Litcius/Paper detail

Open-boundary Hamiltonian adaptive resolution. From grand canonical to non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations

Maziar Heidari, Kurt Kremer, Ramin Golestanian, Raffaello Potestio, Robinson Cortes-Huerto

2020The Journal of Chemical Physics43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We propose an open-boundary molecular dynamics method in which an atomistic system is in contact with an infinite particle reservoir at constant temperature, volume, and chemical potential. In practice, following the Hamiltonian adaptive resolution strategy, the system is partitioned into a domain of interest and a reservoir of non-interacting, ideal gas particles. An external potential, applied only in the interfacial region, balances the excess chemical potential of the system. To ensure that the size of the reservoir is infinite, we introduce a particle insertion/deletion algorithm to control the density in the ideal gas region. We show that it is possible to study non-equilibrium phenomena with this open-boundary molecular dynamics method. To this aim, we consider a prototypical confined liquid under the influence of an external constant density gradient. The resulting pressure-driven flow across the atomistic system exhibits a velocity profile consistent with the corresponding solution of the Navier-Stokes equation. This method conserves, on average, linear momentum and closely resembles experimental conditions. Moreover, it can be used to study various direct and indirect out-of-equilibrium conditions in complex molecular systems.

Topics & Concepts

Molecular dynamicsHamiltonian (control theory)PhysicsStatistical physicsMicrocanonical ensembleClassical mechanicsCanonical ensembleConstant (computer programming)Hamiltonian systemHamiltonian mechanicsDomain (mathematical analysis)Particle systemParticle numberIdeal gasMomentum (technical analysis)Particle dynamicsParticle (ecology)Flow (mathematics)Dynamics (music)Lennard-Jones potentialGrand canonical ensembleIdeal (ethics)Particle densityStatistical mechanicsIsolated systemNanopore and Nanochannel Transport StudiesBlock Copolymer Self-AssemblyGas Dynamics and Kinetic Theory