468 research outputs found
ASCR/HEP Exascale Requirements Review Report
This draft report summarizes and details the findings, results, and
recommendations derived from the ASCR/HEP Exascale Requirements Review meeting
held in June, 2015. The main conclusions are as follows. 1) Larger, more
capable computing and data facilities are needed to support HEP science goals
in all three frontiers: Energy, Intensity, and Cosmic. The expected scale of
the demand at the 2025 timescale is at least two orders of magnitude -- and in
some cases greater -- than that available currently. 2) The growth rate of data
produced by simulations is overwhelming the current ability, of both facilities
and researchers, to store and analyze it. Additional resources and new
techniques for data analysis are urgently needed. 3) Data rates and volumes
from HEP experimental facilities are also straining the ability to store and
analyze large and complex data volumes. Appropriately configured
leadership-class facilities can play a transformational role in enabling
scientific discovery from these datasets. 4) A close integration of HPC
simulation and data analysis will aid greatly in interpreting results from HEP
experiments. Such an integration will minimize data movement and facilitate
interdependent workflows. 5) Long-range planning between HEP and ASCR will be
required to meet HEP's research needs. To best use ASCR HPC resources the
experimental HEP program needs a) an established long-term plan for access to
ASCR computational and data resources, b) an ability to map workflows onto HPC
resources, c) the ability for ASCR facilities to accommodate workflows run by
collaborations that can have thousands of individual members, d) to transition
codes to the next-generation HPC platforms that will be available at ASCR
facilities, e) to build up and train a workforce capable of developing and
using simulations and analysis to support HEP scientific research on
next-generation systems.Comment: 77 pages, 13 Figures; draft report, subject to further revisio
Free energy of hydrophobic hydration:A molecular dynamics study of noble gases in water
The potential utility and limitations of two methods to determine free energy differences from molecular dynamics simulations (MD) are studied. The computation of the free energy of hydration of the inert gases serves as a simple but illustrative example. Good results are obtained for the inert gases from a perturbation treatment, using a reference ensemble obtained from a MD simulation of a cavity in water, if these atoms are comparable in size to the cavity and the calculated free energy differences are small. This limits the applicability of the perturbation treatment of a small number of cases. Larger free energy differences can be obtained with reasonable accuracy from MD simulations with continuously changing interaction parameters. This integration method is more generally applicable, but makes an additional simulation necessary
A Nonorthogonal Configuration Interaction Approach to Singlet Fission in Perylenediimide Compounds
Perylenediimide molecules constitute a family of chromophores that undergo singlet fission, a process in which an excited singlet state converts into lower energy triplets on two neighboring molecules, potentially increasing the efficiency of organic solar cells. Here, the nonorthogonal configuration interaction method is applied to study the effect of the different crystal packing of various perylenediimide derivatives on the relative energies of the singlet and triplet states, the intermolecular electronic couplings, and the relative rates for singlet fission. The analysis of the wave functions and electronic couplings reveals that charge transfer states play an important role in the singlet fission mechanism. Dimer conformations where the PDI molecules are at large displacements along the long axis and short on the short axis are posed as the most favorable for singlet fission. The role of the substituent at the imide group has been inspected concluding that, although it has no effect in the energies, for some conformations it significantly influences the electronic couplings, and therefore, replacing this substituent with hydrogen may introduce artifacts in the computational modeling of the PDI molecules.</p
Effect of the integration method on the accuracy and computational efficiency of free energy calculations using thermodynamic integration
Although calculations of free energy using molecular dynamics simulations have gained significant importance in the chemical and biochemical fields, they still remain quite computationally intensive. Furthermore, when using thermodynamic integration, numerical evaluation of the integral of the Hamiltonian with respect to the coupling parameter may introduce unwanted errors in the free energy. In this paper, we compare the performance of two numerical integration techniques-the trapezoidal and Simpson's rules and propose a new method, based on the analytic integration of physically based fitting functions that are able to accurately describe the behavior of the data. We develop and test our methodology by performing detailed studies on two prototype systems, hydrated methane and hydrated methanol, and treat Lennard-Jones and electrostatic contributions separately. We conclude that the widely used trapezoidal rule may introduce systematic errors in the calculation, but these errors are reduced if Simpson's rule is employed, at least for the electrostatic component. Furthermore, by fitting thermodynamic integration data, we are able to obtain precise free energy estimates using significantly fewer data points (5 intermediate states for the electrostatic component and 11 for the Lennard-Jones term), thus significantly decreasing the associated computational cost. Our method and improved protocol were successfully validated by computing the free energy of more complex systems hydration of 2-methylbutanol and of 4-nitrophenol-thus paving the way for widespread use in solvation free energy calculations of drug molecules
A Non-orthogonal Configuration Interaction approach to Singlet Fission in Perylenediimide compounds
Perylenediimide molecules constitute a family of chromophores that undergo singlet fission, a process in which an excited singlet state converts into lower energy triplets on two neighboring molecules, potentially increasing the efficiency of organic solar cells. Here, the nonorthogonal configuration interaction method is applied to study the effect of the different crystal packing of various perylenediimide derivatives on the relative energies of the singlet and triplet states, the intermolecular electronic couplings, and the relative rates for singlet fission. The analysis of the wave functions and electronic couplings reveals that charge transfer states play an important role in the singlet fission mechanism. Dimer conformations where the PDI molecules are at large displacements along the long axis and short on the short axis are posed as the most favorable for singlet fission. The role of the substituent at the imide group has been inspected concluding that, although it has no effect in the energies, for some conformations it significantly influences the electronic couplings, and therefore, replacing this substituent with hydrogen may introduce artifacts in the computational modeling of the PDI molecules
Exploring the relationship between macrofungi diversity, abundance, and vascular plant diversity in semi-naturaland managed forests in north-east Hungary
Influence of the B-band O-antigen chain in the structure and electrostatics of the lipopolysaccharide membrane of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Some species flourish when many do not: a pattern in data on ecological communities
Patterns in species × sample tables of communities depend above all on the organisms of the data sets and the conditions
involved. Patterns that surpass individual sets are of special interest. Our question, looking for a shared pattern in 12 sets, is
if relative abundances among species are independent of the sample, or formulated alternatively, if species have abundances
that are correlated with total abundances over samples. For exploration we study the overdispersion/aggregation of the data.
A relatively high variation in the total abundances of samples is noticed, indicating an effect of environmental variation.
Overdispersion imposes constraints on the accommodation of relatively high abundance values to samples with a relatively
low total abundance. The null hypothesis of ‘no association’ is modelled by permutation/resampling of the data at the level
of the individual. A correlation study of actual and permuted sets is performed. All actual sets contain a significant number
of species that defy our question. These species flourish when many do not. The relation of our question with issues in
theoretical ecology, such as the assumption of a neutral effect of environmental conditions and/or of neutral characteristics
of species, is discussed
Molecular dynamics simulations of free energy and conformational transition rates of calix[4]arene in chloroform
In a previous article we introduced a reaction coordinate based on the unstable normal mode at the saddle point of the potential energy surface. We here calculate the free-energy distribution along this coordinate for the isomerization of calix[4]arene in vacuo and in chloroform using umbrella sampling, with one umbrella covering the entire range of the reaction coordinate. An excellent first guess at this umbrella is obtained by performing a normal-mode analysis at various points along the reaction path. The isomerization rate constant of this reaction is determined using the reactive flux method and is found to be in good agreement with experimental data. The rate was found to be independent of the location of the transition state, as it should be
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