Incorporating Phase-Dependent Polarizability in Nonadditive Electrostatic Models for Molecular Dynamics Simulations of the Aqueous Liquid-Vapor Interface

被引:34
作者
Bauer, Brad A. [1 ]
Warren, G. Lee [1 ]
Patel, Sandeep [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Delaware, Dept Chem & Biochem, Newark, DE 19716 USA
关键词
CHARGE FORCE-FIELDS; BIOLOGICALLY RELEVANT LIGANDS; HYDROGEN-BOND DYNAMICS; SIMPLE POINT-CHARGE; FLUCTUATING CHARGE; ION SOLVATION; ELECTRONEGATIVITY EQUALIZATION; THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTIES; TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE; COMPUTER-SIMULATIONS;
D O I
10.1021/ct800320f
中图分类号
O64 [物理化学(理论化学)、化学物理学];
学科分类号
070304 ; 081704 ;
摘要
We discuss a new classical water force field that explicitly accounts for differences in polarizability between liquid and vapor phases. The TIP4P-QDP (4-point transferable intermolecular potential with charge-dependent polarizability) force field is a modification of the original TIP4P-FQ fluctuating charge water force field of Rick et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 1994, 101, 6141] that self-consistently adjusts its atomic hardness parameters via a scaling function dependent on the M-site charge. The electronegativity (X) parameters are also scaled in order to reproduce condensed-phase dipole moments of comparable magnitude to TIP4P-FQ. TIP4P-QDP is parametrized to reproduce experimental gas-phase and select condensed-phase properties. The TIP4P-QDP water model possesses a gas phase polarizability of 1.40 angstrom(3) and gas-phase dipole moment of 1.85 Debye, in excellent agreement with experiment and high-level ab initio predictions. The liquid density of TIP4P-QDP is 0.9954 (+/- 0.0002) g/cm(3) at 298 K and 1 atm, and the enthalpy of vaporization is 10.55 (+/- 0.12) kcal/mol. Other condensed-phase properties such as the isobaric heat capacity, isothermal compressibility, and diffusion constant are also calculated within reasonable accuracy of experiment and consistent with predictions of other current state-of-the-art water force fields. The average molecular dipole moment of TIP4P-QDP in the condensed phase is 2.641 (+/- 0.001) Debye, approximately 0.02 Debye higher than TIP4P-FQ and within the range of values currently surmised for the bulk liquid. The dielectric constant, epsilon = 85.8 +/- 1.0, is 10% higher than experiment. This is reasoned to be due, to the increase in the condensed phase dipole moment over TIP4P-FQ, which estimates c remarkably well. Radial distribution functions for TIP4P-QDP and TIP4P-FQ show similar features, with TIP4P-QDP showing slightly reduced peak heights and subtle shifts toward larger distance interactions. Since the greatest effects of the phase-dependent polarizability are anticipated in regions with both liquid and vapor character, interfacial simulations of TIP4P-QDP were performed and compared to TIP4P-FQ, a static polarizability analog. Despite similar features in density profiles such as the position of the GDS and interfacial width, enhanced dipole moments are observed for the TIP4P-QDP interface and onset of the vapor phase. Water orientational profiles show an increased preference (over TIP4P-FQ) in the orientation of the permanent dipole vector of the molecule within the interface; an enhanced z-induced dipole moment directly results from this preference. Hydrogen bond formation is lower, on average, in the bulk for TIP4P-QDP than TIP4P-FQ. However, the average number of hydrogen bonds formed by TIP4P-QDP in the interface exceeds that of TIP4P-FQ and observed hydrogen bond networks extend further into the gaseous region. The TIP4P-QDP interfacial potential, calculated to be -11.98 (+/- 0.08) kcal/mol, is less favorable than that for TIP4P-FQ by approximately 2% as a result of a diminished quadrupole contribution. Surface tension is calculated within a 1.3% reduction from the experimental value. Results reported demonstrate TIP4P-QDP as a model comparable to the popular TIP4P-FQ while accounting for a physical effect neglected by many other classical water models. Further refinements to this model, as well as future applications are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:359 / 373
页数:15
相关论文
共 122 条
[31]   Anisotropic, polarizable molecular mechanics studies of inter- and intramoecular interactions and ligand-macromolecule complexes. A bottom-up strategy [J].
Gresh, Nohad ;
Cisneros, G. Andres ;
Darden, Thomas A. ;
Piquemal, Jean-Philip .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION, 2007, 3 (06) :1960-1986
[32]   Ion solvation thermodynamics from simulation with a polarizable force field [J].
Grossfield, A ;
Ren, PY ;
Ponder, JW .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2003, 125 (50) :15671-15682
[33]   Polarizable force fields [J].
Halgren, TA ;
Damm, W .
CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 2001, 11 (02) :236-242
[34]   Development of an improved four-site water model for biomolecular simulations: TIP4P-Ew [J].
Horn, HW ;
Swope, WC ;
Pitera, JW ;
Madura, JD ;
Dick, TJ ;
Hura, GL ;
Head-Gordon, T .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2004, 120 (20) :9665-9678
[35]   Molecular dynamics study of gas-liquid aqueous sodium halide interfaces. I. Flexible and polarizable molecular modeling and interfacial properties [J].
Ishiyama, Tatsuya ;
Morita, Akihiro .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C, 2007, 111 (02) :721-737
[36]   Chemical potential equalization principle: Direct approach from density functional theory [J].
Itskowitz, P ;
Berkowitz, ML .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, 1997, 101 (31) :5687-5691
[37]   COMPARISON OF SIMPLE POTENTIAL FUNCTIONS FOR SIMULATING LIQUID WATER [J].
JORGENSEN, WL ;
CHANDRASEKHAR, J ;
MADURA, JD ;
IMPEY, RW ;
KLEIN, ML .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1983, 79 (02) :926-935
[38]   Development of a polarizable force field for proteins via ab initio quantum chemistry:: First generation model and gas phase tests [J].
Kaminski, GA ;
Stern, HA ;
Berne, BJ ;
Friesner, RA ;
Cao, YXX ;
Murphy, RB ;
Zhou, RH ;
Halgren, TA .
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY, 2002, 23 (16) :1515-1531
[39]   Development of an accurate and robust polarizable molecular mechanics force field from ab initio quantum chemistry [J].
Kaminski, GA ;
Stern, HA ;
Berne, BJ ;
Friesner, RA .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, 2004, 108 (04) :621-627
[40]   An interpretation of the enhancement of the water dipole moment due to the presence of other water molecules [J].
Kemp, Daniel A. ;
Gordon, Mark S. .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, 2008, 112 (22) :4885-4894