Algorithms for Long Range Interactions
Long Range interactions page is under construction
Long Range Interactions & the root of the problem
Formally a potential is defined to be short ranged if it decreases with distance quicker or similar than where is the dimensionality of the system. Electrostatic, gravitatory and dipolar interactions, present in many physical systems, are examples of long range interactions. When long range intgeractions are present in a system, the weight of the interactions comming from far particles is non negligible. This is due to the type of decay of the interaction with the distance: despite the particle-particle interaction decreases with the distance, the number of interactions increases in such way that the total contribution of the far particles may have a weight as large as the one due to the interaction of neighbouring particles.
The limited power of current computers makes impossible simulate macroscopic bulky systems. Small systems have a large surface vs volume ratio and therefore surface effects may govern the physics of the system. When long-range forces are present, the scenario to mimic bulky systems is even worse because we will neglect a substantial part of the long-range interaction.
Then, why we don't wait a little bit until computers become more powerful? Even if Moore´s law was able to hold on indefinitely, we would still need around two centuries to be able to tackle with systems of the size of about one cubic centimeter. Therefore, it is clear that we need to do some sort of approach in order to mimic bulky systems right now.
How to mimic bulky systems with long range interactions
The straight cut-off (sometimes including a shift) of the long-range interactions have been observed to lead to many unphysical artifacts in the simulations of bulky systems. Although
no perfect solution has been found, there exist some approaches to tackle with the problem:
- Reaction Field Methods.
- Periodic Boundary Conditions (artificial periodicity): Lattice-Sum Methods
- Hybrids of the previous two approaches, eg. LSREF (Heinz2005).
- MEMD – Maxwell Equations Molecular Dynamics (*2)
Periodic Boundary Conditions
Frequently, periodic boundary conditions are used in simulations in order to approach bulk systems within the limits of currently available computers.
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Long Range interactions page is under construction
Links
Scientists
Collaborators
- Dr. Vincent Ballenegger, CNRS, Institut UTINAM, Besancon, France
Publications
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Zuowei Wang, Christian Holm.
Estimate of the Cutoff Errors in the Ewald Summation for Dipolar Systems.
The Journal of Chemical Physics 115:6351–6359, 2001.
[PDF] (1.3 MB) [DOI] -
Jason de Joannis, Axel Arnold, Christian Holm.
Electrostatics in Periodic Slab Geometries. II.
The Journal of Chemical Physics 117:2503–2512, 2002.
[PDF] (267 KB) [Preprint] [DOI] -
Axel Arnold, Jason de Joannis, Christian Holm.
Electrostatics in Periodic Slab Geometries. I.
The Journal of Chemical Physics 117:2496–2502, 2002.
[PDF] (217 KB) [Preprint] [DOI] -
Axel Arnold, Christian Holm.
A novel method for calculating electrostatic interactions in 2D periodic slab geometries.
Chemical Physics Letters 354(3–4):324–330, 2002.
[PDF] (425 KB) [DOI] -
Axel Arnold, Christian Holm.
MMM1D: A method for calculating electrostatic interactions in one-dimensional periodic geometries.
The Journal of Chemical Physics 123(12):144103, 2005.
[PDF] (122 KB) [DOI] -
Axel Arnold, Christian Holm.
Efficient methods to compute long range interactions for soft matter systems.
In Advanced Computer Simulation Approaches for Soft Matter Sciences II, pages 59–109. Edited by C. Holm, K. Kremer. Part of Advances in Polymer Science.
Springer, Berlin, 2005. ISBN: 9783540260912.
[PDF] (1.1 MB) [DOI] -
Sandeep Tyagi, Axel Arnold, Christian Holm.
ICMMM2D: An accurate method to include planar dielectric interfaces via image charge summation.
The Journal of Chemical Physics 127(15):154723, 2007.
[PDF] (305 KB) [DOI] -
Juan J. Cerdà, Vincent Ballenegger, Olaf Lenz, Christian Holm.
P3M algorithm for dipolar interactions.
The Journal of Chemical Physics 129:234104, 2008.
[PDF] (516 KB) [Preprint] [DOI]
Useful references
[Heinz2005] Heinz et al , JCP 123, 034107, (2005)
[2] RottlerMaggs and DunwegPasichnyk,2004
Long Range interactions page is under construction