2021 journal article

Uncertainty Quantification and Sensitivity Analysis of Partial Charges on Macroscopic Solvent Properties in Molecular Dynamics Simulations with a Machine Learning Model

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING, 61(4), 1745–1761.

By: J. Peerless n, A. Kwansa n, B. Hawkins n, R. Smith n & Y. Yingling n

MeSH headings : Machine Learning; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Solvents; Static Electricity; Uncertainty
TL;DR: The results indicate that the effect of partial charge variance on bulk properties, such as solubility parameters, diffusivity, dipole moment, and density, measured from MD simulations is significant; however, measured properties are observed to be less sensitive to partial charges of less accessible atoms. (via Semantic Scholar)
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Added: May 24, 2021

The molecular dynamics (MD) simulation technique is among the most broadly used computational methods to investigate atomistic phenomena in a variety of chemical and biological systems. One of the most common (and most uncertain) parametrization steps in MD simulations of soft materials is the assignment of partial charges to atoms. Here, we apply uncertainty quantification and sensitivity analysis calculations to assess the uncertainty associated with partial charge assignment in the context of MD simulations of an organic solvent. Our results indicate that the effect of partial charge variance on bulk properties, such as solubility parameters, diffusivity, dipole moment, and density, measured from MD simulations is significant; however, measured properties are observed to be less sensitive to partial charges of less accessible (or buried) atoms. Diffusivity, for example, exhibits a global sensitivity of up to 22 × 10-5 cm2/s per electron charge on some acetonitrile atoms. We then demonstrate that machine learning techniques, such as Gaussian process regression (GPR), can be effective and rapid tools for uncertainty quantification of MD simulations. We show that the formulation and application of an efficient GPR surrogate model for the prediction of responses effectively reduces the computational time of additional sample points from hours to milliseconds. This study provides a much-needed context for the effect that partial charge uncertainty has on MD-derived material properties to illustrate the benefit of considering partial charges as distributions rather than point-values. To aid in this treatment, this work then demonstrates methods for rapid characterization of resulting sensitivity in MD simulations.