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Blue moon ensemble

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Revision as of 12:05, 16 October 2024 by Karsai (talk | contribs) (Removed redirect to Blue-moon ensemble)

In general, constrained molecular dynamics generates biased statistical averages. The blue-moon ensemble average, also known as constrained-reaction-coordinate-dynamic (CRCD) ensemble, connects constained and unconstrained molecular dynamics. It shows that the correct average for a quantity a(ξ) can be obtained using the formula:

a(ξ)=|𝐙|1/2a(ξ*)ξ*|𝐙|1/2ξ*,

where ξ is the reaction coordinate, ξ* restrains the reference coordinate, e.g. to a transition state, where the associate velocity is ξ*˙=0, the ...ξ* stands for the statistical average of the quantity enclosed in angle brackets computed for a constrained ensemble, and Z is a mass metric tensor defined as:

Zα,β=i=13Nmi1iξαiξβ,α=1,...,r,β=1,...,r,

It can be shown that the free energy gradient can be computed using the equation:[1][2][3][4]

(Aξk)ξ*=1|Z|1/2ξ*|Z|1/2[λk+kBT2|Z|j=1r(Z1)kji=13Nmi1iξji|Z|]ξ*,

where A is the free energy, kB is the Boltzmann constant, T is the temperature, and λξk is the Lagrange multiplier associated with the parameter ξk used in the SHAKE algorithm.[5]

The free-energy difference between states (1) and (2) can be computed by integrating the free-energy gradients over a connecting path, e.g. using the Simpson method[6]:

ΔA12=ξ(1)ξ(2)(Aξ)ξ*dξ.

Note that as the free energy is a state quantity, the choice of path connecting (1) with (2) is irrelevant. As an example, when calculating the transition state, if (1) were set to the reactant and (2) to the transition state, then ΔA12 would be the activation free energy for the reaction.

References

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