31,870 research outputs found
A GPU-accelerated Direct-sum Boundary Integral Poisson-Boltzmann Solver
In this paper, we present a GPU-accelerated direct-sum boundary integral
method to solve the linear Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) equation. In our method, a
well-posed boundary integral formulation is used to ensure the fast convergence
of Krylov subspace based linear algebraic solver such as the GMRES. The
molecular surfaces are discretized with flat triangles and centroid
collocation. To speed up our method, we take advantage of the parallel nature
of the boundary integral formulation and parallelize the schemes within CUDA
shared memory architecture on GPU. The schemes use only
size-of-double device memory for a biomolecule with triangular surface
elements and partial charges. Numerical tests of these schemes show
well-maintained accuracy and fast convergence. The GPU implementation using one
GPU card (Nvidia Tesla M2070) achieves 120-150X speed-up to the implementation
using one CPU (Intel L5640 2.27GHz). With our approach, solving PB equations on
well-discretized molecular surfaces with up to 300,000 boundary elements will
take less than about 10 minutes, hence our approach is particularly suitable
for fast electrostatics computations on small to medium biomolecules
Exploring the Photophysical Properties of Molecular Systems Using Excited State Accelerated ab Initio Molecular Dynamics.
In the present work, we employ excited state accelerated ab initio molecular dynamics (A-AIMD) to efficiently study the excited state energy landscape and photophysical topology of a variety of molecular systems. In particular, we focus on two important challenges for the modeling of excited electronic states: (i) the identification and characterization of conical intersections and crossing seams, in order to predict different and often competing radiationless decay mechanisms, and (ii) the description of the solvent effect on the absorption and emission spectra of chemical species in solution. In particular, using as examples the Schiff bases formaldimine and salicylidenaniline, we show that A-AIMD can be readily employed to explore the conformational space around crossing seams in molecular systems with very different photochemistry. Using acetone in water as an example, we demonstrate that the enhanced configurational space sampling may be used to accurately and efficiently describe both the prominent features and line-shapes of absorption and emission spectra
Improvements to the APBS biomolecular solvation software suite
The Adaptive Poisson-Boltzmann Solver (APBS) software was developed to solve
the equations of continuum electrostatics for large biomolecular assemblages
that has provided impact in the study of a broad range of chemical, biological,
and biomedical applications. APBS addresses three key technology challenges for
understanding solvation and electrostatics in biomedical applications: accurate
and efficient models for biomolecular solvation and electrostatics, robust and
scalable software for applying those theories to biomolecular systems, and
mechanisms for sharing and analyzing biomolecular electrostatics data in the
scientific community. To address new research applications and advancing
computational capabilities, we have continually updated APBS and its suite of
accompanying software since its release in 2001. In this manuscript, we discuss
the models and capabilities that have recently been implemented within the APBS
software package including: a Poisson-Boltzmann analytical and a
semi-analytical solver, an optimized boundary element solver, a geometry-based
geometric flow solvation model, a graph theory based algorithm for determining
p values, and an improved web-based visualization tool for viewing
electrostatics
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