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1 chrisfen 1453 %\documentclass[prb,aps,twocolumn,tabularx]{revtex4}
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20 chrisfen 1453
21     \begin{document}
22    
23 gezelter 1463 \title{Ice-{\it i}: a novel ice polymorph predicted via computer simulation}
24 chrisfen 1453
25 gezelter 1463 \author{Christopher J. Fennell and J. Daniel Gezelter \\
26     Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry\\ University of Notre Dame\\
27 chrisfen 1453 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
28    
29     \date{\today}
30    
31 gezelter 1463 \maketitle
32 chrisfen 1453 %\doublespacing
33    
34     \begin{abstract}
35 chrisfen 1459 The free energies of several ice polymorphs in the low pressure regime
36 gezelter 1463 were calculated using thermodynamic integration. These integrations
37     were done for most of the common water models. Ice-{\it i}, a
38     structure we recently observed to be stable in one of the single-point
39     water models, was determined to be the stable crystalline state (at 1
40     atm) for {\it all} the water models investigated. Phase diagrams were
41     generated, and phase coexistence lines were determined for all of the
42     known low-pressure ice structures under all of the common water
43     models. Additionally, potential truncation was shown to have an
44     effect on the calculated free energies, and can result in altered free
45     energy landscapes.
46 chrisfen 1453 \end{abstract}
47    
48     %\narrowtext
49    
50     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
51     % BODY OF TEXT
52     %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
53    
54     \section{Introduction}
55    
56 gezelter 1463 Molecular dynamics is a valuable tool for studying the phase behavior
57     of systems ranging from small or simple
58 chrisfen 1462 molecules\cite{Matsumoto02andOthers} to complex biological
59 gezelter 1463 species.\cite{bigStuff} Many techniques have been developed to
60     investigate the thermodynamic properites of model substances,
61 chrisfen 1459 providing both qualitative and quantitative comparisons between
62     simulations and experiment.\cite{thermMethods} Investigation of these
63     properties leads to the development of new and more accurate models,
64     leading to better understanding and depiction of physical processes
65     and intricate molecular systems.
66    
67     Water has proven to be a challenging substance to depict in
68 gezelter 1463 simulations, and a variety of models have been developed to describe
69     its behavior under varying simulation
70 chrisfen 1462 conditions.\cite{Berendsen81,Jorgensen83,Bratko85,Berendsen87,Liu96,Mahoney00,Fennell04}
71 gezelter 1463 These models have been used to investigate important physical
72 chrisfen 1462 phenomena like phase transitions and the hydrophobic
73 gezelter 1463 effect.\cite{evenMorePapers} With the choice of models available, it
74     is only natural to compare the models under interesting thermodynamic
75     conditions in an attempt to clarify the limitations of each of the
76     models.\cite{modelProps} Two important property to quantify are the
77     Gibbs and Helmholtz free energies, particularly for the solid forms of
78     water. Difficulty in these types of studies typically arises from the
79     assortment of possible crystalline polymorphs that water adopts over a
80     wide range of pressures and temperatures. There are currently 13
81     recognized forms of ice, and it is a challenging task to investigate
82     the entire free energy landscape.\cite{Sanz04} Ideally, research is
83     focused on the phases having the lowest free energy at a given state
84     point, because these phases will dictate the true transition
85     temperatures and pressures for their respective model.
86 chrisfen 1459
87     In this paper, standard reference state methods were applied to the
88     study of crystalline water polymorphs in the low pressure regime. This
89     work is unique in the fact that one of the crystal lattices was
90     arrived at through crystallization of a computationally efficient
91     water model under constant pressure and temperature
92     conditions. Crystallization events are interesting in and of
93 chrisfen 1462 themselves\cite{Matsumoto02,Yamada02}; however, the crystal structure
94 chrisfen 1459 obtained in this case was different from any previously observed ice
95     polymorphs, in experiment or simulation.\cite{Fennell04} This crystal
96     was termed Ice-{\it i} in homage to its origin in computational
97     simulation. The unit cell (Fig. \ref{iceiCell}A) consists of eight
98     water molecules that stack in rows of interlocking water
99     tetramers. Proton ordering can be accomplished by orienting two of the
100     waters so that both of their donated hydrogen bonds are internal to
101     their tetramer (Fig. \ref{protOrder}). As expected in an ice crystal
102     constructed of water tetramers, the hydrogen bonds are not as linear
103     as those observed in ice $I_h$, however the interlocking of these
104     subunits appears to provide significant stabilization to the overall
105     crystal. The arrangement of these tetramers results in surrounding
106     open octagonal cavities that are typically greater than 6.3 \AA\ in
107     diameter. This relatively open overall structure leads to crystals
108     that are 0.07 g/cm$^3$ less dense on average than ice $I_h$.
109 gezelter 1463
110 chrisfen 1460 \begin{figure}
111 gezelter 1463 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{unitCell.eps}
112 chrisfen 1461 \caption{Unit cells for (A) Ice-{\it i} and (B) Ice-2{\it i}, the elongated variant of Ice-{\it i}. For Ice-{\it i}, the $a$ to $c$ relation is given by $a = 2.1214c$, while for Ice-2{\it i}, $a = 1.7850c$.}
113 chrisfen 1460 \label{iceiCell}
114     \end{figure}
115 gezelter 1463
116 chrisfen 1460 \begin{figure}
117 gezelter 1463 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{orderedIcei.eps}
118 chrisfen 1460 \caption{Image of a proton ordered crystal of Ice-{\it i} looking
119     down the (001) crystal face. The rows of water tetramers surrounded by
120     octagonal pores leads to a crystal structure that is significantly
121     less dense than ice $I_h$.}
122     \label{protOrder}
123     \end{figure}
124 chrisfen 1459
125     Results in the previous study indicated that Ice-{\it i} is the
126     minimum energy crystal structure for the single point water models
127     being studied (for discussions on these single point dipole models,
128     see the previous work and related
129     articles\cite{Fennell04,Ichiye96,Bratko85}). Those results only
130     consider energetic stabilization and neglect entropic contributions to
131     the overall free energy. To address this issue, the absolute free
132     energy of this crystal was calculated using thermodynamic integration
133     and compared to the free energies of cubic and hexagonal ice $I$ (the
134     experimental low density ice polymorphs) and ice B (a higher density,
135     but very stable crystal structure observed by B\`{a}ez and Clancy in
136     free energy studies of SPC/E).\cite{Baez95b} This work includes
137     results for the water model from which Ice-{\it i} was crystallized
138     (soft sticky dipole extended, SSD/E) in addition to several common
139     water models (TIP3P, TIP4P, TIP5P, and SPC/E) and a reaction field
140     parametrized single point dipole water model (soft sticky dipole
141     reaction field, SSD/RF). In should be noted that a second version of
142     Ice-{\it i} (Ice-2{\it i}) was used in calculations involving SPC/E,
143     TIP4P, and TIP5P. The unit cell of this crystal (Fig. \ref{iceiCell}B)
144     is similar to the Ice-{\it i} unit it is extended in the direction of
145     the (001) face and compressed along the other two faces.
146    
147 chrisfen 1453 \section{Methods}
148    
149 chrisfen 1454 Canonical ensemble (NVT) molecular dynamics calculations were
150     performed using the OOPSE (Object-Oriented Parallel Simulation Engine)
151     molecular mechanics package. All molecules were treated as rigid
152 chrisfen 1459 bodies, with orientational motion propagated using the symplectic DLM
153 chrisfen 1454 integration method. Details about the implementation of these
154     techniques can be found in a recent publication.\cite{Meineke05}
155    
156     Thermodynamic integration was utilized to calculate the free energy of
157 chrisfen 1456 several ice crystals at 200 K using the TIP3P, TIP4P, TIP5P, SPC/E,
158     SSD/RF, and SSD/E water models. Liquid state free energies at 300 and
159     400 K for all of these water models were also determined using this
160     same technique, in order to determine melting points and generate
161     phase diagrams. All simulations were carried out at densities
162     resulting in a pressure of approximately 1 atm at their respective
163     temperatures.
164 chrisfen 1454
165 chrisfen 1458 A single thermodynamic integration involves a sequence of simulations
166     over which the system of interest is converted into a reference system
167     for which the free energy is known. This transformation path is then
168     integrated in order to determine the free energy difference between
169     the two states:
170     \begin{equation}
171     \Delta A = \int_0^1\left\langle\frac{\partial V(\lambda
172     )}{\partial\lambda}\right\rangle_\lambda d\lambda,
173     \end{equation}
174     where $V$ is the interaction potential and $\lambda$ is the
175 chrisfen 1459 transformation parameter that scales the overall
176     potential. Simulations are distributed unevenly along this path in
177     order to sufficiently sample the regions of greatest change in the
178     potential. Typical integrations in this study consisted of $\sim$25
179     simulations ranging from 300 ps (for the unaltered system) to 75 ps
180     (near the reference state) in length.
181 chrisfen 1458
182 chrisfen 1454 For the thermodynamic integration of molecular crystals, the Einstein
183     Crystal is chosen as the reference state that the system is converted
184     to over the course of the simulation. In an Einstein Crystal, the
185     molecules are harmonically restrained at their ideal lattice locations
186     and orientations. The partition function for a molecular crystal
187     restrained in this fashion has been evaluated, and the Helmholtz Free
188     Energy ({\it A}) is given by
189     \begin{eqnarray}
190     A = E_m\ -\ kT\ln \left (\frac{kT}{h\nu}\right )^3&-&kT\ln \left
191     [\pi^\frac{1}{2}\left (\frac{8\pi^2I_\mathrm{A}kT}{h^2}\right
192     )^\frac{1}{2}\left (\frac{8\pi^2I_\mathrm{B}kT}{h^2}\right
193     )^\frac{1}{2}\left (\frac{8\pi^2I_\mathrm{C}kT}{h^2}\right
194     )^\frac{1}{2}\right ] \nonumber \\ &-& kT\ln \left [\frac{kT}{2(\pi
195     K_\omega K_\theta)^{\frac{1}{2}}}\exp\left
196     (-\frac{kT}{2K_\theta}\right)\int_0^{\left (\frac{kT}{2K_\theta}\right
197     )^\frac{1}{2}}\exp(t^2)\mathrm{d}t\right ],
198     \label{ecFreeEnergy}
199     \end{eqnarray}
200     where $2\pi\nu = (K_\mathrm{v}/m)^{1/2}$.\cite{Baez95a} In equation
201     \ref{ecFreeEnergy}, $K_\mathrm{v}$, $K_\mathrm{\theta}$, and
202     $K_\mathrm{\omega}$ are the spring constants restraining translational
203     motion and deflection of and rotation around the principle axis of the
204     molecule respectively (Fig. \ref{waterSpring}), and $E_m$ is the
205     minimum potential energy of the ideal crystal. In the case of
206     molecular liquids, the ideal vapor is chosen as the target reference
207     state.
208 gezelter 1463
209 chrisfen 1456 \begin{figure}
210 gezelter 1463 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{rotSpring.eps}
211 chrisfen 1456 \caption{Possible orientational motions for a restrained molecule.
212     $\theta$ angles correspond to displacement from the body-frame {\it
213     z}-axis, while $\omega$ angles correspond to rotation about the
214     body-frame {\it z}-axis. $K_\theta$ and $K_\omega$ are spring
215     constants for the harmonic springs restraining motion in the $\theta$
216     and $\omega$ directions.}
217     \label{waterSpring}
218     \end{figure}
219 chrisfen 1454
220 chrisfen 1456 Charge, dipole, and Lennard-Jones interactions were modified by a
221 chrisfen 1462 cubic switching between 100\% and 85\% of the cutoff value (9 \AA
222     ). By applying this function, these interactions are smoothly
223     truncated, thereby avoiding poor energy conserving dynamics resulting
224     from harsher truncation schemes. The effect of a long-range correction
225     was also investigated on select model systems in a variety of
226     manners. For the SSD/RF model, a reaction field with a fixed
227     dielectric constant of 80 was applied in all
228     simulations.\cite{Onsager36} For a series of the least computationally
229     expensive models (SSD/E, SSD/RF, and TIP3P), simulations were
230     performed with longer cutoffs of 12 and 15 \AA\ to compare with the 9
231     \AA\ cutoff results. Finally, results from the use of an Ewald
232     summation were estimated for TIP3P and SPC/E by performing
233 chrisfen 1456 calculations with Particle-Mesh Ewald (PME) in the TINKER molecular
234 chrisfen 1462 mechanics software package.\cite{Tinker} TINKER was chosen because it
235     can also propagate the motion of rigid-bodies, and provides the most
236     direct comparison to the results from OOPSE. The calculated energy
237     difference in the presence and absence of PME was applied to the
238     previous results in order to predict changes in the free energy
239     landscape.
240 chrisfen 1454
241 chrisfen 1456 \section{Results and discussion}
242 chrisfen 1454
243 chrisfen 1456 The free energy of proton ordered Ice-{\it i} was calculated and
244     compared with the free energies of proton ordered variants of the
245     experimentally observed low-density ice polymorphs, $I_h$ and $I_c$,
246     as well as the higher density ice B, observed by B\`{a}ez and Clancy
247     and thought to be the minimum free energy structure for the SPC/E
248     model at ambient conditions (Table \ref{freeEnergy}).\cite{Baez95b}
249     Ice XI, the experimentally observed proton ordered variant of ice
250     $I_h$, was investigated initially, but it was found not to be as
251     stable as antiferroelectric variants of proton ordered or even proton
252     disordered ice$I_h$.\cite{Davidson84} The proton ordered variant of
253     ice $I_h$ used here is a simple antiferroelectric version that has an
254     8 molecule unit cell. The crystals contained 648 or 1728 molecules for
255     ice B, 1024 or 1280 molecules for ice $I_h$, 1000 molecules for ice
256     $I_c$, or 1024 molecules for Ice-{\it i}. The larger crystal sizes
257     were necessary for simulations involving larger cutoff values.
258 chrisfen 1454
259 chrisfen 1456 \begin{table*}
260     \begin{minipage}{\linewidth}
261     \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\thempfootnote}
262     \begin{center}
263     \caption{Calculated free energies for several ice polymorphs with a
264     variety of common water models. All calculations used a cutoff radius
265     of 9 \AA\ and were performed at 200 K and $\sim$1 atm. Units are
266     kcal/mol. *Ice $I_c$ is unstable at 200 K using SSD/RF.}
267     \begin{tabular}{ l c c c c }
268 gezelter 1463 \hline
269 chrisfen 1456 \ \quad \ Water Model\ \ & \ \quad \ \ \ \ $I_h$ \ \ & \ \quad \ \ \ \ $I_c$ \ \ & \ \quad \ \ \ \ B \ \ & \ \quad \ \ \ Ice-{\it i} \ \quad \ \\
270 gezelter 1463 \hline
271 chrisfen 1456 \ \quad \ TIP3P & \ \quad \ -11.41 & \ \quad \ -11.23 & \ \quad \ -11.82 & \quad -12.30\\
272     \ \quad \ TIP4P & \ \quad \ -11.84 & \ \quad \ -12.04 & \ \quad \ -12.08 & \quad -12.33\\
273     \ \quad \ TIP5P & \ \quad \ -11.85 & \ \quad \ -11.86 & \ \quad \ -11.96 & \quad -12.29\\
274     \ \quad \ SPC/E & \ \quad \ -12.67 & \ \quad \ -12.96 & \ \quad \ -13.25 & \quad -13.55\\
275     \ \quad \ SSD/E & \ \quad \ -11.27 & \ \quad \ -11.19 & \ \quad \ -12.09 & \quad -12.54\\
276     \ \quad \ SSD/RF & \ \quad \ -11.51 & \ \quad \ NA* & \ \quad \ -12.08 & \quad -12.29\\
277     \end{tabular}
278     \label{freeEnergy}
279     \end{center}
280     \end{minipage}
281     \end{table*}
282 chrisfen 1453
283 chrisfen 1456 The free energy values computed for the studied polymorphs indicate
284     that Ice-{\it i} is the most stable state for all of the common water
285     models studied. With the free energy at these state points, the
286     temperature and pressure dependence of the free energy was used to
287     project to other state points and build phase diagrams. Figures
288     \ref{tp3phasedia} and \ref{ssdrfphasedia} are example diagrams built
289     from the free energy results. All other models have similar structure,
290     only the crossing points between these phases exist at different
291     temperatures and pressures. It is interesting to note that ice $I$
292     does not exist in either cubic or hexagonal form in any of the phase
293     diagrams for any of the models. For purposes of this study, ice B is
294     representative of the dense ice polymorphs. A recent study by Sanz
295     {\it et al.} goes into detail on the phase diagrams for SPC/E and
296     TIP4P in the high pressure regime.\cite{Sanz04}
297 gezelter 1463
298 chrisfen 1456 \begin{figure}
299     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{tp3PhaseDia.eps}
300     \caption{Phase diagram for the TIP3P water model in the low pressure
301     regime. The displayed $T_m$ and $T_b$ values are good predictions of
302     the experimental values; however, the solid phases shown are not the
303     experimentally observed forms. Both cubic and hexagonal ice $I$ are
304     higher in energy and don't appear in the phase diagram.}
305     \label{tp3phasedia}
306     \end{figure}
307 gezelter 1463
308 chrisfen 1456 \begin{figure}
309     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{ssdrfPhaseDia.eps}
310     \caption{Phase diagram for the SSD/RF water model in the low pressure
311     regime. Calculations producing these results were done under an
312     applied reaction field. It is interesting to note that this
313     computationally efficient model (over 3 times more efficient than
314     TIP3P) exhibits phase behavior similar to the less computationally
315     conservative charge based models.}
316     \label{ssdrfphasedia}
317     \end{figure}
318    
319     \begin{table*}
320     \begin{minipage}{\linewidth}
321     \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\thempfootnote}
322     \begin{center}
323     \caption{Melting ($T_m$), boiling ($T_b$), and sublimation ($T_s$)
324     temperatures of several common water models compared with experiment.}
325     \begin{tabular}{ l c c c c c c c }
326 gezelter 1463 \hline
327 chrisfen 1456 \ \ Equilibria Point\ \ & \ \ \ \ \ TIP3P \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ TIP4P \ \ & \ \quad \ \ \ \ TIP5P \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ SPC/E \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ SSD/E \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ SSD/RF \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ Exp. \ \ \\
328 gezelter 1463 \hline
329 chrisfen 1456 \ \ $T_m$ (K) & \ \ 269 & \ \ 265 & \ \ 271 & 297 & \ \ - & \ \ 278 & \ \ 273\\
330     \ \ $T_b$ (K) & \ \ 357 & \ \ 354 & \ \ 337 & 396 & \ \ - & \ \ 349 & \ \ 373\\
331     \ \ $T_s$ (K) & \ \ - & \ \ - & \ \ - & - & \ \ 355 & \ \ - & \ \ -\\
332     \end{tabular}
333     \label{meltandboil}
334     \end{center}
335     \end{minipage}
336     \end{table*}
337    
338     Table \ref{meltandboil} lists the melting and boiling temperatures
339     calculated from this work. Surprisingly, most of these models have
340     melting points that compare quite favorably with experiment. The
341     unfortunate aspect of this result is that this phase change occurs
342     between Ice-{\it i} and the liquid state rather than ice $I_h$ and the
343     liquid state. These results are actually not contrary to previous
344     studies in the literature. Earlier free energy studies of ice $I$
345     using TIP4P predict a $T_m$ ranging from 214 to 238 K (differences
346     being attributed to choice of interaction truncation and different
347     ordered and disordered molecular arrangements). If the presence of ice
348     B and Ice-{\it i} were omitted, a $T_m$ value around 210 K would be
349     predicted from this work. However, the $T_m$ from Ice-{\it i} is
350     calculated at 265 K, significantly higher in temperature than the
351     previous studies. Also of interest in these results is that SSD/E does
352     not exhibit a melting point at 1 atm, but it shows a sublimation point
353     at 355 K. This is due to the significant stability of Ice-{\it i} over
354     all other polymorphs for this particular model under these
355     conditions. While troubling, this behavior turned out to be
356 chrisfen 1459 advantageous in that it facilitated the spontaneous crystallization of
357 chrisfen 1456 Ice-{\it i}. These observations provide a warning that simulations of
358     SSD/E as a ``liquid'' near 300 K are actually metastable and run the
359     risk of spontaneous crystallization. However, this risk changes when
360     applying a longer cutoff.
361    
362 chrisfen 1458 \begin{figure}
363     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{cutoffChange.eps}
364     \caption{Free energy as a function of cutoff radius for (A) SSD/E, (B)
365     TIP3P, and (C) SSD/RF. Data points omitted include SSD/E: $I_c$ 12
366     \AA\, TIP3P: $I_c$ 12 \AA\ and B 12 \AA\, and SSD/RF: $I_c$ 9
367     \AA\. These crystals are unstable at 200 K and rapidly convert into a
368     liquid. The connecting lines are qualitative visual aid.}
369     \label{incCutoff}
370     \end{figure}
371    
372 chrisfen 1457 Increasing the cutoff radius in simulations of the more
373     computationally efficient water models was done in order to evaluate
374     the trend in free energy values when moving to systems that do not
375     involve potential truncation. As seen in Fig. \ref{incCutoff}, the
376     free energy of all the ice polymorphs show a substantial dependence on
377     cutoff radius. In general, there is a narrowing of the free energy
378 chrisfen 1459 differences while moving to greater cutoff radius. Interestingly, by
379     increasing the cutoff radius, the free energy gap was narrowed enough
380     in the SSD/E model that the liquid state is preferred under standard
381     simulation conditions (298 K and 1 atm). Thus, it is recommended that
382     simulations using this model choose interaction truncation radii
383     greater than 9 \AA\. This narrowing trend is much more subtle in the
384     case of SSD/RF, indicating that the free energies calculated with a
385     reaction field present provide a more accurate picture of the free
386     energy landscape in the absence of potential truncation.
387 chrisfen 1456
388 chrisfen 1457 To further study the changes resulting to the inclusion of a
389     long-range interaction correction, the effect of an Ewald summation
390     was estimated by applying the potential energy difference do to its
391     inclusion in systems in the presence and absence of the
392     correction. This was accomplished by calculation of the potential
393     energy of identical crystals with and without PME using TINKER. The
394     free energies for the investigated polymorphs using the TIP3P and
395     SPC/E water models are shown in Table \ref{pmeShift}. TIP4P and TIP5P
396     are not fully supported in TINKER, so the results for these models
397     could not be estimated. The same trend pointed out through increase of
398 chrisfen 1459 cutoff radius is observed in these PME results. Ice-{\it i} is the
399 chrisfen 1457 preferred polymorph at ambient conditions for both the TIP3P and SPC/E
400     water models; however, there is a narrowing of the free energy
401     differences between the various solid forms. In the case of SPC/E this
402     narrowing is significant enough that it becomes less clear cut that
403     Ice-{\it i} is the most stable polymorph, and is possibly metastable
404     with respect to ice B and possibly ice $I_c$. However, these results
405     do not significantly alter the finding that the Ice-{\it i} polymorph
406     is a stable crystal structure that should be considered when studying
407     the phase behavior of water models.
408 chrisfen 1456
409 chrisfen 1457 \begin{table*}
410     \begin{minipage}{\linewidth}
411     \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\thempfootnote}
412     \begin{center}
413 chrisfen 1458 \caption{The free energy of the studied ice polymorphs after applying
414     the energy difference attributed to the inclusion of the PME
415     long-range interaction correction. Units are kcal/mol.}
416 chrisfen 1457 \begin{tabular}{ l c c c c }
417 gezelter 1463 \hline
418 chrisfen 1457 \ \ Water Model \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ $I_h$ \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ $I_c$ \ \ & \ \quad \ \ \ \ B \ \ & \ \ \ \ \ Ice-{\it i} \ \ \\
419 gezelter 1463 \hline
420 chrisfen 1457 \ \ TIP3P & \ \ -11.53 & \ \ -11.24 & \ \ -11.51 & \ \ -11.67\\
421     \ \ SPC/E & \ \ -12.77 & \ \ -12.92 & \ \ -12.96 & \ \ -13.02\\
422     \end{tabular}
423     \label{pmeShift}
424     \end{center}
425     \end{minipage}
426     \end{table*}
427    
428 chrisfen 1453 \section{Conclusions}
429    
430 chrisfen 1458 The free energy for proton ordered variants of hexagonal and cubic ice
431     $I$, ice B, and recently discovered Ice-{\it i} where calculated under
432     standard conditions for several common water models via thermodynamic
433     integration. All the water models studied show Ice-{\it i} to be the
434     minimum free energy crystal structure in the with a 9 \AA\ switching
435     function cutoff. Calculated melting and boiling points show
436     surprisingly good agreement with the experimental values; however, the
437     solid phase at 1 atm is Ice-{\it i}, not ice $I_h$. The effect of
438     interaction truncation was investigated through variation of the
439     cutoff radius, use of a reaction field parameterized model, and
440     estimation of the results in the presence of the Ewald summation
441     correction. Interaction truncation has a significant effect on the
442 chrisfen 1459 computed free energy values, and may significantly alter the free
443     energy landscape for the more complex multipoint water models. Despite
444     these effects, these results show Ice-{\it i} to be an important ice
445     polymorph that should be considered in simulation studies.
446 chrisfen 1458
447 chrisfen 1459 Due to this relative stability of Ice-{\it i} in all manner of
448     investigated simulation examples, the question arises as to possible
449     experimental observation of this polymorph. The rather extensive past
450     and current experimental investigation of water in the low pressure
451     regime leads the authors to be hesitant in ascribing relevance outside
452     of computational models, hence the descriptive name presented. That
453     being said, there are certain experimental conditions that would
454     provide the most ideal situation for possible observation. These
455     include the negative pressure or stretched solid regime, small
456     clusters in vacuum deposition environments, and in clathrate
457     structures involving small non-polar molecules.
458    
459 chrisfen 1453 \section{Acknowledgments}
460     Support for this project was provided by the National Science
461     Foundation under grant CHE-0134881. Computation time was provided by
462 chrisfen 1458 the Notre Dame High Performance Computing Cluster and the Notre Dame
463     Bunch-of-Boxes (B.o.B) computer cluster (NSF grant DMR-0079647).
464 chrisfen 1453
465     \newpage
466    
467     \bibliographystyle{jcp}
468     \bibliography{iceiPaper}
469    
470    
471     \end{document}