richardson, C.~F. and Clancy, P},
1516 Date-Added = {2010-01-12 16:17:33 -0500},
1517 Date-Modified = {2010-04-08 17:18:25 -0400},
1518 Doc-Delivery-Number = {HX378},
1519 Issn = {0163-1829},
1520 Journal = {Phys. Rev. B},
1521 Journal-Iso = {Phys. Rev. B},
1522 Keywords-Plus = {SURFACE SEGREGATION; MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS; TRANSITION-METALS; SOLIDIFICATION; GROWTH; CU; NI},
1523 Language = {English},
1524 Month = {JUN 1},
1525 Number = {21},
1526 Number-Of-Cited-References = {24},
1527 Pages = {12260-12268},
1528 Publisher = {AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOC},
1529 Subject-Category = {Physics, Condensed Matter},
1530 Times-Cited = {11},
1531 Title = {CONTRIBUTION OF THERMAL-CONDUCTIVITY TO THE CRYSTAL-REGROWTH VELOCITY OF EMBEDDED-ATOM-METHOD-MODELED METALS AND METAL-ALLOYS},
1532 Type = {Article},
1533 Unique-Id = {ISI:A1992HX37800010},
1534 Volume = {45},
1535 Year = {1992}}
1536
1537 @article{Bedrov:2000,
1538 Abstract = {We have applied a new nonequilibrium molecular
1539 dynamics (NEMD) method {[}F. Muller-Plathe,
1540 J. Chem. Phys. 106, 6082 (1997)] previously applied
1541 to monatomic Lennard-Jones fluids in the
1542 determination of the thermal conductivity of
1543 molecular fluids. The method was modified in order
1544 to be applicable to systems with holonomic
1545 constraints. Because the method involves imposing a
1546 known heat flux it is particularly attractive for
1547 systems involving long-range and many-body
1548 interactions where calculation of the microscopic
1549 heat flux is difficult. The predicted thermal
1550 conductivities of liquid n-butane and water using
1551 the imposed-flux NEMD method were found to be in a
1552 good agreement with previous simulations and
1553 experiment. (C) 2000 American Institute of
1554 Physics. {[}S0021-9606(00)50841-1].},
1555 Address = {2 HUNTINGTON QUADRANGLE, STE 1NO1, MELVILLE, NY 11747-4501 USA},
1556 Affiliation = {Bedrov, D (Reprint Author), Univ Utah, Dept Chem \& Fuels Engn, 122 S Cent Campus Dr,Rm 304, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. Univ Utah, Dept Chem \& Fuels Engn, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. Univ Utah, Dept Mat Sci \& Engn, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA.},
1557 Author = {Bedrov, D and Smith, GD},
1558 Date-Added = {2009-11-05 18:21:18 -0500},
1559 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 11:50:48 -0400},
1560 Doc-Delivery-Number = {369BF},
1561 Issn = {0021-9606},
1562 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1563 Journal-Iso = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1564 Keywords-Plus = {EFFECTIVE PAIR POTENTIALS; TRANSPORT-PROPERTIES; CANONICAL ENSEMBLE; NORMAL-BUTANE; ALGORITHMS; SHAKE; WATER},
1565 Language = {English},
1566 Month = {NOV 8},
1567 Number = {18},
1568 Number-Of-Cited-References = {26},
1569 Pages = {8080-8084},
1570 Publisher = {AMER INST PHYSICS},
1571 Subject-Category = {Physics, Atomic, Molecular \& Chemical},
1572 Times-Cited = {23},
1573 Title = {Thermal conductivity of molecular fluids from molecular dynamics simulations: Application of a new imposed-flux method},
1574 Type = {Article},
1575 Unique-Id = {ISI:000090151400044},
1576 Volume = {113},
1577 Year = {2000}}
1578
1579 @article{ISI:000231042800044,
1580 Abstract = {The reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics
1581 method for thermal conductivities is adapted to the
1582 investigation of molecular fluids. The method
1583 generates a heat flux through the system by suitably
1584 exchanging velocities of particles located in
1585 different regions. From the resulting temperature
1586 gradient, the thermal conductivity is then
1587 calculated. Different variants of the algorithm and
1588 their combinations with other system parameters are
1589 tested: exchange of atomic velocities versus
1590 exchange of molecular center-of-mass velocities,
1591 different exchange frequencies, molecular models
1592 with bond constraints versus models with flexible
1593 bonds, united-atom versus all-atom models, and
1594 presence versus absence of a thermostat. To help
1595 establish the range of applicability, the algorithm
1596 is tested on different models of benzene,
1597 cyclohexane, water, and n-hexane. We find that the
1598 algorithm is robust and that the calculated thermal
1599 conductivities are insensitive to variations in its
1600 control parameters. The force field, in contrast,
1601 has a major influence on the value of the thermal
1602 conductivity. While calculated and experimental
1603 thermal conductivities fall into the same order of
1604 magnitude, in most cases the calculated values are
1605 systematically larger. United-atom force fields seem
1606 to do better than all-atom force fields, possibly
1607 because they remove high-frequency degrees of
1608 freedom from the simulation, which, in nature, are
1609 quantum-mechanical oscillators in their ground state
1610 and do not contribute to heat conduction.},
1611 Address = {1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA},
1612 Affiliation = {Zhang, MM (Reprint Author), Int Univ Bremen, POB 750 561, D-28725 Bremen, Germany. Int Univ Bremen, D-28725 Bremen, Germany. Banco Cent Brasil, Desup, Diesp, BR-01310922 Sao Paulo, Brazil.},
1613 Author = {Zhang, MM and Lussetti, E and de Souza, LES and M\"{u}ller-Plathe, F},
1614 Date-Added = {2009-11-05 18:17:33 -0500},
1615 Date-Modified = {2009-11-05 18:17:33 -0500},
1616 Doc-Delivery-Number = {952YQ},
1617 Doi = {10.1021/jp0512255},
1618 Issn = {1520-6106},
1619 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1620 Journal-Iso = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1621 Keywords-Plus = {LENNARD-JONES LIQUIDS; TRANSPORT-COEFFICIENTS; SWOLLEN POLYMERS; SHEAR VISCOSITY; MODEL SYSTEMS; SIMULATION; BENZENE; FLUIDS; POTENTIALS; DIFFUSION},
1622 Language = {English},
1623 Month = {AUG 11},
1624 Number = {31},
1625 Number-Of-Cited-References = {42},
1626 Pages = {15060-15067},
1627 Publisher = {AMER CHEMICAL SOC},
1628 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical},
1629 Times-Cited = {17},
1630 Title = {Thermal conductivities of molecular liquids by reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics},
1631 Type = {Article},
1632 Unique-Id = {ISI:000231042800044},
1633 Volume = {109},
1634 Year = {2005},
1635 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp0512255%7D}}
1636
1637 @article{ISI:A1997YC32200056,
1638 Abstract = {Equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations have
1639 been carried out in the microcanonical ensemble at
1640 300 and 255 K on the extended simple point charge
1641 (SPC/E) model of water {[}Berendsen et al.,
1642 J. Phys. Chem. 91, 6269 (1987)]. In addition to a
1643 number of static and dynamic properties, thermal
1644 conductivity lambda has been calculated via
1645 Green-Kubo integration of the heat current time
1646 correlation functions (CF's) in the atomic and
1647 molecular formalism, at wave number k=0. The
1648 calculated values (0.67 +/- 0.04 W/mK at 300 K and
1649 0.52 +/- 0.03 W/mK at 255 K) are in good agreement
1650 with the experimental data (0.61 W/mK at 300 K and
1651 0.49 W/mK at 255 K). A negative long-time tail of
1652 the heat current CF, more apparent at 255 K, is
1653 responsible for the anomalous decrease of lambda
1654 with temperature. An analysis of the dynamical modes
1655 contributing to lambda has shown that its value is
1656 due to two low-frequency exponential-like modes, a
1657 faster collisional mode, with positive contribution,
1658 and a slower one, which determines the negative
1659 long-time tail. A comparison of the molecular and
1660 atomic spectra of the heat current CF has suggested
1661 that higher-frequency modes should not contribute to
1662 lambda in this temperature range. Generalized
1663 thermal diffusivity D-T(k) decreases as a function
1664 of k, after an initial minor increase at k =
1665 k(min). The k dependence of the generalized
1666 thermodynamic properties has been calculated in the
1667 atomic and molecular formalisms. The observed
1668 differences have been traced back to intramolecular
1669 or intermolecular rotational effects and related to
1670 the partial structure functions. Finally, from the
1671 results we calculated it appears that the SPC/E
1672 model gives results in better agreement with
1673 experimental data than the transferable
1674 intermolecular potential with four points TIP4P
1675 water model {[}Jorgensen et al., J. Chem. Phys. 79,
1676 926 (1983)], with a larger improvement for, e.g.,
1677 diffusion, viscosities, and dielectric properties
1678 and a smaller one for thermal conductivity. The
1679 SPC/E model shares, to a smaller extent, the
1680 insufficient slowing down of dynamics at low
1681 temperature already found for the TIP4P water
1682 model.},
1683 Address = {ONE PHYSICS ELLIPSE, COLLEGE PK, MD 20740-3844 USA},
1684 Affiliation = {UNIV PISA,DIPARTIMENTO CHIM \& CHIM IND,I-56126 PISA,ITALY. CNR,IST FIS ATOM \& MOL,I-56127 PISA,ITALY.},
1685 Author = {Bertolini, D and Tani, A},
1686 Date-Added = {2009-10-30 15:41:21 -0400},
1687 Date-Modified = {2009-10-30 15:41:21 -0400},
1688 Doc-Delivery-Number = {YC322},
1689 Issn = {1063-651X},
1690 Journal = {Phys. Rev. E},
1691 Journal-Iso = {Phys. Rev. E},
1692 Keywords-Plus = {TIME-CORRELATION-FUNCTIONS; LENNARD-JONES LIQUID; TRANSPORT-PROPERTIES; SUPERCOOLED WATER; DENSITY; SIMULATIONS; RELAXATION; VELOCITY; ELECTRON; FLUIDS},
1693 Language = {English},
1694 Month = {OCT},
1695 Number = {4},
1696 Number-Of-Cited-References = {35},
1697 Pages = {4135-4151},
1698 Publisher = {AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOC},
1699 Subject-Category = {Physics, Fluids \& Plasmas; Physics, Mathematical},
1700 Times-Cited = {18},
1701 Title = {Thermal conductivity of water: Molecular dynamics and generalized hydrodynamics results},
1702 Type = {Article},
1703 Unique-Id = {ISI:A1997YC32200056},
1704 Volume = {56},
1705 Year = {1997}}
1706
1707 @article{Meineke:2005gd,
1708 Abstract = {OOPSE is a new molecular dynamics simulation program
1709 that is capable of efficiently integrating equations
1710 of motion for atom types with orientational degrees
1711 of freedom (e.g. #sticky# atoms and point
1712 dipoles). Transition metals can also be simulated
1713 using the embedded atom method (EAM) potential
1714 included in the code. Parallel simulations are
1715 carried out using the force-based decomposition
1716 method. Simulations are specified using a very
1717 simple C-based meta-data language. A number of
1718 advanced integrators are included, and the basic
1719 integrator for orientational dynamics provides
1720 substantial improvements over older quaternion-based
1721 schemes.},
1722 Address = {111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, NJ 07030 USA},
1723 Author = {Meineke, M. A. and Vardeman, C. F. and Lin, T and Fennell, CJ and Gezelter, J. D.},
1724 Date-Added = {2009-10-01 18:43:03 -0400},
1725 Date-Modified = {2010-04-13 09:11:16 -0400},
1726 Doi = {DOI 10.1002/jcc.20161},
1727 Isi = {000226558200006},
1728 Isi-Recid = {142688207},
1729 Isi-Ref-Recids = {67885400 50663994 64190493 93668415 46699855 89992422 57614458 49016001 61447131 111114169 68770425 52728075 102422498 66381878 32391149 134477335 53221357 9929643 59492217 69681001 99223832 142688208 94600872 91658572 54857943 117365867 69323123 49588888 109970172 101670714 142688209 121603296 94652379 96449138 99938010 112825758 114905670 86802042 121339042 104794914 82674909 72096791 93668384 90513335 142688210 23060767 63731466 109033408 76303716 31384453 97861662 71842426 130707771 125809946 66381889 99676497},
1730 Journal = {J. Comput. Chem.},
1731 Keywords = {OOPSE; molecular dynamics},
1732 Month = feb,
1733 Number = {3},
1734 Pages = {252-271},
1735 Publisher = {JOHN WILEY \& SONS INC},
1736 Times-Cited = {9},
1737 Title = {OOPSE: An object-oriented parallel simulation engine for molecular dynamics},
1738 Volume = {26},
1739 Year = {2005},
1740 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://gateway.isiknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=Alerting&SrcApp=Alerting&DestApp=WOS&DestLinkType=FullRecord;KeyUT=000226558200006},
1741 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcc.20161}}
1742
1743 @article{ISI:000080382700030,
1744 Abstract = {A nonequilibrium method for calculating the shear
1745 viscosity is presented. It reverses the
1746 cause-and-effect picture customarily used in
1747 nonequilibrium molecular dynamics: the effect, the
1748 momentum flux or stress, is imposed, whereas the
1749 cause, the velocity gradient or shear rate, is
1750 obtained from the simulation. It differs from other
1751 Norton-ensemble methods by the way in which the
1752 steady-state momentum flux is maintained. This
1753 method involves a simple exchange of particle
1754 momenta, which is easy to implement. Moreover, it
1755 can be made to conserve the total energy as well as
1756 the total linear momentum, so no coupling to an
1757 external temperature bath is needed. The resulting
1758 raw data, the velocity profile, is a robust and
1759 rapidly converging property. The method is tested on
1760 the Lennard-Jones fluid near its triple point. It
1761 yields a viscosity of 3.2-3.3, in Lennard-Jones
1762 reduced units, in agreement with literature
1763 results. {[}S1063-651X(99)03105-0].},
1764 Address = {ONE PHYSICS ELLIPSE, COLLEGE PK, MD 20740-3844 USA},
1765 Affiliation = {Muller-Plathe, F (Reprint Author), Max Planck Inst Polymerforsch, Ackermannweg 10, D-55128 Mainz, Germany. Max Planck Inst Polymerforsch, D-55128 Mainz, Germany.},
1766 Author = {M\"{u}ller-Plathe, F},
1767 Date-Added = {2009-10-01 14:07:30 -0400},
1768 Date-Modified = {2009-10-01 14:07:30 -0400},
1769 Doc-Delivery-Number = {197TX},
1770 Issn = {1063-651X},
1771 Journal = {Phys. Rev. E},
1772 Journal-Iso = {Phys. Rev. E},
1773 Language = {English},
1774 Month = {MAY},
1775 Number = {5, Part A},
1776 Number-Of-Cited-References = {17},
1777 Pages = {4894-4898},
1778 Publisher = {AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOC},
1779 Subject-Category = {Physics, Fluids \& Plasmas; Physics, Mathematical},
1780 Times-Cited = {57},
1781 Title = {Reversing the perturbation in nonequilibrium molecular dynamics: An easy way to calculate the shear viscosity of fluids},
1782 Type = {Article},
1783 Unique-Id = {ISI:000080382700030},
1784 Volume = {59},
1785 Year = {1999}}
1786
1787 @article{Maginn:2007,
1788 Abstract = {Atomistic simulations are conducted to examine the
1789 dependence of the viscosity of
1790 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium
1791 bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide on temperature
1792 and water content. A nonequilibrium molecular
1793 dynamics procedure is utilized along with an
1794 established fixed charge force field. It is found
1795 that the simulations quantitatively capture the
1796 temperature dependence of the viscosity as well as
1797 the drop in viscosity that occurs with increasing
1798 water content. Using mixture viscosity models, we
1799 show that the relative drop in viscosity with water
1800 content is actually less than that that would be
1801 predicted for an ideal system. This finding is at
1802 odds with the popular notion that small amounts of
1803 water cause an unusually large drop in the viscosity
1804 of ionic liquids. The simulations suggest that, due
1805 to preferential association of water with anions and
1806 the formation of water clusters, the excess molar
1807 volume is negative. This means that dissolved water
1808 is actually less effective at lowering the viscosity
1809 of these mixtures when compared to a solute obeying
1810 ideal mixing behavior. The use of a nonequilibrium
1811 simulation technique enables diffusive behavior to
1812 be observed on the time scale of the simulations,
1813 and standard equilibrium molecular dynamics resulted
1814 in sub-diffusive behavior even over 2 ns of
1815 simulation time.},
1816 Address = {1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA},
1817 Affiliation = {Maginn, EJ (Reprint Author), Univ Notre Dame, Dept Chem \& Biomol Engn, 182 Fitzpatrick Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA. Univ Notre Dame, Dept Chem \& Biomol Engn, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.},
1818 Author = {Kelkar, Manish S. and Maginn, Edward J.},
1819 Author-Email = {ed@nd.edu},
1820 Date-Added = {2009-09-29 17:07:17 -0400},
1821 Date-Modified = {2010-04-14 12:51:02 -0400},
1822 Doc-Delivery-Number = {163VA},
1823 Doi = {10.1021/jp0686893},
1824 Issn = {1520-6106},
1825 Journal = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1826 Journal-Iso = {J. Phys. Chem. B},
1827 Keywords-Plus = {MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATION; MOMENTUM IMPULSE RELAXATION; FORCE-FIELD; TRANSPORT-PROPERTIES; PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; SIMPLE FLUID; CHLORIDE; MODEL; SALTS; ARCHITECTURE},
1828 Language = {English},
1829 Month = {MAY 10},
1830 Number = {18},
1831 Number-Of-Cited-References = {57},
1832 Pages = {4867-4876},
1833 Publisher = {AMER CHEMICAL SOC},
1834 Subject-Category = {Chemistry, Physical},
1835 Times-Cited = {35},
1836 Title = {Effect of temperature and water content on the shear viscosity of the ionic liquid 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide as studied by atomistic simulations},
1837 Type = {Article},
1838 Unique-Id = {ISI:000246190100032},
1839 Volume = {111},
1840 Year = {2007},
1841 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp0686893%7D},
1842 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp0686893}}
1843
1844 @article{MullerPlathe:1997xw,
1845 Abstract = {A nonequilibrium molecular dynamics method for
1846 calculating the thermal conductivity is
1847 presented. It reverses the usual cause and effect
1848 picture. The ''effect,'' the heat flux, is imposed
1849 on the system and the ''cause,'' the temperature
1850 gradient is obtained from the simulation. Besides
1851 being very simple to implement, the scheme offers
1852 several advantages such as compatibility with
1853 periodic boundary conditions, conservation of total
1854 energy and total linear momentum, and the sampling
1855 of a rapidly converging quantity (temperature
1856 gradient) rather than a slowly converging one (heat
1857 flux). The scheme is tested on the Lennard-Jones
1858 fluid. (C) 1997 American Institute of Physics.},
1859 Address = {WOODBURY},
1860 Author = {M\"{u}ller-Plathe, F.},
1861 Cited-Reference-Count = {13},
1862 Date = {APR 8},
1863 Date-Added = {2009-09-21 16:51:21 -0400},
1864 Date-Modified = {2009-09-21 16:51:21 -0400},
1865 Document-Type = {Article},
1866 Isi = {ISI:A1997WR62000032},
1867 Isi-Document-Delivery-Number = {WR620},
1868 Iso-Source-Abbreviation = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1869 Issn = {0021-9606},
1870 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1871 Language = {English},
1872 Month = {Apr},
1873 Number = {14},
1874 Page-Count = {4},
1875 Pages = {6082--6085},
1876 Publication-Type = {J},
1877 Publisher = {AMER INST PHYSICS},
1878 Publisher-Address = {CIRCULATION FULFILLMENT DIV, 500 SUNNYSIDE BLVD, WOODBURY, NY 11797-2999},
1879 Reprint-Address = {MullerPlathe, F, MAX PLANCK INST POLYMER RES, D-55128 MAINZ, GERMANY.},
1880 Source = {J CHEM PHYS},
1881 Subject-Category = {Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical},
1882 Times-Cited = {106},
1883 Title = {A simple nonequilibrium molecular dynamics method for calculating the thermal conductivity},
1884 Volume = {106},
1885 Year = {1997}}
1886
1887 @article{Muller-Plathe:1999ek,
1888 Abstract = {A novel non-equilibrium method for calculating
1889 transport coefficients is presented. It reverses the
1890 experimental cause-and-effect picture, e.g. for the
1891 calculation of viscosities: the effect, the momentum
1892 flux or stress, is imposed, whereas the cause, the
1893 velocity gradient or shear rates, is obtained from
1894 the simulation. It differs from other
1895 Norton-ensemble methods by the way, in which the
1896 steady-state fluxes are maintained. This method
1897 involves a simple exchange of particle momenta,
1898 which is easy to implement and to analyse. Moreover,
1899 it can be made to conserve the total energy as well
1900 as the total linear momentum, so no thermostatting
1901 is needed. The resulting raw data are robust and
1902 rapidly converging. The method is tested on the
1903 calculation of the shear viscosity, the thermal
1904 conductivity and the Soret coefficient (thermal
1905 diffusion) for the Lennard-Jones (LJ) fluid near its
1906 triple point. Possible applications to other
1907 transport coefficients and more complicated systems
1908 are discussed. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All
1909 rights reserved.},
1910 Address = {THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND},
1911 Author = {M\"{u}ller-Plathe, F and Reith, D},
1912 Date-Added = {2009-09-21 16:47:07 -0400},
1913 Date-Modified = {2009-09-21 16:47:07 -0400},
1914 Isi = {000082266500004},
1915 Isi-Recid = {111564960},
1916 Isi-Ref-Recids = {64516210 89773595 53816621 60134000 94875498 60964023 90228608 85968509 86405859 63979644 108048497 87560156 577165 103281654 111564961 83735333 99953572 88476740 110174781 111564963 6599000 75892253},
1917 Journal = {Computational and Theoretical Polymer Science},
1918 Keywords = {viscosity; Ludwig-Soret effect; thermal conductivity; Onsager coefficents; non-equilibrium molecular dynamics},
1919 Number = {3-4},
1920 Pages = {203-209},
1921 Publisher = {ELSEVIER SCI LTD},
1922 Times-Cited = {15},
1923 Title = {Cause and effect reversed in non-equilibrium molecular dynamics: an easy route to transport coefficients},
1924 Volume = {9},
1925 Year = {1999},
1926 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://gateway.isiknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=Alerting&SrcApp=Alerting&DestApp=WOS&DestLinkType=FullRecord;KeyUT=000082266500004}}
1927
1928 @article{Viscardy:2007lq,
1929 Abstract = {The thermal conductivity is calculated with the
1930 Helfand-moment method in the Lennard-Jones fluid
1931 near the triple point. The Helfand moment of thermal
1932 conductivity is here derived for molecular dynamics
1933 with periodic boundary conditions. Thermal
1934 conductivity is given by a generalized Einstein
1935 relation with this Helfand moment. The authors
1936 compute thermal conductivity by this new method and
1937 compare it with their own values obtained by the
1938 standard Green-Kubo method. The agreement is
1939 excellent. (C) 2007 American Institute of Physics.},
1940 Address = {CIRCULATION \& FULFILLMENT DIV, 2 HUNTINGTON QUADRANGLE, STE 1 N O 1, MELVILLE, NY 11747-4501 USA},
1941 Author = {Viscardy, S. and Servantie, J. and Gaspard, P.},
1942 Date-Added = {2009-09-21 16:37:20 -0400},
1943 Date-Modified = {2010-07-19 16:18:44 -0400},
1944 Doi = {DOI 10.1063/1.2724821},
1945 Isi = {000246453900035},
1946 Isi-Recid = {156192451},
1947 Isi-Ref-Recids = {18794442 84473620 156192452 41891249 90040203 110174972 59859940 47256160 105716249 91804339 93329429 95967319 6199670 1785176 105872066 6325196 65361295 71941152 4307928 23120502 54053395 149068110 4811016 99953572 59859908 132156782 156192449},
1948 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1949 Month = may,
1950 Number = {18},
1951 Pages = {184513},
1952 Publisher = {AMER INST PHYSICS},
1953 Times-Cited = {3},
1954 Title = {Transport and Helfand moments in the Lennard-Jones fluid. II. Thermal conductivity},
1955 Volume = {126},
1956 Year = {2007},
1957 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://gateway.isiknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=Alerting&SrcApp=Alerting&DestApp=WOS&DestLinkType=FullRecord;KeyUT=000246453900035},
1958 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2724821}}
1959
1960 @article{Viscardy:2007bh,
1961 Abstract = {The authors propose a new method, the Helfand-moment
1962 method, to compute the shear viscosity by
1963 equilibrium molecular dynamics in periodic
1964 systems. In this method, the shear viscosity is
1965 written as an Einstein-type relation in terms of the
1966 variance of the so-called Helfand moment. This
1967 quantity is modified in order to satisfy systems
1968 with periodic boundary conditions usually considered
1969 in molecular dynamics. They calculate the shear
1970 viscosity in the Lennard-Jones fluid near the triple
1971 point thanks to this new technique. They show that
1972 the results of the Helfand-moment method are in
1973 excellent agreement with the results of the standard
1974 Green-Kubo method. (C) 2007 American Institute of
1975 Physics.},
1976 Address = {CIRCULATION \& FULFILLMENT DIV, 2 HUNTINGTON QUADRANGLE, STE 1 N O 1, MELVILLE, NY 11747-4501 USA},
1977 Author = {Viscardy, S. and Servantie, J. and Gaspard, P.},
1978 Date-Added = {2009-09-21 16:37:19 -0400},
1979 Date-Modified = {2010-07-19 16:19:03 -0400},
1980 Doi = {DOI 10.1063/1.2724820},
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1984 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
1985 Month = may,
1986 Number = {18},
1987 Pages = {184512},
1988 Publisher = {AMER INST PHYSICS},
1989 Times-Cited = {1},
1990 Title = {Transport and Helfand moments in the Lennard-Jones fluid. I. Shear viscosity},
1991 Volume = {126},
1992 Year = {2007},
1993 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://gateway.isiknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=Alerting&SrcApp=Alerting&DestApp=WOS&DestLinkType=FullRecord;KeyUT=000246453900034},
1994 Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2724820}}
1995
1996 @inproceedings{384119,
1997 Address = {New York, NY, USA},
1998 Author = {Fortune, Steven},
1999 Booktitle = {ISSAC '01: Proceedings of the 2001 international symposium on Symbolic and algebraic computation},
2000 Doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/384101.384119},
2001 Isbn = {1-58113-417-7},
2002 Location = {London, Ontario, Canada},
2003 Pages = {121--128},
2004 Publisher = {ACM},
2005 Title = {Polynomial root finding using iterated Eigenvalue computation},
2006 Year = {2001},
2007 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/384101.384119}}
2008
2009 @article{Fennell06,
2010 Author = {C.~J. Fennell and J.~D. Gezelter},
2011 Date-Added = {2006-08-24 09:49:57 -0400},
2012 Date-Modified = {2006-08-24 09:49:57 -0400},
2013 Doi = {10.1063/1.2206581},
2014 Journal = {J. Chem. Phys.},
2015 Number = {23},
2016 Pages = {234104(12)},
2017 Rating = {5},
2018 Read = {Yes},
2019 Title = {Is the \uppercase{E}wald summation still necessary? \uppercase{P}airwise alternatives to the accepted standard for long-range electrostatics},
2020 Volume = {124},
2021 Year = {2006},
2022 Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2206581}}
2023
2024 @book{Sommese2005,
2025 Address = {Singapore},
2026 Author = {Andrew J. Sommese and Charles W. Wampler},
2027 Publisher = {World Scientific Press},
2028 Title = {The numerical solution of systems of polynomials arising in engineering and science},
2029 Year = 2005}