ct7b01173_si_001.pdf (2.15 MB)
Ultra-Coarse-Grained Models Allow for an Accurate and Transferable Treatment of Interfacial Systems
journal contribution
posted on 2018-02-26, 00:00 authored by Jaehyeok Jin, Gregory A. VothInterfacial systems
are fundamentally important in many processes.
However, constructing coarse-grained (CG) models for such systems
is a significant challenge due to their inhomogeneous nature. This
problem is made worse due to the generally nontransferable nature
of the interactions in CG models across different phases. In this
paper, we address these challenges by systematically constructing
ultra-coarse-grained (UCG) models for interfaces, in which the CG
sites are allowed to have internal states. We find that a multiscale
coarse-grained (MS-CG) representation of a single CG site model fails
to identify the directionality of a molecule and is unable to reproduce
the correct phase coexistence for aspherical molecules. In contrast
with conventional MS-CG models, the UCG methodology allows chemical
and environmental changes to be captured by modulating the interactions
between internal states. In this work, we design the internal states
to depend on local particle density to distinguish different phases
in liquid/vapor or liquid/liquid interfaces. These UCG models are
able to capture phase coexistence and recapitulate structures, notably
at state points in which the MS-CG method yields poor results. Interestingly,
effective pairwise forces and potentials from the UCG models are almost
identical to those of the bulk liquids that correspond to each phase,
indicating that the UCG approach can provide transferable interactions.
This approach is expected to be applicable to other systems that exhibit
phase coexistence and also to complex macromolecular systems by modulating
interactions based on local density or other order parameters to unravel
the complex nature underlying heterogeneous system boundaries.