화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol.111, No.18, 8271-8274, 1999
Rationalizing the effects of modified electrostatic interactions in computer simulations: The dielectric self-consistent field method
The dielectric self-consistent field method, a novel tool to study solvated systems based on continuum electrostatics, is introduced. It permits the qualitative and even semiquantitative calculation of orientational correlation functions, i.e., it gives insights into the orientational structure of a solute-solvent system. Further, modified Coulomb potentials and periodic boundary conditions can easily be integrated. One possible application is rapid, yet detailed methodological studies of the effects resulting from the various modified electrostatic interactions that are used regularly in computer simulations with explicit solvent molecules. As an example, we report the distance dependent Kirkwood g-factor and ion-dipole correlation functions of a solvated glycine zwitterion obtained with a simple cutoff, a shifted potential, two reaction field techniques, and Ewald summation. For the reaction fields and Ewald summation, conducting and adjusted dielectric boundary conditions are compared.