Water molecule bond length: Difference between revisions

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=== Newton Equations ===
=== Newton Equations ===
<math>F = ma</math> where <math>F = - \nabla V</math>. The system is 1D, thus gradient will be differential, and <math>F= - \frac{d V}{dx}</math>.
The mass <math>m</math> should be the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduced_mass reduced mass] of the oxygen--hydrogen system, but we use mass <math>m=1</math> here.
=== Potential Function ===
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lennard-Jones_potential Lennard--Jones potential] with dimensionless parameters for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_model TIPS] model:
<math>
V(x) = 4 \left[ \left( \frac1x\right)^{12} - \left( \frac1 x\right)^6 \right]
</math>
where the distance <math>x</math> is given in Ångstroms.


=== Integration ===
=== Integration ===


=== Potential Function ===
The finite differences (Euler method) are
 
<math>
\begin{align}
v(t) &= \frac{x(t+\Delta t) - x(t)}{\Delta t} \\
a(t) &= \frac{v(t+\Delta t) - v(t)}{\Delta t}
\end{align}
</math>
and
 
<math>
a(t) = -\frac{\frac{d}{dx}(V(x(t)))}{m}
</math>
 
 
 
=== Velocity Verlet Algorithm ===
 
A very good and easy to implement integration method is velocity Verlet:


[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lennard-Jones_potential Lennard--Jones potential] with parameters for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_model TIPS] model:
<math>
<math>
A = 580.0 \times 10^3 kcal \A ^{12}/mol
\begin{align}
B = 525.0 kcal A^6/mol
x(t + \Delta t) &= x(t) + v(t) \Delta t + \frac12 a \Delta t^2 \\
v(t + \Delta t) &= v(t) + \frac12\left( a(t) + a(t+\Delta t) \right) \Delta t
\end{align}
</math>
</math>
where <math>A</math> is Ångströms.
 
where <math>a(t) = a(x(t)) = - \frac1m \frac{d}{dx}V(x(t))</math> is given at Section . . .


=== Temperature/  Initial distribution ===
=== Temperature/  Initial distribution ===
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\exp\left[- \frac12 \frac{mv^2}{k_B T} \right]
\exp\left[- \frac12 \frac{mv^2}{k_B T} \right]
</math>
</math>
The mean speed (for 3d?) is
<math>
v_\text{mean} = \sqrt{\frac{8k_B T}{\pi m}}
</math>
where <math>k_B</math> is Boltzmann constant, here <math>k_B = 1</math>.


== Results ==
== Results ==
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1D statement
1D statement
== References ==
D.T.W. Lin and C.-K. Chen: A molecular dynamics simulation of TIP4P and Lennard-Jones water in nanochannel, acta Mechanica 173, 181.194 (2004).

Latest revision as of 23:12, 12 October 2020

Introduction

Classical Mechanics

Newton Equations

where . The system is 1D, thus gradient will be differential, and .

The mass should be the reduced mass of the oxygen--hydrogen system, but we use mass here.

Potential Function

Lennard--Jones potential with dimensionless parameters for TIPS model:

where the distance is given in Ångstroms.

Integration

The finite differences (Euler method) are

and


Velocity Verlet Algorithm

A very good and easy to implement integration method is velocity Verlet:

where is given at Section . . .

Temperature/ Initial distribution

The initial velocity of the hydrogen atom is chosen randomly from the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution at given temperature

The mean speed (for 3d?) is

where is Boltzmann constant, here .

Results

Issues

1D statement


References

D.T.W. Lin and C.-K. Chen: A molecular dynamics simulation of TIP4P and Lennard-Jones water in nanochannel, acta Mechanica 173, 181.194 (2004).