Crystal lattice properties fully determine short-range interaction parameters for alkali and halide ions
Albert H. Mao, Rohit V. Pappu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a solvent-independent method for calibrating ion parameters based solely on crystal lattice properties, improving transferability and computational efficiency for simulations of alkali and halide ions.
Contribution
The authors develop a lattice-based calibration approach that avoids water model dependencies, enabling accurate and transferable ion parameters for various force fields.
Findings
Lattice-derived parameters accurately reproduce crystal lattice properties.
Parameters successfully predict hydration free energies in agreement with experiments.
Method is computationally efficient and applicable to multiple ion models.
Abstract
Accurate models of alkali and halide ions in aqueous solution are necessary for computer simulations of a broad variety of systems. Previous efforts to develop ion force fields have generally focused on reproducing experimental measurements of aqueous solution properties such as hydration free energies and ion-water distribution functions. This dependency limits transferability of the resulting parameters because of the variety and known limitations of water models. We present a solvent-independent approach to calibrating ion parameters based exclusively on crystal lattice properties. Our procedure relies on minimization of lattice sums to calculate lattice energies and interionic distances instead of equilibrium ensemble simulations of dense fluids. The gain in computational efficiency enables simultaneous optimization of all parameters for Li+, Na+, K+, Rb+, Cs+, F-, Cl-, Br-, and I-…
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