Polarization and charge transfer in classical molecular dynamics

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Slides for the UIUC biophysics symposium (Fall 2007).

Transcript of Polarization and charge transfer in classical molecular dynamics

Polarization and charge transfer in classical molecular dynamics

Jiahao ChenMartínez Group

Chemistry, MRL and Beckman, UIUC

Methods of computational chemistry

less variablesmore variables

H! = i!

H! = E!

directnumericalquadrature

ab initiotheories

semiempiricalmethods

density functional

theory

coarse-grained models

continuumelectrostatics

molecular models (MM)

classicalmoleculardynamics

finite element methods

coarse-grained

dynamics

numerical quadrature, e.g. real-time path

integral propagatorsab initio molecular dynamics

What is the charge distribution?

What does the system do?

Molecular models/force fields

covalent bond effectsE =

+

Typical energy function

noncovalent interactions

Molecular models/force fields

bond stretch angle torsion dihedrals

electrostatics dispersion

E = !

a!angles

!a("a ! "eq,a)2!

b!bonds

kb(rb ! req,b)2

!

i<j!atoms

qiqj

rij

!

d!dihedrals

!

n

lnd cos (n!)

+ -

++

+ +

Typical energy function

!

i<j!atoms

!ij

"#"ij

rij

$12

!#

"ij

rij

$6%

Unique to condensed phases, where most

chemistry and biology happens

Why care about polarization and charge transfer?

Polarization in chemistry• Effect of local environment in liquid phases

• Ex. 1: Stabilizes carbonium in lysozyme

• Ex. 2: Hydrates chloride in water clusters

OPLS/AAnon-polarizable

force field

TIP4P/FQpolarizableforce field

1. A Warshel and M Levitt J. Mol. Biol. 103 (1976), 227-249. 2. SJ Stuart and BJ Berne J. Phys. Chem. 100 (1996), 11934 -11943.

3 models for polarization

Review: H Yu and WF van Gunsteren Comput. Phys. Commun. 172 (2005), 69-85.

Drude oscillatorsor charge-on-spring

or shell modelsQ

q !Q

kR

Response = change in RReview: H Yu and WF van Gunsteren Comput. Phys. Commun. 172 (2005), 69-85.

Ideal spring

Inducible dipoles

!1 !2

µinduced,1 µinduced,2

Response = change in induced dipoles

Review: H Yu and WF van Gunsteren Comput. Phys. Commun. 172 (2005), 69-85.

Fluctuating charges

charge transfer = 0.5 charge transfer = 0.2 e

charge transfer = 0.9 e

-1.1

-0.3

+1.4

Response = change in atomic charges

!1, "1

!2, "2

!3, "3

Review: H Yu and WF van Gunsteren Comput. Phys. Commun. 172 (2005), 69-85.

Better Electrostatics

!

i<j!atoms

qiqj

rij

ModelPolari-zation

Charge transfer

Cost

Pairwise fixed charges

Drude oscillator

Inducible dipoles

Fluctuating charges

✓ ❙ ❙

✓ ❙ ❙ ❙ ❙ ❙ ❙

✓ ✓ ❙ ❙ ❙

QEq, a fluctuating-charge model

AK Rappé and WA Goddard III J. Phys. Chem. 95 (1991), 3358-3363.

atomicelectronegativities

“voltages”

screenedCoulomb

interactions

E =!

i

qi!i +!

i<j

qiqjJij

Jij =!

R3!2

!2i (r1)!2

j (r2)|r1 ! r2| dr1dr2

!i(r) = Ni|r !Ri|ni!1e!!i|r!Ri|

QEq has wrong asymptotics

q =!1 ! !2

J11 + J22 ! J12

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0

R/Å

q/e

QEq

ab initio

Na ClR

asymptote ~ 0.43 ≠ 0

QTPIE: our new model

J Chen and T J Martínez, Chem. Phys. Lett. 438 (2007), 315-320.

replace atomic electronegativities with

distance-dependent pairwise electronegativities

or “potential differences”

E =!

i

qi!i +!

i<j

qiqjJij

!

i<j

pji!ikijSij

Sij =!

R3!i(r)!j(r)dr

!i(r) = Ni|r !Ri|ni!1e!!i|r!Ri|

overlap integral

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0

R/Å

q/e

QEq

QTPIE

ab initio

QTPIE has correct limit

q =(!1 ! !2)S12

J11 + J22 ! J12

q =!1 ! !2

J11 + J22 ! J12

Na ClR

Execution times

J Chen and T J Martínez, in preparation.

0.01

0.1

1

10

100

1000

104

10 100 1000 104 105

TImes to solve the QTPIE model

Bond-space SVDBond-space COFAtom-space iterative solverAtom-space direct solver

Sol

utio

n tim

e (s

)

Number of atoms

N1.81N6.20

N

Cooperative polarization in water

• Dipole moment of water increases from 1.854 Debye1 in gas phase to 2.95±0.20 Debye2 at r.t.p. (liquid phase)

• Polarization enhances dipole moments

• Missing in models with implicit or no polarization

!"+

1. D R Lide, CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 73rd ed., 1992.2. AV Gubskaya and PG Kusalik J. Chem. Phys. 117 (2002) 5290-5302.

Polarization in water chains• Use parameters from single water molecule

to model chains of waters

• Compare QEq and QTPIE with:

๏ Gas phase experimental data1

๏ Ab initio DF-LMP2/aug-cc-pVDZ

๏ AMOEBA2, an inducible dipole model

๏ TIP3P, a common implicit polarization model

1. WF Murphy J. Chem. Phys. 67 (1977), 5877-5882.2. P Ren and JW Ponder J. Phys. Chem. B 107 (2003), 5933-5947.

H! = E!

Dipole moment per water

1.8

1.9

2.0

2.1

2.2

2.3

2.4

2.5

2.6

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40

Number of water molecules, N

( /N)/Debye

TIP3P

AMOEBA

DF-LMP2/aug-cc-pVDZ

TIP3P/QTPIE

TIP3P/QEq

gas phase (experimental)

Charge transfer in 15 waters

-0.03

-0.02

-0.01

0

0.01

0.02

0.03

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15

Charges per molecule in chain of 15 water molecules

QTPIEQEqMulliken/DF-LMP2/aug-cc-pVDZ

Cha

rge

on N

th m

olec

ule

Molecule No. N

Summary

• Polarization and charge transfer are important effects usually neglected in classical MD

• Our new charge model corrects deficiencies in existing fluctuating-charge model at similar computational cost

• We obtain quantitative polarization and qualitative charge transfer trends in linear water chains

Acknowledgments

Prof. Todd J. MartínezMartínez Group and friends

$: DOE