Response Theory for Static and Dynamic Solvation of Ionic and Dipolar Solutes in Water
Renjie Zhao, Richard C. Remsing, John D. Weeks

TL;DR
This paper develops a Gaussian-smoothed test charge approach to analyze the dielectric response of water to ions and dipoles, enabling accurate predictions of solvation free energies and dynamics without molecular perturbations.
Contribution
It introduces a Gaussian smoothing method for test charges and dipoles that simplifies the analysis of solvent dielectric response in atomistic models.
Findings
Gaussian charges and dipoles avoid infinite energies in simulations.
Theories accurately predict solvation free energies and dynamics.
Gaussian probes effectively measure dielectric response in water.
Abstract
The response of polar solvents to ions and polar molecules dictates many fundamental molecular processes. To understand such electrostatically-driven solvation processes, one ideally would probe the dielectric response of a solvent to an idealized point test charge or dipole solute, as envisioned in classic continuum treatments of the problem. However, this is difficult in simulations using standard atomically-detailed solvent models with embedded point charges due to possible overlap with the test charge that lead to singular interaction energies. This problem is traditionally avoided for a realistic charged solute by introducing an excluded volume core that shields its embedded point charge or dipole from the charges in the solvent. However, this core introduces additional molecular-scale perturbations of the solvent density that complicate the interpretation of solvent dielectric…
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