Periodic boundary conditions
A liquid, in the thermodynamic limit, would occupy an infinite volume. It is common experience that one can perfectly well obtain the thermodynamic properties of a material from a more modest sample. However, even a droplet has more atoms or molecules than one can possibly hope to introduce into ones computer simulation. Thus to simulate a bulk sample of liquid it is common practice to use a 'trick' known as periodic boundary conditions. If one has a cube of atoms/molecules, the molecule leaving one side enters on the diametrically opposite side. This is analogous to the arcade video game Asteriods [1], where one can imagine the action takes place on the surface of a torus. In general, a simulation box whose dimensions are several times the range of the interaction potential works well for equilibrium properties, although in the region of a phase transition, where long-range fluctuations play an important role, problems may arise. In confined systems periodicity is only required in some spacial dimensions.
List of periodic boundary conditions[edit]
Cubic[edit]
Orthorhombic[edit]
Parallelepiped[edit]
Truncated octahedral[edit]
Rhombic dodecahedral[edit]
Slab[edit]
Hexagonal prism[edit]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Related reading
- M. J. Mandell "On the properties of a periodic fluid", Journal of Statistical Physics 15 pp. 299-305 (1976)
- Lawrence R. Pratt and Steven W. Haan "Effects of periodic boundary conditions on equilibrium properties of computer simulated fluids. I. Theory", Journal of Chemical Physics 74 pp. 1864- (1981)
- M. P. Allen and D. J. Tildesley "Computer Simulation of Liquids", Oxford University Press (1989) Section 1.5.2
- Daan Frenkel and Berend Smit "Understanding Molecular Simulation: From Algorithms to Applications", Second Edition pp. 32-35 (2002) ISBN 0-12-267351-4
- Phil Attard "Non-periodic boundary conditions for molecular simulations of condensed matter", Molecular Physics 104 pp. 1951-1960 (2006)
- Dhairyashil Ghatage, Gaurav Tomar and Ratnesh K. Shukla "Soft-spring wall based non-periodic boundary conditions for non-equilibrium molecular dynamics of dense fluids", Journal of Chemical Physics 142 124108 (2015)
External resources[edit]
- Periodic boundary conditions in various geometries sample FORTRAN computer code from the book M. P. Allen and D. J. Tildesley "Computer Simulation of Liquids", Oxford University Press (1989).