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