Abstract

Molecular mechanics (MM) is a powerful tool to study the properties of molecular systems in the fields of biology and materials science. With the development of ab initio force field and the application of ab initio potential energy surface, the nuclear quantum effect (NQE) is becoming increasingly important for the robustness of the simulation. However, the state-of-the-art path-integral molecular dynamics simulation, which incorporates NQE in MM, is still too expensive to conduct for most biological and material systems. In this work, we analyze the locality of NQE, using both analytical and numerical approaches, and conclude that NQE is an extremely localized phenomenon in nonreactive molecular systems. Therefore, we can use localized machine learning (ML) models to predict quantum force corrections both accurately and efficiently. Using liquid water as example, we show that the ML facilitated centroid MD can reproduce the NQEs in both the thermodynamical and the dynamical properties, with a minimal increase in computational time compared to classical molecular dynamics. This simple approach thus largely decreases the computational cost of quantum simulations, making it really accessible to the studies of large-scale molecular systems.

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