First-principles molecular dynamics simulations at solid-liquid interfaces with a continuum solvent
Veronica M. Sanchez, Mariela Sued, Damian A. Scherlis

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel continuum solvent model integrated with DFT for molecular dynamics at solid-liquid interfaces, enabling efficient and accurate simulations of interfacial phenomena.
Contribution
It develops a new continuum solvent approach compatible with plane-wave DFT and periodic boundary conditions for solid-liquid interface simulations.
Findings
Achieved good convergence in MD simulations with the new model.
Enhanced computational efficiency by partitioning the simulation box.
Successfully simulated acid-base equilibrium at TiO2-water interface.
Abstract
Continuum solvent models have become a standard technique in the context of electronic structure calculations, yet, no implementations have been reported capable to perform molecular dynamics at solid-liquid interfaces. We propose here such a continuum approach in a DFT framework, using plane-waves basis sets and periodic boundary conditions. Our work stems from a recent model designed for Car-Parrinello simulations of quantum solutes in a dielectric medium [J. Chem. Phys. 124, 74103 (2006)], for which the permittivity of the solvent is defined as a function of the electronic density of the solute. This strategy turns out to be inadequate for systems extended in two dimensions, by introducing new term in the Kohn-Sham potential which becomes unphysically large at the interfacial region, seriously affecting the convergence. If the dielectric medium is properly redefined as a function of…
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