Minimal Experimental Bias on the Hydrogen Bond Greatly Improves Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Water.
Paul B CalioGlen M HockyGregory A VothPublished in: Journal of chemical theory and computation (2020)
Experiment directed simulation (EDS) is a method within a class of techniques seeking to improve molecular simulations by minimally biasing the system Hamiltonian to reproduce certain experimental observables. In a previous application of EDS to ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulation based on electronic density functional theory (DFT), the AIMD simulations of water were biased to reproduce its experimentally derived solvation structure. In particular, by solely biasing the O-O pair correlation function, other structural and dynamical properties that were not biased were improved. In this work, the hypothesis is tested that directly biasing the O-H pair correlation (and hence the H-O···H hydrogen bonding) will provide an even better improvement of DFT-based water properties in AIMD simulations. The logic behind this hypothesis is that for most electronic DFT descriptions of water the hydrogen bonding is known to be deficient due to anomalous charge transfer and over polarization in the DFT. Using recent advances to the EDS learning algorithm, we thus train a minimal bias on AIMD water that reproduces the O-H radial distribution function derived from the highly accurate MB-pol model of water. It is then confirmed that biasing the O-H pair correlation alone can lead to improved AIMD water properties, with structural and dynamical properties even closer to experiment than the previous EDS-AIMD model.