Quantifying Artifacts in Ewald Simulations of Inhomogeneous Systems with a Net Charge

2014 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to:Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Quantifying Artifacts in Ewald Simulations of Inhomogeneous Systems with a Net Charge​
Hub, J. S. ; Groot, B. L. de ; Grubmüller, H.   & Groenhof, G. ​ (2014) 
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation10(1) pp. 381​-390​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/ct400626b 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Hub, Jochen S. ; Groot, Bert L. de ; Grubmüller, Helmut ; Groenhof, Gerrit 
Abstract
Ewald summation, which has become the de facto standard for computing electrostatic interactions in biomolecular simulations, formally requires that the simulation box is neutral. For non-neutral systems, the Ewald algorithm implicitly introduces a uniform background charge distribution that effectively neutralizes the simulation box. Because a uniform distribution of counter charges typically deviates from the spatial distribution of counterions in real systems, artifacts may arise, in particular in systems with an inhomogeneous dielectric constant. Here, we derive an analytical expression for the effect of using an implicit background charge instead of explicit counterions, on the chemical potential of ions in heterogeneous systems, which (i) provides a quantitative criterium for deciding if the background charge offers an acceptable trade-off between artifacts arising from sampling problems and artifacts arising from the homogeneous background charge distribution, and (ii) can be used to correct this artifact in certain cases. Our model quantifies the artifact in terms of the difference in charge density between the non-neutral system with a uniform neutralizing background charge and the real neutral system with a physically correct distribution of explicit counterions. We show that for inhomogeneous systems, such as proteins and membranes in water, the artifact manifests itself by an overstabilization of ions inside the lower dielectric by tens to even hundreds kilojoules per mole. We have tested the accuracy of our model in molecular dynamics simulations and found that the error in the calculated free energy for moving a test charge from water into hexadecane, at different net charges of the system and different simulation box sizes, is correctly predicted by the model. The calculations further confirm that the incorrect distribution of counter charges in the simulation box is solely responsible for the errors in the PMFs.
Issue Date
2014
Journal
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation 
ISSN
1549-9618
eISSN
1549-9626
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media