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1 \documentclass[journal = jctcce, manuscript = article]{achemso}
2 \setkeys{acs}{usetitle = true}
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23 \usepackage{achemso}
24 \usepackage[version=3]{mhchem} % this is a great package for formatting chemical reactions
25 % \usepackage[square, comma, sort&compress]{natbib}
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27 \pagestyle{plain} \pagenumbering{arabic} \oddsidemargin 0.0cm
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40
41 \title{A Method for Creating Thermal and Angular Momentum Fluxes in Non-Periodic Systems}
42
43 \author{Kelsey M. Stocker}
44 \author{J. Daniel Gezelter}
45 \email{gezelter@nd.edu}
46 \affiliation[University of Notre Dame]{251 Nieuwland Science Hall\\ Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry\\ University of Notre Dame\\ Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
47
48 \begin{document}
49
50 \newcolumntype{A}{p{1.5in}}
51 \newcolumntype{B}{p{0.75in}}
52
53 % \author{Kelsey M. Stocker and J. Daniel
54 % Gezelter\footnote{Corresponding author. \ Electronic mail:
55 % gezelter@nd.edu} \\
56 % 251 Nieuwland Science Hall, \\
57 % Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,\\
58 % University of Notre Dame\\
59 % Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
60
61 \date{\today}
62
63 \maketitle
64
65 \begin{doublespace}
66
67 \begin{abstract}
68
69 We have adapted the Velocity Shearing and Scaling Reverse Non-Equilibium Molecular Dynamics (VSS-RNEMD) method for use with aperiodic system geometries. This new method is capable of creating stable temperature and angular velocity gradients in heterogeneous non-periodic systems while conserving total energy and angular momentum. To demonstrate the method, we have computed the thermal conductivities of a gold nanoparticle and water cluster, the shear viscosity of a water cluster, the interfacial thermal conductivity of a solvated gold nanoparticle and the interfacial friction of solvated gold nanostructures.
70
71 \end{abstract}
72
73 \newpage
74
75 %\narrowtext
76
77 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
78 % **INTRODUCTION**
79 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
80 \section{Introduction}
81
82 Non-equilibrium Molecular Dynamics (NEMD) methods impose a temperature
83 or velocity {\it gradient} on a
84 system,\cite{ASHURST:1975tg,Evans:1982zk,ERPENBECK:1984sp,MAGINN:1993hc,Berthier:2002ij,Evans:2002ai,Schelling:2002dp,PhysRevA.34.1449,JiangHao_jp802942v}
85 and use linear response theory to connect the resulting thermal or
86 momentum flux to transport coefficients of bulk materials. However,
87 for heterogeneous systems, such as phase boundaries or interfaces, it
88 is often unclear what shape of gradient should be imposed at the
89 boundary between materials.
90
91 \begin{figure}
92 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/VSS}
93 \caption{Schematics of periodic (left) and non-periodic (right)
94 Velocity Shearing and Scaling RNEMD. A kinetic energy or momentum
95 flux is applied from region B to region A. Thermal gradients are
96 depicted by a color gradient. Linear or angular velocity gradients
97 are shown as arrows.}
98 \label{fig:VSS}
99 \end{figure}
100
101 Reverse Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics (RNEMD) methods impose an
102 unphysical {\it flux} between different regions or ``slabs'' of the
103 simulation
104 box.\cite{MullerPlathe:1997xw,ISI:000080382700030,Kuang:2010uq} The
105 system responds by developing a temperature or velocity {\it gradient}
106 between the two regions. The gradients which develop in response to
107 the applied flux are then related (via linear response theory) to the
108 transport coefficient of interest. Since the amount of the applied
109 flux is known exactly, and measurement of a gradient is generally less
110 complicated, imposed-flux methods typically take shorter simulation
111 times to obtain converged results. At interfaces, the observed
112 gradients often exhibit near-discontinuities at the boundaries between
113 dissimilar materials. RNEMD methods do not need many trajectories to
114 provide information about transport properties, and they have become
115 widely used to compute thermal and mechanical transport in both
116 homogeneous liquids and
117 solids~\cite{MullerPlathe:1997xw,ISI:000080382700030,Maginn:2010} as
118 well as heterogeneous
119 interfaces.\cite{garde:nl2005,garde:PhysRevLett2009,kuang:AuThl}
120
121
122 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
123 % **METHODOLOGY**
124 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
125 \section{Velocity Shearing and Scaling (VSS) for non-periodic systems}
126 The VSS-RNEMD approach uses a series of simultaneous velocity shearing
127 and scaling exchanges between the two slabs.\cite{2012MolPh.110..691K}
128 This method imposes energy and momentum conservation constraints while
129 simultaneously creating a desired flux between the two slabs. These
130 constraints ensure that all configurations are sampled from the same
131 microcanonical (NVE) ensemble.
132
133 We have extended the VSS method for use in {\it non-periodic}
134 simulations, in which the ``slabs'' have been generalized to two
135 separated regions of space. These regions could be defined as
136 concentric spheres (as in figure \ref{fig:VSS}), or one of the regions
137 can be defined in terms of a dynamically changing ``hull'' comprising
138 the surface atoms of the cluster. This latter definition is identical
139 to the hull used in the Langevin Hull algorithm.
140
141 We present here a new set of constraints that are more general than
142 the VSS constraints. For the non-periodic variant, the constraints
143 fix both the total energy and total {\it angular} momentum of the
144 system while simultaneously imposing a thermal and angular momentum
145 flux between the two regions.
146
147 After each $\Delta t$ time interval, the particle velocities
148 ($\mathbf{v}_i$ and $\mathbf{v}_j$) in the two shells ($A$ and $B$)
149 are modified by a velocity scaling coefficient ($a$ and $b$) and by a
150 rotational shearing term ($\mathbf{c}_a$ and $\mathbf{c}_b$).
151 \begin{displaymath}
152 \begin{array}{rclcl}
153 & \underline{~~~~~~~~\mathrm{scaling}~~~~~~~~} & &
154 \underline{\mathrm{rotational~shearing}} \\ \\
155 \mathbf{v}_i $~~~$\leftarrow &
156 a \left(\mathbf{v}_i - \langle \omega_a
157 \rangle \times \mathbf{r}_i\right) & + & \mathbf{c}_a \times \mathbf{r}_i \\
158 \mathbf{v}_j $~~~$\leftarrow &
159 b \left(\mathbf{v}_j - \langle \omega_b
160 \rangle \times \mathbf{r}_j\right) & + & \mathbf{c}_b \times \mathbf{r}_j
161 \end{array}
162 \end{displaymath}
163 Here $\langle\mathbf{\omega}_a\rangle$ and
164 $\langle\mathbf{\omega}_b\rangle$ are the instantaneous angular
165 velocities of each shell, and $\mathbf{r}_i$ is the position of
166 particle $i$ relative to a fixed point in space (usually the center of
167 mass of the cluster). Particles in the shells also receive an
168 additive ``angular shear'' to their velocities. The amount of shear
169 is governed by the imposed angular momentum flux,
170 $\mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L})$,
171 \begin{eqnarray}
172 \mathbf{c}_a & = & - \mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L}) \cdot
173 \overleftrightarrow{I_a}^{-1} \Delta t + \langle \omega_a \rangle \label{eq:bc}\\
174 \mathbf{c}_b & = & + \mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L}) \cdot
175 \overleftrightarrow{I_b}^{-1} \Delta t + \langle \omega_b \rangle \label{eq:bh}
176 \end{eqnarray}
177 where $\overleftrightarrow{I}_{\{a,b\}}$ is the moment of inertia tensor for
178 each of the two shells.
179
180 To simultaneously impose a thermal flux ($J_r$) between the shells we
181 use energy conservation constraints,
182 \begin{eqnarray}
183 K_a - J_r \Delta t & = & a^2 \left(K_a - \frac{1}{2}\langle
184 \omega_a \rangle \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_a} \cdot \langle \omega_a
185 \rangle \right) + \frac{1}{2} \mathbf{c}_a \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_a}
186 \cdot \mathbf{c}_a \label{eq:Kc}\\
187 K_b + J_r \Delta t & = & b^2 \left(K_b - \frac{1}{2}\langle
188 \omega_b \rangle \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_b} \cdot \langle \omega_b
189 \rangle \right) + \frac{1}{2} \mathbf{c}_b \cdot \overleftrightarrow{I_b} \cdot \mathbf{c}_b \label{eq:Kh}
190 \end{eqnarray}
191 Simultaneous solution of these quadratic formulae for the scaling
192 coefficients, $a$ and $b$, will ensure that the simulation samples
193 from the original microcanonical (NVE) ensemble. Here $K_{\{a,b\}}$
194 is the instantaneous translational kinetic energy of each shell. At
195 each time interval, we solve for $a$, $b$, $\mathbf{c}_a$, and
196 $\mathbf{c}_b$, subject to the imposed angular momentum flux,
197 $j_r(\mathbf{L})$, and thermal flux, $J_r$ values. The new particle
198 velocities are computed, and the simulation continues. System
199 configurations after the transformations have exactly the same energy
200 ({\it and} angular momentum) as before the moves.
201
202 As the simulation progresses, the velocity transformations can be
203 performed on a regular basis, and the system will develop a
204 temperature and/or angular velocity gradient in response to the
205 applied flux. Using the slope of the radial temperature or velocity
206 gradients, it is quite simple to obtain both the thermal conductivity
207 ($\lambda$) and shear viscosity ($\eta$),
208 \begin{equation}
209 J_r = -\lambda \frac{\partial T}{\partial
210 r} \hspace{2in} j_r(\mathbf{L}_z) = -\eta \frac{\partial
211 \omega_z}{\partial r}
212 \end{equation}
213 of a liquid cluster.
214
215 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
216 % NON-PERIODIC DYNAMICS
217 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
218 \subsection{Dynamics for non-periodic systems}
219
220 We have run all tests using the Langevin Hull nonperiodic simulation methodology.\cite{Vardeman2011} The Langevin Hull is especially useful for simulating heterogeneous mixtures of materials with different compressibilities, which are typically problematic for traditional affine transform methods. We have had success applying this method to
221 several different systems including bare metal nanoparticles, liquid water clusters, and explicitly solvated nanoparticles. Calculated physical properties such as the isothermal compressibility of water and the bulk modulus of gold nanoparticles are in good agreement with previous theoretical and experimental results. The Langevin Hull uses a Delaunay tesselation to create a dynamic convex hull composed of triangular facets with vertices at atomic sites. Atomic sites included in the hull are coupled to an external bath defined by a temperature, pressure and viscosity. Atoms not included in the hull are subject to standard Newtonian dynamics. For these tests, thermal coupling to the bath was turned off to avoid interference with any imposed kinetic flux. Systems containing liquids were run under moderate pressure ($\sim$ 5 atm) to avoid the formation of a substantial vapor phase.
222
223 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
224 % NON-PERIODIC RNEMD
225 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
226 \subsection{VSS-RNEMD for non-periodic systems}
227
228 The most useful RNEMD approach developed so far utilizes a series of
229 simultaneous velocity shearing and scaling (VSS) exchanges between the two
230 regions.\cite{Kuang2012} This method provides a set of conservation constraints
231 while simultaneously creating a desired flux between the two regions. Satisfying
232 the constraint equations ensures that the new configurations are sampled from the
233 same NVE ensemble.
234
235 We have implemented this new method in OpenMD, our group molecular dynamics code.\cite{openmd} The adaptation of VSS-RNEMD for non-periodic systems is relatively
236 straightforward. The major modifications to the method are the addition of a rotational shearing term and the use of more versatile hot / cold regions instead
237 of rectangular slabs. A temperature profile along the $r$ coordinate is created by recording the average temperature of concentric spherical shells.
238
239 \begin{figure}
240 \center{\includegraphics[width=7in]{figures/npVSS2}}
241 \caption{Schematics of periodic (left) and nonperiodic (right) Velocity Shearing and Scaling RNEMD. A kinetic energy or momentum flux is applied from region B to region A. Thermal gradients are depicted by a color gradient. Linear or angular velocity gradients are shown as arrows.}
242 \label{fig:VSS}
243 \end{figure}
244
245 At each time interval, the particle velocities ($\mathbf{v}_i$ and
246 $\mathbf{v}_j$) in the cold and hot shells ($C$ and $H$) are modified by a
247 velocity scaling coefficient ($c$ and $h$), an additive linear velocity shearing
248 term ($\mathbf{a}_c$ and $\mathbf{a}_h$), and an additive angular velocity
249 shearing term ($\mathbf{b}_c$ and $\mathbf{b}_h$). Here, $\langle
250 \mathbf{v}_{i,j} \rangle$ and $\langle \mathbf{\omega}_{i,j} \rangle$ are the
251 average linear and angular velocities for each shell.
252 \begin{displaymath}
253 \begin{array}{rclcl}
254 & \underline{~~~~~~~~~~\mathrm{scaling}~~~~~~~~~~} & &
255 \underline{\mathrm{rotational \; shearing}} \\ \\
256 \mathbf{v}_i $~~~$\leftarrow &
257 c \, \left(\mathbf{v}_i - \langle \omega_c
258 \rangle \times r_i\right) & + & \mathbf{b}_c \times r_i \\
259 \mathbf{v}_j $~~~$\leftarrow &
260 h \, \left(\mathbf{v}_j - \langle \omega_h
261 \rangle \times r_j\right) & + & \mathbf{b}_h \times r_j
262 \end{array}
263 \end{displaymath}
264
265 \begin{eqnarray}
266 \mathbf{b}_c & = & - \mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L}) \; \Delta \, t \; I_c^{-1} + \langle \omega_c \rangle \label{eq:bc}\\
267 \mathbf{b}_h & = & + \mathbf{j}_r(\mathbf{L}) \; \Delta \, t \; I_h^{-1} + \langle \omega_h \rangle \label{eq:bh}
268 \end{eqnarray}
269
270 The total energy is constrained via two quadratic formulae,
271 \begin{eqnarray}
272 K_c - J_r \; \Delta \, t & = & c^2 \, (K_c - \frac{1}{2}\langle \omega_c \rangle \cdot I_c\langle \omega_c \rangle) + \frac{1}{2} \mathbf{b}_c \cdot I_c \, \mathbf{b}_c \label{eq:Kc}\\
273 K_h + J_r \; \Delta \, t & = & h^2 \, (K_h - \frac{1}{2}\langle \omega_h \rangle \cdot I_h\langle \omega_h \rangle) + \frac{1}{2} \mathbf{b}_h \cdot I_h \, \mathbf{b}_h \label{eq:Kh}
274 \end{eqnarray}
275
276 the simultaneous
277 solution of which provide the velocity scaling coefficients $c$ and $h$. Given an
278 imposed angular momentum flux, $\mathbf{j}_{r} \left( \mathbf{L} \right)$, and/or
279 thermal flux, $J_r$, equations \ref{eq:bc} - \ref{eq:Kh} are sufficient to obtain
280 the velocity scaling ($c$ and $h$) and shearing ($\mathbf{b}_c,\,$ and $\mathbf{b}_h$) at each time interval.
281
282 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
283 % **COMPUTATIONAL DETAILS**
284 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
285 \section{Computational Details}
286
287 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
288 % SIMULATION PROTOCOL
289 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
290 \subsection{Simulation protocol}
291
292
293 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
294 % FORCE FIELD PARAMETERS
295 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
296 \subsection{Force field parameters}
297
298 We have chosen the SPC/E water model for these simulations, which is particularly useful for method validation as there are many values for physical properties from previous simulations available for direct comparison.\cite{Bedrov:2000, Kuang2010}
299
300 Gold -- gold interactions are described by the quantum Sutton-Chen (QSC) model.\cite{PhysRevB.59.3527} The QSC parameters are tuned to experimental properties such as density, cohesive energy, and elastic moduli and include zero-point quantum corrections.
301
302 Hexane molecules are described by the TraPPE united atom model,\cite{TraPPE-UA.alkanes} which provides good computational efficiency and reasonable accuracy for bulk thermal conductivity values. In this model,
303 sites are located at the carbon centers for alkyl groups. Bonding
304 interactions, including bond stretches and bends and torsions, were
305 used for intra-molecular sites closer than 3 bonds. For non-bonded
306 interactions, Lennard-Jones potentials were used. We have previously
307 utilized both united atom (UA) and all-atom (AA) force fields for
308 thermal conductivity,\cite{kuang:AuThl,Kuang2012} and since the united
309 atom force fields cannot populate the high-frequency modes that are
310 present in AA force fields, they appear to work better for modeling
311 thermal conductivity.
312
313 Gold -- hexane nonbonded interactions are governed by pairwise Lennard-Jones parameters derived from Vlugt \emph{et al}.\cite{vlugt:cpc2007154} They fitted parameters for the interaction between Au and CH$_{\emph x}$ pseudo-atoms based on the effective potential of Hautman and Klein for the Au(111) surface.\cite{hautman:4994}
314
315 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
316 % THERMAL CONDUCTIVITIES
317 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
318 \subsection{Thermal conductivities}
319
320 The thermal conductivity, $\lambda$, can be calculated using the imposed kinetic energy flux, $J_r$, and thermal gradient, $\frac{\partial T}{\partial r}$ measured from the resulting temperature profile
321
322 \begin{equation}
323 J_r = -\lambda \frac{\partial T}{\partial r}
324 \end{equation}
325
326 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
327 % INTERFACIAL THERMAL CONDUCTANCE
328 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
329 \subsection{Interfacial thermal conductance}
330
331 A thermal flux is created using VSS-RNEMD moves, and the resulting temperature
332 profiles are analyzed to yield information about the interfacial thermal
333 conductance. As the simulation progresses, the VSS moves are performed on a regular basis, and
334 the system develops a thermal or velocity gradient in response to the applied
335 flux. A definition of the interfacial conductance in terms of a temperature difference ($\Delta T$) measured at $r_0$,
336 \begin{equation}
337 G = \frac{J_r}{\Delta T_{r_0}}, \label{eq:G}
338 \end{equation}
339 is useful once the RNEMD approach has generated a
340 stable temperature gap across the interface.
341
342 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
343 % INTERFACIAL FRICTION
344 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
345 \subsection{Interfacial friction}
346
347 The slip length, $\delta$, is defined as the ratio of the interfacial friction coefficient, $\kappa$, and dynamic solvent viscosity, $\eta$
348
349 \begin{equation}
350 \delta = \frac{\eta}{\kappa}
351 \end{equation}
352
353 and is measured from a radial angular momentum profile generated from a nonperiodic VSS-RNEMD simulation.
354
355 Analytical solutions for the rotational friction coefficients for a solvated spherical body of radius $r$ under ``stick'' boundary conditions can be estimated using Stokes' law
356
357 \begin{equation}
358 \Xi = 8 \pi \eta r^3 \label{eq:Xi}.
359 \end{equation}
360
361 where $\eta$ is the dynamic viscosity of the surrounding solvent and was determined for TraPPE-UA hexane under these condition by applying a traditional VSS-RNEMD linear momentum flux to a periodic box of solvent.
362
363 For general ellipsoids with semiaxes $a$, $b$, and $c$, Perrin's extension of Stokes' law provides exact solutions for symmetric prolate $(a \geq b = c)$ and oblate $(a < b = c)$ ellipsoids. For simplicity, we define a Perrin Factor, $S$,
364
365 \begin{equation}
366 S = \frac{2}{\sqrt{a^2 - b^2}} ln \left[ \frac{a + \sqrt{a^2 - b^2}}{b} \right]. \label{eq:S}
367 \end{equation}
368
369 For a prolate ellipsoidal rod, demonstrated here, the rotational resistance tensor $\Xi$ is a $3 \times 3$ diagonal matrix with elements
370 \begin{equation}
371 \Xi^{rr}_a = \frac{32 \pi}{2} \eta \frac{ \left( a^2 - b^2 \right) b^2}{2a - b^2 S}
372 \label{eq:Xia}
373 \end{equation}
374 \begin{equation}
375 \Xi^{rr}_{b,c} = \frac{32 \pi}{2} \eta \frac{ \left( a^4 - b^4 \right)}{ \left( 2a^2 - b^2 \right)S - 2a}. \label{eq:Xibc}
376 \end{equation}
377
378 % However, the friction between hexane solvent and gold more likely falls within ``slip'' boundary conditions. Hu and Zwanzig\cite{Zwanzig} investigated the rotational friction coefficients for spheroids under slip boundary conditions and obtained numerial results for a scaling factor as a function of $\tau$, the ratio of the shorter semiaxes and the longer semiaxis of the spheroid. For the sphere and prolate ellipsoid shown here, the values of $\tau$ are $1$ and $0.3939$, respectively. According to the values tabulated by Hu and Zwanzig, the sphere friction coefficient approaches $0$, while the ellipsoidal friction coefficient must be scaled by a factor of $0.880$ to account for the reduced interfacial friction under ``slip'' boundary conditions.
379
380 Another useful quantity is the friction factor $f$, or the friction coefficient of a non-spherical shape divided by the friction coefficient of a sphere of equivalent volume. The nanoparticle and ellipsoidal nanorod dimensions used here were specifically chosen to create structures with equal volumes.
381
382 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
383 % **TESTS AND APPLICATIONS**
384 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
385 \section{Tests and Applications}
386
387 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
388 % THERMAL CONDUCTIVITIES
389 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
390 \subsection{Thermal conductivities}
391
392 Calculated values for the thermal conductivity of a 40 \AA$~$ radius gold nanoparticle (15707 atoms) at different kinetic energy flux values are shown in Table \ref{table:goldconductivity}. For these calculations, the hot and cold slabs were excluded from the linear regression of the thermal gradient. The measured linear slope $\langle dT / dr \rangle$ is linearly dependent on the applied kinetic energy flux $J_r$. Calculated thermal conductivity values compare well with previous bulk QSC values of 1.08 -- 1.26 W m$^{-1}$ K$^{-1}$\cite{Kuang2010}, though still significantly lower than the experimental value of 320 W m$^{-1}$ K$^{-1}$, as the QSC force field neglects significant electronic contributions to heat conduction. The small increase relative to previous simulated bulk values is due to a slight increase in gold density -- as expected, an increase in density results in higher thermal conductivity values. The increased density is a result of nanoparticle curvature relative to an infinite bulk slab, which introduces surface tension that increases ambient density.
393
394 \begin{longtable}{ccc}
395 \caption{Calculated thermal conductivity of a crystalline gold nanoparticle of radius 40 \AA. Calculations were performed at 300 K and ambient density. Gold-gold interactions are described by the Quantum Sutton-Chen potential.}
396 \\ \hline \hline
397 {$J_r$} & {$\langle dT / dr \rangle$} & {$\boldsymbol \lambda$}\\
398 {\small(kcal fs$^{-1}$ \AA$^{-2}$)} & {\small(K \AA$^{-1}$)} & {\small(W m$^{-1}$ K$^{-1}$)}\\ \hline
399 3.25$\times 10^{-6}$ & 0.11435 & 1.9753 \\
400 6.50$\times 10^{-6}$ & 0.2324 & 1.9438 \\
401 1.30$\times 10^{-5}$ & 0.44922 & 2.0113 \\
402 3.25$\times 10^{-5}$ & 1.1802 & 1.9139 \\
403 6.50$\times 10^{-5}$ & 2.339 & 1.9314
404 \\ \hline \hline
405 \label{table:goldconductivity}
406 \end{longtable}
407
408 Calculated values for the thermal conductivity of a cluster of 6912 SPC/E water molecules are shown in Table \ref{table:waterconductivity}.
409
410 \begin{longtable}{ccc}
411 \caption{Calculated thermal conductivity of a cluster of 6912 SPC/E water molecules. Calculations were performed at 300 K and ambient density.}
412 \\ \hline \hline
413 {$J_r$} & {$\langle dT / dr \rangle$} & {$\boldsymbol \lambda$}\\
414 {\small(kcal fs$^{-1}$ \AA$^{-2}$)} & {\small(K \AA$^{-1}$)} & {\small(W m$^{-1}$ K$^{-1}$)}\\ \hline
415 1.00$\times 10^{-5}$ & 0.38683 & 1.79665486\\
416 3.00$\times 10^{-5}$ & 1.1643 & 1.79077557\\
417 6.00$\times 10^{-5}$ & 2.2262 & 1.87314707\\
418 \hline \hline
419 \label{table:waterconductivity}
420 \end{longtable}
421
422 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
423 % INTERFACIAL THERMAL CONDUCTANCE
424 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
425 \subsection{Interfacial thermal conductance}
426
427 \begin{longtable}{ccc}
428 \caption{Caption.}
429 \\ \hline \hline
430 {Nanoparticle Radius} & $J_r$ & {G}\\
431 {\small(\AA)} & {\small(kcal fs$^{-1}$ \AA$^{-2}$)} & {\small(W m$^{-2}$ K$^{-1}$)}\\ \hline
432 20 & & 59.66 \\
433 30 & & 57.88 \\
434 40 & & 37.48 \\
435 $\infty$ & & 30.2 \\
436 \hline \hline
437 \label{table:interfacialconductance}
438 \end{longtable}
439
440 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
441 % INTERFACIAL FRICTION
442 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
443 \subsection{Interfacial friction}
444
445 Table \ref{table:interfacialfrictionstick} shows the calculated interfacial friction coefficients $\kappa$ for spherical gold nanoparticles and a prolate ellipsoidal gold nanorod in TraPPE-UA hexane. An angular momentum flux was applied between the A and B regions defined as the gold structure and hexane molecules beyond a certain radius, respectively. The resulting angular velocity gradient resulted in the gold structure rotating about the prescribed axis within the solvent.
446
447 \begin{longtable}{lccccc}
448 \caption{Calculated ``stick'' interfacial friction coefficients ($\kappa$) and friction factors ($f$) of gold nanostructures solvated in TraPPE-UA hexane at 230 K. The ellipsoid is oriented with the long axis along the $z$ direction.}
449 \\ \hline \hline
450 {Structure} & {Axis of Rotation} & {$\kappa_{VSS}$} & {$\kappa_{calc}$} & {$f_{VSS}$} & {$f_{calc}$}\\
451 {} & {} & {\small($10^{-29}$ Pa s m$^{3}$)} & {\small($10^{-29}$ Pa s m$^{3}$)} & {} & {}\\ \hline
452 {Sphere (r = 20 \AA)} & {$x = y = z$} & {} & {6.13239} & {1} & {1}\\
453 {Sphere (r = 30 \AA)} & {$x = y = z$} & {} & {20.6968} & {1} & {1}\\
454 {Sphere (r = 40 \AA)} & {$x = y = z$} & {} & {49.0591} & {1} & {1}\\
455 {Prolate Ellipsoid} & {$x = y$} & {} & {8.22846} & {} & {1.92477}\\
456 {Prolate Ellipsoid} & {$z$} & {} & {3.28634} & {} & {0.768726}\\
457 \hline \hline
458 \label{table:interfacialfrictionstick}
459 \end{longtable}
460
461 % \begin{longtable}{lccc}
462 % \caption{Calculated ``slip'' interfacial friction coefficients ($\kappa$) and friction factors ($f$) of gold nanostructures solvated in TraPPE-UA hexane. The ellipsoid is oriented with the long axis along the $z$ direction.}
463 % \\ \hline \hline
464 % {Structure} & {Axis of rotation} & {$\kappa_{VSS}$} & {$\kappa_{calc}$}\\
465 % {} & {} & {\small($10^{-29}$ Pa s m$^{3}$)} & {\small($10^{-29}$ Pa s m$^{3}$)}\\ \hline
466 % {Sphere} & {$x = y = z$} & {} & {0}\\
467 % {Prolate Ellipsoid} & {$x = y$} & {} & {0}\\
468 % {Prolate Ellipsoid} & {$z$} & {} & {7.9295392}\\ \hline \hline
469 % \label{table:interfacialfrictionslip}
470 % \end{longtable}
471
472 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
473 % **DISCUSSION**
474 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
475 \section{Discussion}
476
477
478 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
479 % **ACKNOWLEDGMENTS**
480 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
481 \section*{Acknowledgments}
482
483 We gratefully acknowledge conversations with Dr. Shenyu Kuang. Support for
484 this project was provided by the National Science Foundation under grant
485 CHE-0848243. Computational time was provided by the Center for Research
486 Computing (CRC) at the University of Notre Dame.
487
488 \newpage
489
490 \bibliography{nonperiodicVSS}
491
492 \end{doublespace}
493 \end{document}

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