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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 98, 2000 - Issue 12
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Original Articles

Free energy from molecular dynamics with multiple constraints

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Pages 773-781 | Received 14 Oct 1999, Accepted 21 Jan 2000, Published online: 01 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

In molecular dynamics simulations of reacting systems, the key step to determining the equilibrium constant and the reaction rate is the calculation of the free energy as a function of the reaction coordinate. Intuitively the derivative of the free energy is equal to the average force needed to constrain the reaction coordinate to a constant value, but the metric tensor effect of the constraint on the sampled phase space distribution complicates this relation. The appropriately corrected expression for the potential of mean constraint force method (PMCF) for systems in which only the reaction coordinate is constrained was published recently. Here we will consider the general case of a system with multiple constraints. This situation arises when both the reaction coordinate and the ‘hard’ coordinates are constrained, and also in systems with several reaction coordinates. The obvious advantage of this method over the established thermodynamic integration and free energy perturbation methods is that it avoids the cumbersome introduction of a full set of generalized coordinates complementing the constrained coordinates. Simulations of n-butane and n-pentane in vacuum illustrate the method.

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