Author
Roger Impey
Bio: Roger Impey is an academic researcher from National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grid & Cloud computing. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 53 publications receiving 31150 citations.
Topics: Grid, Cloud computing, Grid computing, Mobile agent, Pager
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the Bernal Fowler (BF), SPC, ST2, TIPS2, TIP3P, and TIP4P potential functions for liquid water in the NPT ensemble at 25°C and 1 atm.
Abstract: Classical Monte Carlo simulations have been carried out for liquid water in the NPT ensemble at 25 °C and 1 atm using six of the simpler intermolecular potential functions for the water dimer: Bernal–Fowler (BF), SPC, ST2, TIPS2, TIP3P, and TIP4P. Comparisons are made with experimental thermodynamic and structural data including the recent neutron diffraction results of Thiessen and Narten. The computed densities and potential energies are in reasonable accord with experiment except for the original BF model, which yields an 18% overestimate of the density and poor structural results. The TIPS2 and TIP4P potentials yield oxygen–oxygen partial structure functions in good agreement with the neutron diffraction results. The accord with the experimental OH and HH partial structure functions is poorer; however, the computed results for these functions are similar for all the potential functions. Consequently, the discrepancy may be due to the correction terms needed in processing the neutron data or to an effect uniformly neglected in the computations. Comparisons are also made for self‐diffusion coefficients obtained from molecular dynamics simulations. Overall, the SPC, ST2, TIPS2, and TIP4P models give reasonable structural and thermodynamic descriptions of liquid water and they should be useful in simulations of aqueous solutions. The simplicity of the SPC, TIPS2, and TIP4P functions is also attractive from a computational standpoint.
33,683 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a molecular model for studying the prototypical ferric-ferrous electron transfer process in liquid water is presented, and the validity of the tight binding model is examined.
Abstract: We present a molecular model for studying the prototypical ferric–ferrous electron transfer process in liquid water, and we discuss its structural implications. Treatment of the nonequilibrium dynamics will be the subject of future work. The elementary constituents in the model are classical water molecules, classical ferric ions (i.e., Fe3+ particles), and a quantal electron. Pair potentials and pseudopotentials describing the interactions between these constituents are presented. These interactions lead to ligand structures of the ferric and ferrous ions that are in good agreement with those observed in nature. The validity of the tight binding model is examined. With umbrella sampling, we have computed the diabatic free energy of activation for electron transfer. The number obtained, roughly 20 kcal/mol, is in reasonable accord with the aqueous ferric–ferrous transfer activation energy of about 15 to 20 kcal/mol estimated from experiment. The Marcus relation for intersecting parabolic diabatic free ene...
433 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the potential energy function of molecular dynamics has been used to study the dynamical properties of liquid water at several state points, including self diffusion coefficient, N.M.R relaxation times, infrared and Raman spectra, and functions relevant to coherent and incoherent inelastic neutron scattering and to dielectric relaxation.
Abstract: Computer simulation by the method of molecular dynamics has been used to study the dynamical properties of liquid water at several state points. The interactions between molecules were represented by the potential energy function of Matsuoka, Clementi and Yoshimine. The main effort has been directed at extracting from the simulations results of significance for the interpretation of measurements of spectroscopic and transport properties of real water, including isotope effects. Results are reported for the self diffusion coefficient, N.M.R. relaxation times, infrared and Raman spectra, and functions relevant to coherent and incoherent inelastic neutron scattering and to dielectric relaxation. A basis is provided for the explanation of a number of experimental observations.
256 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the far infrared absorption coefficient and R (ω) representation of the Raman spectrum were calculated for the interaction-induced dipole and polarizability of water by computer simulation, using the MCY potential.
143 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the effect of changes in temperature and density on the structure of water has been studied by molecular dynamics using the analytical potential of Matsuoka, Clementi, and Yoshimine.
Abstract: The effect of changes in temperature and density on the structure of water has been studied by molecular dynamics using the analytical potential of Matsuoka, Clementi, and Yoshimine. Significant structural changes are found to occur, particularly at high density. Implications for the interpretation of neutron scattering experiments are discussed.
102 citations
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that arbitrary accuracy can be achieved, independent of system size N, at a cost that scales as N log(N), which is comparable to that of a simple truncation method of 10 A or less.
Abstract: The previously developed particle mesh Ewald method is reformulated in terms of efficient B‐spline interpolation of the structure factors This reformulation allows a natural extension of the method to potentials of the form 1/rp with p≥1 Furthermore, efficient calculation of the virial tensor follows Use of B‐splines in place of Lagrange interpolation leads to analytic gradients as well as a significant improvement in the accuracy We demonstrate that arbitrary accuracy can be achieved, independent of system size N, at a cost that scales as N log(N) For biomolecular systems with many thousands of atoms this method permits the use of Ewald summation at a computational cost comparable to that of a simple truncation method of 10 A or less
17,897 citations
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TL;DR: A new implementation of the molecular simulation toolkit GROMACS is presented which now both achieves extremely high performance on single processors from algorithmic optimizations and hand-coded routines and simultaneously scales very well on parallel machines.
Abstract: Molecular simulation is an extremely useful, but computationally very expensive tool for studies of chemical and biomolecular systems Here, we present a new implementation of our molecular simulation toolkit GROMACS which now both achieves extremely high performance on single processors from algorithmic optimizations and hand-coded routines and simultaneously scales very well on parallel machines The code encompasses a minimal-communication domain decomposition algorithm, full dynamic load balancing, a state-of-the-art parallel constraint solver, and efficient virtual site algorithms that allow removal of hydrogen atom degrees of freedom to enable integration time steps up to 5 fs for atomistic simulations also in parallel To improve the scaling properties of the common particle mesh Ewald electrostatics algorithms, we have in addition used a Multiple-Program, Multiple-Data approach, with separate node domains responsible for direct and reciprocal space interactions Not only does this combination of a
14,032 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the canonical distribution in both momentum and coordinate space with three recently proposed constant temperature molecular dynamics methods by: (i) Nose (Mol. Phys., to be published); (ii) Hoover et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 63 (1983); and (iii) Haile and Gupta [J. Chem. Phys. 79, 3067 (1983).
Abstract: Three recently proposed constant temperature molecular dynamics methods by: (i) Nose (Mol. Phys., to be published); (ii) Hoover et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 48, 1818 (1982)], and Evans and Morriss [Chem. Phys. 77, 63 (1983)]; and (iii) Haile and Gupta [J. Chem. Phys. 79, 3067 (1983)] are examined analytically via calculating the equilibrium distribution functions and comparing them with that of the canonical ensemble. Except for effects due to momentum and angular momentum conservation, method (1) yields the rigorous canonical distribution in both momentum and coordinate space. Method (2) can be made rigorous in coordinate space, and can be derived from method (1) by imposing a specific constraint. Method (3) is not rigorous and gives a deviation of order N−1/2 from the canonical distribution (N the number of particles). The results for the constant temperature–constant pressure ensemble are similar to the canonical ensemble case.
13,921 citations
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TL;DR: The results demonstrate that use of ab initio structural and energetic data by themselves are not sufficient to obtain an adequate backbone representation for peptides and proteins in solution and in crystals.
Abstract: New protein parameters are reported for the all-atom empirical energy function in the CHARMM program. The parameter evaluation was based on a self-consistent approach designed to achieve a balance between the internal (bonding) and interaction (nonbonding) terms of the force field and among the solvent−solvent, solvent−solute, and solute−solute interactions. Optimization of the internal parameters used experimental gas-phase geometries, vibrational spectra, and torsional energy surfaces supplemented with ab initio results. The peptide backbone bonding parameters were optimized with respect to data for N-methylacetamide and the alanine dipeptide. The interaction parameters, particularly the atomic charges, were determined by fitting ab initio interaction energies and geometries of complexes between water and model compounds that represented the backbone and the various side chains. In addition, dipole moments, experimental heats and free energies of vaporization, solvation and sublimation, molecular volume...
13,164 citations
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TL;DR: The software suite GROMACS (Groningen MAchine for Chemical Simulation) that was developed at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, in the early 1990s is described, which is a very fast program for molecular dynamics simulation.
Abstract: This article describes the software suite GROMACS (Groningen MAchine for Chemical Simulation) that was developed at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, in the early 1990s. The software, written in ANSI C, originates from a parallel hardware project, and is well suited for parallelization on processor clusters. By careful optimization of neighbor searching and of inner loop performance, GROMACS is a very fast program for molecular dynamics simulation. It does not have a force field of its own, but is compatible with GROMOS, OPLS, AMBER, and ENCAD force fields. In addition, it can handle polarizable shell models and flexible constraints. The program is versatile, as force routines can be added by the user, tabulated functions can be specified, and analyses can be easily customized. Nonequilibrium dynamics and free energy determinations are incorporated. Interfaces with popular quantum-chemical packages (MOPAC, GAMES-UK, GAUSSIAN) are provided to perform mixed MM/QM simulations. The package includes about 100 utility and analysis programs. GROMACS is in the public domain and distributed (with source code and documentation) under the GNU General Public License. It is maintained by a group of developers from the Universities of Groningen, Uppsala, and Stockholm, and the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz. Its Web site is http://www.gromacs.org.
13,116 citations