scholarly journals Many-body reactive force field development for carbon condensation in C/O systems under extreme conditions

2020 ◽  
Vol 153 (5) ◽  
pp. 054103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca K. Lindsey ◽  
Nir Goldman ◽  
Laurence E. Fried ◽  
Sorin Bastea
2015 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 2943-2949 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. C. Saha ◽  
A. Iskandarov ◽  
K. Nakao ◽  
T. Ishimoto ◽  
Y. Umeno ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas P Senftle ◽  
Sungwook Hong ◽  
Md Mahbubul Islam ◽  
Sudhir B Kylasa ◽  
Yuanxia Zheng ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (23) ◽  
pp. 15838-15847 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amar Deep Pathak ◽  
Silvia Nedea ◽  
Adri C. T. van Duin ◽  
Herbert Zondag ◽  
Camilo Rindt ◽  
...  

We present the development of the ReaxFF of MgCl2 hydrates and its application for seasonal heat storage. This study, indicate the validity of the ReaxFF approach for studying MgCl2 hydrates and provide important atomistic-scale insight of reaction kinetics and H2O transport.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clément Dulong ◽  
Bruno Madebène ◽  
Susanna Monti ◽  
Johannes Richardi

<div><div><div><p>A new reactive force field based on the ReaxFF formalism is effectively parametrized against an extended training set of quantum chemistry data (containing more than 120 different structures) to describe accurately silver- and silver-thiolate systems. The results obtained with this novel representation demonstrate that the novel ReaxFF paradigm is a powerful methodology to reproduce more appropriately average geometric and energetic properties of metal clusters and slabs when compared to the earlier ReaxFF parametrizations dealing with silver and gold. ReaxFF cannot describe adequately specific geometrical features such as the observed shorter distances between the under-coordinated atoms at the cluster edges. Geometric and energetic properties of thiolates adsorbed on a silver Ag20 pyramid are correctly represented by the new ReaxFF and compared with results for gold. The simulation of self-assembled monolayers of thiolates on a silver (111) surface does not indicate the formation of staples in contrast to the results for gold-thiolate systems.</p></div></div></div>


Author(s):  
Yudong Qiu ◽  
Daniel Smith ◽  
Chaya Stern ◽  
mudong feng ◽  
Lee-Ping Wang

<div>The parameterization of torsional / dihedral angle potential energy terms is a crucial part of developing molecular mechanics force fields.</div><div>Quantum mechanical (QM) methods are often used to provide samples of the potential energy surface (PES) for fitting the empirical parameters in these force field terms.</div><div>To ensure that the sampled molecular configurations are thermodynamically feasible, constrained QM geometry optimizations are typically carried out, which relax the orthogonal degrees of freedom while fixing the target torsion angle(s) on a grid of values.</div><div>However, the quality of results and computational cost are affected by various factors on a non-trivial PES, such as dependence on the chosen scan direction and the lack of efficient approaches to integrate results started from multiple initial guesses.</div><div>In this paper we propose a systematic and versatile workflow called \textit{TorsionDrive} to generate energy-minimized structures on a grid of torsion constraints by means of a recursive wavefront propagation algorithm, which resolves the deficiencies of conventional scanning approaches and generates higher quality QM data for force field development.</div><div>The capabilities of our method are presented for multi-dimensional scans and multiple initial guess structures, and an integration with the MolSSI QCArchive distributed computing ecosystem is described.</div><div>The method is implemented in an open-source software package that is compatible with many QM software packages and energy minimization codes.</div>


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