Abstract

Determining low-energy structures of large water clusters is a challenge for any optimization algorithm. In this work, we have developed a new Monte Carlo (MC)-based method, temperature basin paving (TBP), which is related to the well-known basin hopping method. In the TBP method, the Boltzmann weight factor used in MC methods is dynamically modified based on the history of the simulation. The states that are visited more are given a lower probability by increasing their temperatures and vice versa. This allows faster escapes from the states frequently visited in the simulation. We have used the TBP method to find a large number of low-energy minima of water clusters of size 20 and 25. We have found structures energetically same to the global minimum structures known for these two clusters. We have compared the efficiency of this method to the basin-hopping method and found that it can locate the minima faster. Statistical efficiency of the new method has been investigated by running a large number of trajectories. The new method can locate low-energy structures of both the clusters faster than some of the reported algorithms for water clusters and can switch between high energy and low-energy structures multiple times in a simulation illustrating its efficiency. The large number of minima obtained from the simulations is used to get both general and specific features of the minima. The distribution of minima for these two clusters based on the similarity of their oxygen frames shows that the (H(2)O)(20) can have different variety of structures, but for (H(2)O)(25), low-energy structures are mostly cagelike. Several (H(2)O)(25) structures are found with similar energy but with different cage architectures. Noncage structures of (H(2)O)(25) are also found but they are 6-7 kcal/mol higher in energy from the global minimum. The TBP method is likely to play an important role for exploring the complex energy landscape of large molecules.

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