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Accurate method for the Brownian dynamics simulation of spherical particles with hard-body interactions

Authors :
Jay D. Schieber
Eajf Frank Peters
Theo M. A. O. M. Barenbrug
Molecular Simulations (HIMS, FNWI)
Source :
Journal of Chemical Physics, 117(20), 9202-9214. American Chemical Society, Journal of Chemical Physics, 117, 9202-9214. American Institute of Physics
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
American Institute of Physics, 2002.

Abstract

In Brownian Dynamics simulations, the diffusive motion of the particles is simulated by adding random displacements, proportional to the square root of the chosen time step. When computing average quantities, these Brownian contributions usually average out, and the overall simulation error becomes proportional to the time step. A special situation arises if the particles undergo hard-body interactions that instantaneously change their properties, as in absorption or association processes, chemical reactions, etc. The common "naive simulation method" accounts for these interactions by checking for hard-body overlaps after every time step. Due to the simplification of the diffusive motion, a substantial part of the actual hard-body interactions is not detected by this method, resulting in an overall simulation error proportional to the square root of the time step. In this paper we take the hard-body interactions during the time step interval into account, using the relative positions of the particles at the beginning and at the end of the time step, as provided by the naive method, and the analytical solution for the diffusion of a point particle around an absorbing sphere. Ottinger used a similar approach for the one-dimensional case [Stochastic Processes in Polymeric Fluids (Springer, Berlin, 1996), p. 270]. We applied the "corrected simulation method" to the case of a simple, second-order chemical reaction. The results agree with recent theoretical predictions [K. Hyojoon and Joe S. Kook, Phys. Rev. E 61, 3426 (2000)]. The obtained simulation error is proportional to the time step, instead of its square root. The new method needs substantially less simulation time to obtain the same accuracy. Finally, we briefly discuss a straightforward way to extend the method for simulations of systems with additional (deterministic) forces. (C) 2002 American Institute of Physics.

Details

ISSN :
10897690 and 00219606
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5496ecf3dc0334d17d718988569aaaf4