2019
DOI: 10.1063/1.5100587
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Path-integral dynamics of water using curvilinear centroids

Abstract: We develop a path-integral dynamics method for water that resembles centroid molecular dynamics (CMD), except that the centroids are averages of curvilinear, rather than cartesian, bead coordinates. The curvilinear coordinates are used explicitly only when computing the potential of mean force, the components of which are re-expressed in terms of cartesian 'quasi-centroids' (so-called because they are close to the cartesian centroids). Cartesian equations of motion are obtained by making small approximations t… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(90 citation statements)
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“…When used to compute the IR spectrum of water, CMD gives redshifts and broadening in the stretch band, [40][41][42] and RPMD gives spurious resonances; 43 TPRMD damps out these resonances, but gives artificially broadened spectral lineshapes. 30 Recently, we developed a ring-polymer method, called quasi-centroid molecular dynamics (QCMD), 44 which appears to avoid most of these errors, by making a better mean-field approximation to Matsubara dynamics than CMD, without artificially damping the dynamics as in TRPMD. The QCMD method is expensive, but not prohibitively so, and has recently yielded IR spectra for liquid water and ice described by the simple q-TIP4P/F potential energy surface.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…When used to compute the IR spectrum of water, CMD gives redshifts and broadening in the stretch band, [40][41][42] and RPMD gives spurious resonances; 43 TPRMD damps out these resonances, but gives artificially broadened spectral lineshapes. 30 Recently, we developed a ring-polymer method, called quasi-centroid molecular dynamics (QCMD), 44 which appears to avoid most of these errors, by making a better mean-field approximation to Matsubara dynamics than CMD, without artificially damping the dynamics as in TRPMD. The QCMD method is expensive, but not prohibitively so, and has recently yielded IR spectra for liquid water and ice described by the simple q-TIP4P/F potential energy surface.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The QCMD spectra for gas-phase water are close to the exact quantum results, suggesting that the QCMD condensed phase spectra are of comparable quality. 44 Given these new developments, it is timely to ask which is better at describing the dynamics of liquid water and ice (and related systems): LSC-IVR, or ring-polymer methods such as QCMD? We present here new LSC-IVR spectra, computed for liquid water at 300 K and ice at 150 K, which are compared with recently calculated CMD, TRPMD and QCMD results from ref.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Condensed phase systems can be studied [13] either by an exact treatment of the quantum dynamics of a subset of the nuclear degrees of freedom [14], or through classical dynamics on the quantum free energy surface of the nuclei [15,16]. Among the methods in the latter class, several of the most popular ones are based on the imaginary time path integral framework -such as (thermostatted) ring polymer molecular dynamics [17,18] ((T)RPMD), centroid molec- * venkat.kapil@epfl.ch ular dynamics [19,20] (CMD) and the recently developed quasi-centroid molecular dynamics [21] (QCMD). These methods ignore real time coherence but include effects arising from equilibrium quantum fluctuations and have been validated on several model systems and small molecules for which exact or highly accurate results are available [15,18,20,22].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, we test the approach on condensed-phase systems. We begin by studying the IR spectrum of hexagonal ice at 150 K and liquid water at 300 K using the q-TIP4P/f water model [40] and a linear dipole moment surface, as used in a number of prior investigations [21,41,42]. The IR spectrum Cμμ(ω) is calculated using the autocorrelation of the time derivative of the instantaneous dipole moment of the system µ(t) and is normalized to integrate to unity.…”
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confidence: 99%
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