Over the past decade, great strides have been taken in developing methodologies that can treat more and more complex nano- and nano-bio systems embedded in complex environments.
Multiscale Dynamics Simulations covers methods including DFT/MM-MD, DFTB and semi-empirical QM/MM-MD, DFT/MMPOL as well as Machine-learning approaches to all of the above. Focusing on key methodological breakthroughs in the field, this book provides newcomers with a comprehensive menu of multiscale modelling options so that they can better chart their course in the nano/bio world.
Inhoudsopgave
QM/MM with Auxiliary DFT in de Mon2k; Computational Enzymology: A Challenge for Multiscale Approaches; QM/MM Simulations of Proteins: Is Explicit Inclusion of Polarization on the Horizon?; Electron and Molecular Dynamics Simulations with Polarizable Embedding; DFTB and Hybrid-DFTB Schemes: Application to Metal Nanosystems, Isolated and in Environments; From Atomic Orbitals to Nano-scale Charge Transport with Mixed Quantum/Classical Non-adiabatic Dynamics: Method, Implementation and Application; Modeling Nanocatalytic Reactions with DFTB/MM-MD and DFTB/NMD; Hohenberg–Kohn Theorems as a Basis for Multi-scale Simulations: Frozen-density Embedding Theory; 3D-RISM-KH Molecular Solvation Theory; Free Energy Analysis Algorithms along Transition Paths and Transmembrane Ion Permeation; Pathways in Classification Space: Machine Learning as a Route to Predicting Kinetics of Structural Transitions in Atomic Crystals; Machine Learning Algorithms for the Analysis of Molecular Dynamics Trajectories
Over de auteur
Dongqing Wei is a professor of Bioinformatics at Shanghai Jiaotong University and editor-in-chief of “Interdisciplinary Sciences- Computational Life Sciences”. Over the past three decades he has made many ground-breaking contributions to the development of AI and molecular simulation techniques and their interdisciplinary applications to systems of ever-increasing complexity. Published more than 350 papers, 9 monographs with 8000 SCI citations and an H -index of 55.