2 See the "run control" section for a working example of the
3 syntax to use when making .mdp entries, with and without detailed
4 documentation for values those entries might take. Everything can
5 be cross-referenced, see the examples there. TODO Make more
8 Molecular dynamics parameters (.mdp options)
9 ============================================
14 Default values are given in parentheses, or listed first among
15 choices. The first option in the list is always the default
16 option. Units are given in square brackets. The difference between a
17 dash and an underscore is ignored.
19 A :ref:`sample mdp file <mdp>` is available. This should be
20 appropriate to start a normal simulation. Edit it to suit your
21 specific needs and desires.
29 directories to include in your topology. Format:
30 ``-I/home/john/mylib -I../otherlib``
34 defines to pass to the preprocessor, default is no defines. You can
35 use any defines to control options in your customized topology
36 files. Options that act on existing :ref:`top` file mechanisms
39 ``-DFLEXIBLE`` will use flexible water instead of rigid water
40 into your topology, this can be useful for normal mode analysis.
42 ``-DPOSRES`` will trigger the inclusion of ``posre.itp`` into
43 your topology, used for implementing position restraints.
51 (Despite the name, this list includes algorithms that are not
52 actually integrators over time. :mdp-value:`integrator=steep` and
53 all entries following it are in this category)
57 A leap-frog algorithm for integrating Newton's equations of motion.
61 A velocity Verlet algorithm for integrating Newton's equations
62 of motion. For constant NVE simulations started from
63 corresponding points in the same trajectory, the trajectories
64 are analytically, but not binary, identical to the
65 :mdp-value:`integrator=md` leap-frog integrator. The the kinetic
66 energy, which is determined from the whole step velocities and
67 is therefore slightly too high. The advantage of this integrator
68 is more accurate, reversible Nose-Hoover and Parrinello-Rahman
69 coupling integration based on Trotter expansion, as well as
70 (slightly too small) full step velocity output. This all comes
71 at the cost off extra computation, especially with constraints
72 and extra communication in parallel. Note that for nearly all
73 production simulations the :mdp-value:`integrator=md` integrator
76 .. mdp-value:: md-vv-avek
78 A velocity Verlet algorithm identical to
79 :mdp-value:`integrator=md-vv`, except that the kinetic energy is
80 determined as the average of the two half step kinetic energies
81 as in the :mdp-value:`integrator=md` integrator, and this thus
82 more accurate. With Nose-Hoover and/or Parrinello-Rahman
83 coupling this comes with a slight increase in computational
88 An accurate and efficient leap-frog stochastic dynamics
89 integrator. With constraints, coordinates needs to be
90 constrained twice per integration step. Depending on the
91 computational cost of the force calculation, this can take a
92 significant part of the simulation time. The temperature for one
93 or more groups of atoms (:mdp:`tc-grps`) is set with
94 :mdp:`ref-t`, the inverse friction constant for each group is
95 set with :mdp:`tau-t`. The parameter :mdp:`tcoupl` is
96 ignored. The random generator is initialized with
97 :mdp:`ld-seed`. When used as a thermostat, an appropriate value
98 for :mdp:`tau-t` is 2 ps, since this results in a friction that
99 is lower than the internal friction of water, while it is high
100 enough to remove excess heat NOTE: temperature deviations decay
101 twice as fast as with a Berendsen thermostat with the same
106 An Euler integrator for Brownian or position Langevin dynamics,
107 the velocity is the force divided by a friction coefficient
108 (:mdp:`bd-fric`) plus random thermal noise (:mdp:`ref-t`). When
109 :mdp:`bd-fric` is 0, the friction coefficient for each particle
110 is calculated as mass/ :mdp:`tau-t`, as for the integrator
111 :mdp-value:`integrator=sd`. The random generator is initialized
116 A steepest descent algorithm for energy minimization. The
117 maximum step size is :mdp:`emstep`, the tolerance is
122 A conjugate gradient algorithm for energy minimization, the
123 tolerance is :mdp:`emtol`. CG is more efficient when a steepest
124 descent step is done every once in a while, this is determined
125 by :mdp:`nstcgsteep`. For a minimization prior to a normal mode
126 analysis, which requires a very high accuracy, |Gromacs| should be
127 compiled in double precision.
129 .. mdp-value:: l-bfgs
131 A quasi-Newtonian algorithm for energy minimization according to
132 the low-memory Broyden-Fletcher-Goldfarb-Shanno approach. In
133 practice this seems to converge faster than Conjugate Gradients,
134 but due to the correction steps necessary it is not (yet)
139 Normal mode analysis is performed on the structure in the :ref:`tpr`
140 file. |Gromacs| should be compiled in double precision.
144 Test particle insertion. The last molecule in the topology is
145 the test particle. A trajectory must be provided to ``mdrun
146 -rerun``. This trajectory should not contain the molecule to be
147 inserted. Insertions are performed :mdp:`nsteps` times in each
148 frame at random locations and with random orientiations of the
149 molecule. When :mdp:`nstlist` is larger than one,
150 :mdp:`nstlist` insertions are performed in a sphere with radius
151 :mdp:`rtpi` around a the same random location using the same
152 neighborlist. Since neighborlist construction is expensive,
153 one can perform several extra insertions with the same list
154 almost for free. The random seed is set with
155 :mdp:`ld-seed`. The temperature for the Boltzmann weighting is
156 set with :mdp:`ref-t`, this should match the temperature of the
157 simulation of the original trajectory. Dispersion correction is
158 implemented correctly for TPI. All relevant quantities are
159 written to the file specified with ``mdrun -tpi``. The
160 distribution of insertion energies is written to the file
161 specified with ``mdrun -tpid``. No trajectory or energy file is
162 written. Parallel TPI gives identical results to single-node
163 TPI. For charged molecules, using PME with a fine grid is most
164 accurate and also efficient, since the potential in the system
165 only needs to be calculated once per frame.
169 Test particle insertion into a predefined cavity location. The
170 procedure is the same as for :mdp-value:`integrator=tpi`, except
171 that one coordinate extra is read from the trajectory, which is
172 used as the insertion location. The molecule to be inserted
173 should be centered at 0,0,0. |Gromacs| does not do this for you,
174 since for different situations a different way of centering
175 might be optimal. Also :mdp:`rtpi` sets the radius for the
176 sphere around this location. Neighbor searching is done only
177 once per frame, :mdp:`nstlist` is not used. Parallel
178 :mdp-value:`integrator=tpic` gives identical results to
179 single-rank :mdp-value:`integrator=tpic`.
184 starting time for your run (only makes sense for time-based
190 time step for integration (only makes sense for time-based
196 maximum number of steps to integrate or minimize, -1 is no
202 The starting step. The time at an step i in a run is
203 calculated as: t = :mdp:`tinit` + :mdp:`dt` *
204 (:mdp:`init-step` + i). The free-energy lambda is calculated
205 as: lambda = :mdp:`init-lambda` + :mdp:`delta-lambda` *
206 (:mdp:`init-step` + i). Also non-equilibrium MD parameters can
207 depend on the step number. Thus for exact restarts or redoing
208 part of a run it might be necessary to set :mdp:`init-step` to
209 the step number of the restart frame. :ref:`gmx convert-tpr`
210 does this automatically.
212 .. mdp:: simulation-part
215 A simulation can consist of multiple parts, each of which has
216 a part number. This option specifies what that number will
217 be, which helps keep track of parts that are logically the
218 same simulation. This option is generally useful to set only
219 when coping with a crashed simulation where files were lost.
223 .. mdp-value:: Linear
225 Remove center of mass translation
227 .. mdp-value:: Angular
229 Remove center of mass translation and rotation around the center of mass
233 No restriction on the center of mass motion
238 frequency for center of mass motion removal
242 group(s) for center of mass motion removal, default is the whole
252 Brownian dynamics friction coefficient. When :mdp:`bd-fric` is 0,
253 the friction coefficient for each particle is calculated as mass/
259 used to initialize random generator for thermal noise for
260 stochastic and Brownian dynamics. When :mdp:`ld-seed` is set to -1,
261 a pseudo random seed is used. When running BD or SD on multiple
262 processors, each processor uses a seed equal to :mdp:`ld-seed` plus
263 the processor number.
271 (10.0) \[kJ mol-1 nm-1\]
272 the minimization is converged when the maximum force is smaller
283 frequency of performing 1 steepest descent step while doing
284 conjugate gradient energy minimization.
289 Number of correction steps to use for L-BFGS minimization. A higher
290 number is (at least theoretically) more accurate, but slower.
293 Shell Molecular Dynamics
294 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
296 When shells or flexible constraints are present in the system the
297 positions of the shells and the lengths of the flexible constraints
298 are optimized at every time step until either the RMS force on the
299 shells and constraints is less than :mdp:`emtol`, or a maximum number
300 of iterations :mdp:`niter` has been reached. Minimization is converged
301 when the maximum force is smaller than :mdp:`emtol`. For shell MD this
302 value should be 1.0 at most.
307 maximum number of iterations for optimizing the shell positions and
308 the flexible constraints.
313 the step size for optimizing the flexible constraints. Should be
314 chosen as mu/(d2V/dq2) where mu is the reduced mass of two
315 particles in a flexible constraint and d2V/dq2 is the second
316 derivative of the potential in the constraint direction. Hopefully
317 this number does not differ too much between the flexible
318 constraints, as the number of iterations and thus the runtime is
319 very sensitive to fcstep. Try several values!
322 Test particle insertion
323 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
328 the test particle insertion radius, see integrators
329 :mdp-value:`integrator=tpi` and :mdp-value:`integrator=tpic`
338 number of steps that elapse between writing coordinates to output
339 trajectory file, the last coordinates are always written
344 number of steps that elapse between writing velocities to output
345 trajectory, the last velocities are always written
350 number of steps that elapse between writing forces to output
356 number of steps that elapse between writing energies to the log
357 file, the last energies are always written
359 .. mdp:: nstcalcenergy
362 number of steps that elapse between calculating the energies, 0 is
363 never. This option is only relevant with dynamics. This option affects the
364 performance in parallel simulations, because calculating energies
365 requires global communication between all processes which can
366 become a bottleneck at high parallelization.
371 number of steps that else between writing energies to energy file,
372 the last energies are always written, should be a multiple of
373 :mdp:`nstcalcenergy`. Note that the exact sums and fluctuations
374 over all MD steps modulo :mdp:`nstcalcenergy` are stored in the
375 energy file, so :ref:`gmx energy` can report exact energy averages
376 and fluctuations also when :mdp:`nstenergy` > 1
378 .. mdp:: nstxout-compressed
381 number of steps that elapse between writing position coordinates
382 using lossy compression
384 .. mdp:: compressed-x-precision
387 precision with which to write to the compressed trajectory file
389 .. mdp:: compressed-x-grps
391 group(s) to write to the compressed trajectory file, by default the
392 whole system is written (if :mdp:`nstxout-compressed` > 0)
396 group(s) for which to write to write short-ranged non-bonded
397 potential energies to the energy file (not supported on GPUs)
403 .. mdp:: cutoff-scheme
405 .. mdp-value:: Verlet
407 Generate a pair list with buffering. The buffer size is
408 automatically set based on :mdp:`verlet-buffer-tolerance`,
409 unless this is set to -1, in which case :mdp:`rlist` will be
410 used. This option has an explicit, exact cut-off at :mdp:`rvdw`
411 equal to :mdp:`rcoulomb`, unless PME or Ewald is used, in which
412 case :mdp:`rcoulomb` > :mdp:`rvdw` is allowed. Currently only
413 cut-off, reaction-field, PME or Ewald electrostatics and plain
414 LJ are supported. Some :ref:`gmx mdrun` functionality is not yet
415 supported with the :mdp:`Verlet` scheme, but :ref:`gmx grompp`
416 checks for this. Native GPU acceleration is only supported with
417 :mdp:`Verlet`. With GPU-accelerated PME or with separate PME
418 ranks, :ref:`gmx mdrun` will automatically tune the CPU/GPU load
419 balance by scaling :mdp:`rcoulomb` and the grid spacing. This
420 can be turned off with ``mdrun -notunepme``. :mdp:`Verlet` is
421 faster than :mdp:`group` when there is no water, or if
422 :mdp:`group` would use a pair-list buffer to conserve energy.
426 Generate a pair list for groups of atoms. These groups
427 correspond to the charge groups in the topology. This was the
428 only cut-off treatment scheme before version 4.6, and is
429 **deprecated in |gmx-version|**. There is no explicit buffering of
430 the pair list. This enables efficient force calculations for
431 water, but energy is only conserved when a buffer is explicitly
440 Frequency to update the neighbor list. When this is 0, the
441 neighbor list is made only once. With energy minimization the
442 neighborlist will be updated for every energy evaluation when
443 :mdp:`nstlist` is greater than 0. With :mdp:`Verlet` and
444 :mdp:`verlet-buffer-tolerance` set, :mdp:`nstlist` is actually
445 a minimum value and :ref:`gmx mdrun` might increase it, unless
446 it is set to 1. With parallel simulations and/or non-bonded
447 force calculation on the GPU, a value of 20 or 40 often gives
448 the best performance. With :mdp:`group` and non-exact
449 cut-off's, :mdp:`nstlist` will affect the accuracy of your
450 simulation and it can not be chosen freely.
454 The neighbor list is only constructed once and never
455 updated. This is mainly useful for vacuum simulations in which
456 all particles see each other.
466 Make a grid in the box and only check atoms in neighboring grid
467 cells when constructing a new neighbor list every
468 :mdp:`nstlist` steps. In large systems grid search is much
469 faster than simple search.
471 .. mdp-value:: simple
473 Check every atom in the box when constructing a new neighbor
474 list every :mdp:`nstlist` steps (only with :mdp:`group`
481 Use periodic boundary conditions in all directions.
485 Use no periodic boundary conditions, ignore the box. To simulate
486 without cut-offs, set all cut-offs and :mdp:`nstlist` to 0. For
487 best performance without cut-offs on a single MPI rank, set
488 :mdp:`nstlist` to zero and :mdp:`ns-type` =simple.
492 Use periodic boundary conditions in x and y directions
493 only. This works only with :mdp:`ns-type` =grid and can be used
494 in combination with walls_. Without walls or with only one wall
495 the system size is infinite in the z direction. Therefore
496 pressure coupling or Ewald summation methods can not be
497 used. These disadvantages do not apply when two walls are used.
499 .. mdp:: periodic-molecules
503 molecules are finite, fast molecular PBC can be used
507 for systems with molecules that couple to themselves through the
508 periodic boundary conditions, this requires a slower PBC
509 algorithm and molecules are not made whole in the output
511 .. mdp:: verlet-buffer-tolerance
513 (0.005) \[kJ/mol/ps\]
515 Useful only with the :mdp:`Verlet` :mdp:`cutoff-scheme`. This sets
516 the maximum allowed error for pair interactions per particle caused
517 by the Verlet buffer, which indirectly sets :mdp:`rlist`. As both
518 :mdp:`nstlist` and the Verlet buffer size are fixed (for
519 performance reasons), particle pairs not in the pair list can
520 occasionally get within the cut-off distance during
521 :mdp:`nstlist` -1 steps. This causes very small jumps in the
522 energy. In a constant-temperature ensemble, these very small energy
523 jumps can be estimated for a given cut-off and :mdp:`rlist`. The
524 estimate assumes a homogeneous particle distribution, hence the
525 errors might be slightly underestimated for multi-phase
526 systems. (See the `reference manual`_ for details). For longer
527 pair-list life-time (:mdp:`nstlist` -1) * :mdp:`dt` the buffer is
528 overestimated, because the interactions between particles are
529 ignored. Combined with cancellation of errors, the actual drift of
530 the total energy is usually one to two orders of magnitude
531 smaller. Note that the generated buffer size takes into account
532 that the |Gromacs| pair-list setup leads to a reduction in the
533 drift by a factor 10, compared to a simple particle-pair based
534 list. Without dynamics (energy minimization etc.), the buffer is 5%
535 of the cut-off. For NVE simulations the initial temperature is
536 used, unless this is zero, in which case a buffer of 10% is
537 used. For NVE simulations the tolerance usually needs to be lowered
538 to achieve proper energy conservation on the nanosecond time
539 scale. To override the automated buffer setting, use
540 :mdp:`verlet-buffer-tolerance` =-1 and set :mdp:`rlist` manually.
545 Cut-off distance for the short-range neighbor list. With the
546 :mdp:`Verlet` :mdp:`cutoff-scheme`, this is by default set by the
547 :mdp:`verlet-buffer-tolerance` option and the value of
548 :mdp:`rlist` is ignored.
556 .. mdp-value:: Cut-off
558 Plain cut-off with neighborlist radius :mdp:`rlist` and
559 Coulomb cut-off :mdp:`rcoulomb`, where :mdp:`rlist` >=
564 Classical Ewald sum electrostatics. The real-space cut-off
565 :mdp:`rcoulomb` should be equal to :mdp:`rlist`. Use *e.g.*
566 :mdp:`rlist` =0.9, :mdp:`rcoulomb` =0.9. The highest magnitude
567 of wave vectors used in reciprocal space is controlled by
568 :mdp:`fourierspacing`. The relative accuracy of
569 direct/reciprocal space is controlled by :mdp:`ewald-rtol`.
571 NOTE: Ewald scales as O(N^3/2) and is thus extremely slow for
572 large systems. It is included mainly for reference - in most
573 cases PME will perform much better.
577 Fast smooth Particle-Mesh Ewald (SPME) electrostatics. Direct
578 space is similar to the Ewald sum, while the reciprocal part is
579 performed with FFTs. Grid dimensions are controlled with
580 :mdp:`fourierspacing` and the interpolation order with
581 :mdp:`pme-order`. With a grid spacing of 0.1 nm and cubic
582 interpolation the electrostatic forces have an accuracy of
583 2-3*10^-4. Since the error from the vdw-cutoff is larger than
584 this you might try 0.15 nm. When running in parallel the
585 interpolation parallelizes better than the FFT, so try
586 decreasing grid dimensions while increasing interpolation.
588 .. mdp-value:: P3M-AD
590 Particle-Particle Particle-Mesh algorithm with analytical
591 derivative for for long range electrostatic interactions. The
592 method and code is identical to SPME, except that the influence
593 function is optimized for the grid. This gives a slight increase
596 .. mdp-value:: Reaction-Field
598 Reaction field electrostatics with Coulomb cut-off
599 :mdp:`rcoulomb`, where :mdp:`rlist` >= :mdp:`rvdw`. The
600 dielectric constant beyond the cut-off is
601 :mdp:`epsilon-rf`. The dielectric constant can be set to
602 infinity by setting :mdp:`epsilon-rf` =0.
604 .. mdp-value:: Generalized-Reaction-Field
606 Generalized reaction field with Coulomb cut-off
607 :mdp:`rcoulomb`, where :mdp:`rlist` >= :mdp:`rcoulomb`. The
608 dielectric constant beyond the cut-off is
609 :mdp:`epsilon-rf`. The ionic strength is computed from the
610 number of charged (*i.e.* with non zero charge) charge
611 groups. The temperature for the GRF potential is set with
614 .. mdp-value:: Reaction-Field-zero
616 In |Gromacs|, normal reaction-field electrostatics with
617 :mdp:`cutoff-scheme` = :mdp:`group` leads to bad energy
618 conservation. :mdp:`Reaction-Field-zero` solves this by making
619 the potential zero beyond the cut-off. It can only be used with
620 an infinite dielectric constant (:mdp:`epsilon-rf` =0), because
621 only for that value the force vanishes at the
622 cut-off. :mdp:`rlist` should be 0.1 to 0.3 nm larger than
623 :mdp:`rcoulomb` to accommodate for the size of charge groups
624 and diffusion between neighbor list updates. This, and the fact
625 that table lookups are used instead of analytical functions make
626 :mdp:`Reaction-Field-zero` computationally more expensive than
627 normal reaction-field.
631 Analogous to :mdp-value:`vdwtype=Shift` for :mdp:`vdwtype`. You
632 might want to use :mdp:`Reaction-Field-zero` instead, which has
633 a similar potential shape, but has a physical interpretation and
634 has better energies due to the exclusion correction terms.
636 .. mdp-value:: Encad-Shift
638 The Coulomb potential is decreased over the whole range, using
639 the definition from the Encad simulation package.
641 .. mdp-value:: Switch
643 Analogous to :mdp-value:`vdwtype=Switch` for
644 :mdp:`vdwtype`. Switching the Coulomb potential can lead to
645 serious artifacts, advice: use :mdp:`Reaction-Field-zero`
650 :ref:`gmx mdrun` will now expect to find a file ``table.xvg``
651 with user-defined potential functions for repulsion, dispersion
652 and Coulomb. When pair interactions are present, :ref:`gmx
653 mdrun` also expects to find a file ``tablep.xvg`` for the pair
654 interactions. When the same interactions should be used for
655 non-bonded and pair interactions the user can specify the same
656 file name for both table files. These files should contain 7
657 columns: the ``x`` value, ``f(x)``, ``-f'(x)``, ``g(x)``,
658 ``-g'(x)``, ``h(x)``, ``-h'(x)``, where ``f(x)`` is the Coulomb
659 function, ``g(x)`` the dispersion function and ``h(x)`` the
660 repulsion function. When :mdp:`vdwtype` is not set to User the
661 values for ``g``, ``-g'``, ``h`` and ``-h'`` are ignored. For
662 the non-bonded interactions ``x`` values should run from 0 to
663 the largest cut-off distance + :mdp:`table-extension` and
664 should be uniformly spaced. For the pair interactions the table
665 length in the file will be used. The optimal spacing, which is
666 used for non-user tables, is ``0.002 nm`` when you run in mixed
667 precision or ``0.0005 nm`` when you run in double precision. The
668 function value at ``x=0`` is not important. More information is
669 in the printed manual.
671 .. mdp-value:: PME-Switch
673 A combination of PME and a switch function for the direct-space
674 part (see above). :mdp:`rcoulomb` is allowed to be smaller than
675 :mdp:`rlist`. This is mainly useful constant energy simulations
676 (note that using PME with :mdp:`cutoff-scheme` = :mdp:`Verlet`
677 will be more efficient).
679 .. mdp-value:: PME-User
681 A combination of PME and user tables (see
682 above). :mdp:`rcoulomb` is allowed to be smaller than
683 :mdp:`rlist`. The PME mesh contribution is subtracted from the
684 user table by :ref:`gmx mdrun`. Because of this subtraction the
685 user tables should contain about 10 decimal places.
687 .. mdp-value:: PME-User-Switch
689 A combination of PME-User and a switching function (see
690 above). The switching function is applied to final
691 particle-particle interaction, *i.e.* both to the user supplied
692 function and the PME Mesh correction part.
694 .. mdp:: coulomb-modifier
696 .. mdp-value:: Potential-shift-Verlet
698 Selects Potential-shift with the Verlet cutoff-scheme, as it is
699 (nearly) free; selects None with the group cutoff-scheme.
701 .. mdp-value:: Potential-shift
703 Shift the Coulomb potential by a constant such that it is zero
704 at the cut-off. This makes the potential the integral of the
705 force. Note that this does not affect the forces or the
710 Use an unmodified Coulomb potential. With the group scheme this
711 means no exact cut-off is used, energies and forces are
712 calculated for all pairs in the neighborlist.
714 .. mdp:: rcoulomb-switch
717 where to start switching the Coulomb potential, only relevant
718 when force or potential switching is used
723 distance for the Coulomb cut-off
728 The relative dielectric constant. A value of 0 means infinity.
733 The relative dielectric constant of the reaction field. This
734 is only used with reaction-field electrostatics. A value of 0
743 .. mdp-value:: Cut-off
745 Twin range cut-offs with neighbor list cut-off :mdp:`rlist` and
746 VdW cut-off :mdp:`rvdw`, where :mdp:`rvdw` >= :mdp:`rlist`.
750 Fast smooth Particle-mesh Ewald (SPME) for VdW interactions. The
751 grid dimensions are controlled with :mdp:`fourierspacing` in
752 the same way as for electrostatics, and the interpolation order
753 is controlled with :mdp:`pme-order`. The relative accuracy of
754 direct/reciprocal space is controlled by :mdp:`ewald-rtol-lj`,
755 and the specific combination rules that are to be used by the
756 reciprocal routine are set using :mdp:`lj-pme-comb-rule`.
760 This functionality is deprecated and replaced by
761 :mdp:`vdw-modifier` = Force-switch. The LJ (not Buckingham)
762 potential is decreased over the whole range and the forces decay
763 smoothly to zero between :mdp:`rvdw-switch` and
764 :mdp:`rvdw`. The neighbor search cut-off :mdp:`rlist` should
765 be 0.1 to 0.3 nm larger than :mdp:`rvdw` to accommodate for the
766 size of charge groups and diffusion between neighbor list
769 .. mdp-value:: Switch
771 This functionality is deprecated and replaced by
772 :mdp:`vdw-modifier` = Potential-switch. The LJ (not Buckingham)
773 potential is normal out to :mdp:`rvdw-switch`, after which it
774 is switched off to reach zero at :mdp:`rvdw`. Both the
775 potential and force functions are continuously smooth, but be
776 aware that all switch functions will give rise to a bulge
777 (increase) in the force (since we are switching the
778 potential). The neighbor search cut-off :mdp:`rlist` should be
779 0.1 to 0.3 nm larger than :mdp:`rvdw` to accommodate for the
780 size of charge groups and diffusion between neighbor list
783 .. mdp-value:: Encad-Shift
785 The LJ (not Buckingham) potential is decreased over the whole
786 range, using the definition from the Encad simulation package.
790 See user for :mdp:`coulombtype`. The function value at zero is
791 not important. When you want to use LJ correction, make sure
792 that :mdp:`rvdw` corresponds to the cut-off in the user-defined
793 function. When :mdp:`coulombtype` is not set to User the values
794 for the ``f`` and ``-f'`` columns are ignored.
796 .. mdp:: vdw-modifier
798 .. mdp-value:: Potential-shift-Verlet
800 Selects Potential-shift with the Verlet cutoff-scheme, as it is
801 (nearly) free; selects None with the group cutoff-scheme.
803 .. mdp-value:: Potential-shift
805 Shift the Van der Waals potential by a constant such that it is
806 zero at the cut-off. This makes the potential the integral of
807 the force. Note that this does not affect the forces or the
812 Use an unmodified Van der Waals potential. With the group scheme
813 this means no exact cut-off is used, energies and forces are
814 calculated for all pairs in the neighborlist.
816 .. mdp-value:: Force-switch
818 Smoothly switches the forces to zero between :mdp:`rvdw-switch`
819 and :mdp:`rvdw`. This shifts the potential shift over the whole
820 range and switches it to zero at the cut-off. Note that this is
821 more expensive to calculate than a plain cut-off and it is not
822 required for energy conservation, since Potential-shift
823 conserves energy just as well.
825 .. mdp-value:: Potential-switch
827 Smoothly switches the potential to zero between
828 :mdp:`rvdw-switch` and :mdp:`rvdw`. Note that this introduces
829 articifically large forces in the switching region and is much
830 more expensive to calculate. This option should only be used if
831 the force field you are using requires this.
837 where to start switching the LJ force and possibly the potential,
838 only relevant when force or potential switching is used
843 distance for the LJ or Buckingham cut-off
849 don't apply any correction
851 .. mdp-value:: EnerPres
853 apply long range dispersion corrections for Energy and Pressure
857 apply long range dispersion corrections for Energy only
863 .. mdp:: table-extension
866 Extension of the non-bonded potential lookup tables beyond the
867 largest cut-off distance. The value should be large enough to
868 account for charge group sizes and the diffusion between
869 neighbor-list updates. Without user defined potential the same
870 table length is used for the lookup tables for the 1-4
871 interactions, which are always tabulated irrespective of the use of
872 tables for the non-bonded interactions. The value of
873 :mdp:`table-extension` in no way affects the values of
874 :mdp:`rlist`, :mdp:`rcoulomb`, or :mdp:`rvdw`.
876 .. mdp:: energygrp-table
878 When user tables are used for electrostatics and/or VdW, here one
879 can give pairs of energy groups for which seperate user tables
880 should be used. The two energy groups will be appended to the table
881 file name, in order of their definition in :mdp:`energygrps`,
882 seperated by underscores. For example, if ``energygrps = Na Cl
883 Sol`` and ``energygrp-table = Na Na Na Cl``, :ref:`gmx mdrun` will
884 read ``table_Na_Na.xvg`` and ``table_Na_Cl.xvg`` in addition to the
885 normal ``table.xvg`` which will be used for all other energy group
892 .. mdp:: fourierspacing
895 For ordinary Ewald, the ratio of the box dimensions and the spacing
896 determines a lower bound for the number of wave vectors to use in
897 each (signed) direction. For PME and P3M, that ratio determines a
898 lower bound for the number of Fourier-space grid points that will
899 be used along that axis. In all cases, the number for each
900 direction can be overridden by entering a non-zero value for that
901 :mdp:`fourier-nx` direction. For optimizing the relative load of
902 the particle-particle interactions and the mesh part of PME, it is
903 useful to know that the accuracy of the electrostatics remains
904 nearly constant when the Coulomb cut-off and the PME grid spacing
905 are scaled by the same factor.
912 Highest magnitude of wave vectors in reciprocal space when using Ewald.
913 Grid size when using PME or P3M. These values override
914 :mdp:`fourierspacing` per direction. The best choice is powers of
915 2, 3, 5 and 7. Avoid large primes.
920 Interpolation order for PME. 4 equals cubic interpolation. You
921 might try 6/8/10 when running in parallel and simultaneously
922 decrease grid dimension.
927 The relative strength of the Ewald-shifted direct potential at
928 :mdp:`rcoulomb` is given by :mdp:`ewald-rtol`. Decreasing this
929 will give a more accurate direct sum, but then you need more wave
930 vectors for the reciprocal sum.
932 .. mdp:: ewald-rtol-lj
935 When doing PME for VdW-interactions, :mdp:`ewald-rtol-lj` is used
936 to control the relative strength of the dispersion potential at
937 :mdp:`rvdw` in the same way as :mdp:`ewald-rtol` controls the
938 electrostatic potential.
940 .. mdp:: lj-pme-comb-rule
943 The combination rules used to combine VdW-parameters in the
944 reciprocal part of LJ-PME. Geometric rules are much faster than
945 Lorentz-Berthelot and usually the recommended choice, even when the
946 rest of the force field uses the Lorentz-Berthelot rules.
948 .. mdp-value:: Geometric
950 Apply geometric combination rules
952 .. mdp-value:: Lorentz-Berthelot
954 Apply Lorentz-Berthelot combination rules
956 .. mdp:: ewald-geometry
960 The Ewald sum is performed in all three dimensions.
964 The reciprocal sum is still performed in 3D, but a force and
965 potential correction applied in the `z` dimension to produce a
966 pseudo-2D summation. If your system has a slab geometry in the
967 `x-y` plane you can try to increase the `z`-dimension of the box
968 (a box height of 3 times the slab height is usually ok) and use
971 .. mdp:: epsilon-surface
974 This controls the dipole correction to the Ewald summation in
975 3D. The default value of zero means it is turned off. Turn it on by
976 setting it to the value of the relative permittivity of the
977 imaginary surface around your infinite system. Be careful - you
978 shouldn't use this if you have free mobile charges in your
979 system. This value does not affect the slab 3DC variant of the long
990 No temperature coupling.
992 .. mdp-value:: berendsen
994 Temperature coupling with a Berendsen-thermostat to a bath with
995 temperature :mdp:`ref-t`, with time constant
996 :mdp:`tau-t`. Several groups can be coupled separately, these
997 are specified in the :mdp:`tc-grps` field separated by spaces.
999 .. mdp-value:: nose-hoover
1001 Temperature coupling using a Nose-Hoover extended ensemble. The
1002 reference temperature and coupling groups are selected as above,
1003 but in this case :mdp:`tau-t` controls the period of the
1004 temperature fluctuations at equilibrium, which is slightly
1005 different from a relaxation time. For NVT simulations the
1006 conserved energy quantity is written to energy and log file.
1008 .. mdp-value:: andersen
1010 Temperature coupling by randomizing a fraction of the particles
1011 at each timestep. Reference temperature and coupling groups are
1012 selected as above. :mdp:`tau-t` is the average time between
1013 randomization of each molecule. Inhibits particle dynamics
1014 somewhat, but little or no ergodicity issues. Currently only
1015 implemented with velocity Verlet, and not implemented with
1018 .. mdp-value:: andersen-massive
1020 Temperature coupling by randomizing all particles at infrequent
1021 timesteps. Reference temperature and coupling groups are
1022 selected as above. :mdp:`tau-t` is the time between
1023 randomization of all molecules. Inhibits particle dynamics
1024 somewhat, but little or no ergodicity issues. Currently only
1025 implemented with velocity Verlet.
1027 .. mdp-value:: v-rescale
1029 Temperature coupling using velocity rescaling with a stochastic
1030 term (JCP 126, 014101). This thermostat is similar to Berendsen
1031 coupling, with the same scaling using :mdp:`tau-t`, but the
1032 stochastic term ensures that a proper canonical ensemble is
1033 generated. The random seed is set with :mdp:`ld-seed`. This
1034 thermostat works correctly even for :mdp:`tau-t` =0. For NVT
1035 simulations the conserved energy quantity is written to the
1036 energy and log file.
1041 The frequency for coupling the temperature. The default value of -1
1042 sets :mdp:`nsttcouple` equal to :mdp:`nstlist`, unless
1043 :mdp:`nstlist` <=0, then a value of 10 is used. For velocity
1044 Verlet integrators :mdp:`nsttcouple` is set to 1.
1046 .. mdp:: nh-chain-length
1049 The number of chained Nose-Hoover thermostats for velocity Verlet
1050 integrators, the leap-frog :mdp-value:`integrator=md` integrator
1051 only supports 1. Data for the NH chain variables is not printed to
1052 the :ref:`edr` file, but can be using the ``GMX_NOSEHOOVER_CHAINS``
1053 environment variable
1057 groups to couple to separate temperature baths
1062 time constant for coupling (one for each group in
1063 :mdp:`tc-grps`), -1 means no temperature coupling
1068 reference temperature for coupling (one for each group in
1079 No pressure coupling. This means a fixed box size.
1081 .. mdp-value:: Berendsen
1083 Exponential relaxation pressure coupling with time constant
1084 :mdp:`tau-p`. The box is scaled every timestep. It has been
1085 argued that this does not yield a correct thermodynamic
1086 ensemble, but it is the most efficient way to scale a box at the
1089 .. mdp-value:: Parrinello-Rahman
1091 Extended-ensemble pressure coupling where the box vectors are
1092 subject to an equation of motion. The equation of motion for the
1093 atoms is coupled to this. No instantaneous scaling takes
1094 place. As for Nose-Hoover temperature coupling the time constant
1095 :mdp:`tau-p` is the period of pressure fluctuations at
1096 equilibrium. This is probably a better method when you want to
1097 apply pressure scaling during data collection, but beware that
1098 you can get very large oscillations if you are starting from a
1099 different pressure. For simulations where the exact fluctation
1100 of the NPT ensemble are important, or if the pressure coupling
1101 time is very short it may not be appropriate, as the previous
1102 time step pressure is used in some steps of the |Gromacs|
1103 implementation for the current time step pressure.
1107 Martyna-Tuckerman-Tobias-Klein implementation, only useable with
1108 :mdp-value:`md-vv` or :mdp-value:`md-vv-avek`, very similar to
1109 Parrinello-Rahman. As for Nose-Hoover temperature coupling the
1110 time constant :mdp:`tau-p` is the period of pressure
1111 fluctuations at equilibrium. This is probably a better method
1112 when you want to apply pressure scaling during data collection,
1113 but beware that you can get very large oscillations if you are
1114 starting from a different pressure. Currently (as of version
1115 5.1), it only supports isotropic scaling, and only works without
1120 Specifies the kind of isotropy of the pressure coupling used. Each
1121 kind takes one or more values for :mdp:`compressibility` and
1122 :mdp:`ref-p`. Only a single value is permitted for :mdp:`tau-p`.
1124 .. mdp-value:: isotropic
1126 Isotropic pressure coupling with time constant
1127 :mdp:`tau-p`. One value each for :mdp:`compressibility` and
1128 :mdp:`ref-p` is required.
1130 .. mdp-value:: semiisotropic
1132 Pressure coupling which is isotropic in the ``x`` and ``y``
1133 direction, but different in the ``z`` direction. This can be
1134 useful for membrane simulations. Two values each for
1135 :mdp:`compressibility` and :mdp:`ref-p` are required, for
1136 ``x/y`` and ``z`` directions respectively.
1138 .. mdp-value:: anisotropic
1140 Same as before, but 6 values are needed for ``xx``, ``yy``, ``zz``,
1141 ``xy/yx``, ``xz/zx`` and ``yz/zy`` components,
1142 respectively. When the off-diagonal compressibilities are set to
1143 zero, a rectangular box will stay rectangular. Beware that
1144 anisotropic scaling can lead to extreme deformation of the
1147 .. mdp-value:: surface-tension
1149 Surface tension coupling for surfaces parallel to the
1150 xy-plane. Uses normal pressure coupling for the `z`-direction,
1151 while the surface tension is coupled to the `x/y` dimensions of
1152 the box. The first :mdp:`ref-p` value is the reference surface
1153 tension times the number of surfaces ``bar nm``, the second
1154 value is the reference `z`-pressure ``bar``. The two
1155 :mdp:`compressibility` values are the compressibility in the
1156 `x/y` and `z` direction respectively. The value for the
1157 `z`-compressibility should be reasonably accurate since it
1158 influences the convergence of the surface-tension, it can also
1159 be set to zero to have a box with constant height.
1164 The frequency for coupling the pressure. The default value of -1
1165 sets :mdp:`nstpcouple` equal to :mdp:`nstlist`, unless
1166 :mdp:`nstlist` <=0, then a value of 10 is used. For velocity
1167 Verlet integrators :mdp:`nstpcouple` is set to 1.
1172 The time constant for pressure coupling (one value for all
1175 .. mdp:: compressibility
1178 The compressibility (NOTE: this is now really in bar^-1) For water at 1
1179 atm and 300 K the compressibility is 4.5e-5 bar^-1. The number of
1180 required values is implied by :mdp:`pcoupltype`.
1185 The reference pressure for coupling. The number of required values
1186 is implied by :mdp:`pcoupltype`.
1188 .. mdp:: refcoord-scaling
1192 The reference coordinates for position restraints are not
1193 modified. Note that with this option the virial and pressure
1194 will depend on the absolute positions of the reference
1199 The reference coordinates are scaled with the scaling matrix of
1200 the pressure coupling.
1204 Scale the center of mass of the reference coordinates with the
1205 scaling matrix of the pressure coupling. The vectors of each
1206 reference coordinate to the center of mass are not scaled. Only
1207 one COM is used, even when there are multiple molecules with
1208 position restraints. For calculating the COM of the reference
1209 coordinates in the starting configuration, periodic boundary
1210 conditions are not taken into account.
1216 Simulated annealing is controlled separately for each temperature
1217 group in |Gromacs|. The reference temperature is a piecewise linear
1218 function, but you can use an arbitrary number of points for each
1219 group, and choose either a single sequence or a periodic behaviour for
1220 each group. The actual annealing is performed by dynamically changing
1221 the reference temperature used in the thermostat algorithm selected,
1222 so remember that the system will usually not instantaneously reach the
1223 reference temperature!
1227 Type of annealing for each temperature group
1231 No simulated annealing - just couple to reference temperature value.
1233 .. mdp-value:: single
1235 A single sequence of annealing points. If your simulation is
1236 longer than the time of the last point, the temperature will be
1237 coupled to this constant value after the annealing sequence has
1238 reached the last time point.
1240 .. mdp-value:: periodic
1242 The annealing will start over at the first reference point once
1243 the last reference time is reached. This is repeated until the
1246 .. mdp:: annealing-npoints
1248 A list with the number of annealing reference/control points used
1249 for each temperature group. Use 0 for groups that are not
1250 annealed. The number of entries should equal the number of
1253 .. mdp:: annealing-time
1255 List of times at the annealing reference/control points for each
1256 group. If you are using periodic annealing, the times will be used
1257 modulo the last value, *i.e.* if the values are 0, 5, 10, and 15,
1258 the coupling will restart at the 0ps value after 15ps, 30ps, 45ps,
1259 etc. The number of entries should equal the sum of the numbers
1260 given in :mdp:`annealing-npoints`.
1262 .. mdp:: annealing-temp
1264 List of temperatures at the annealing reference/control points for
1265 each group. The number of entries should equal the sum of the
1266 numbers given in :mdp:`annealing-npoints`.
1268 Confused? OK, let's use an example. Assume you have two temperature
1269 groups, set the group selections to ``annealing = single periodic``,
1270 the number of points of each group to ``annealing-npoints = 3 4``, the
1271 times to ``annealing-time = 0 3 6 0 2 4 6`` and finally temperatures
1272 to ``annealing-temp = 298 280 270 298 320 320 298``. The first group
1273 will be coupled to 298K at 0ps, but the reference temperature will
1274 drop linearly to reach 280K at 3ps, and then linearly between 280K and
1275 270K from 3ps to 6ps. After this is stays constant, at 270K. The
1276 second group is coupled to 298K at 0ps, it increases linearly to 320K
1277 at 2ps, where it stays constant until 4ps. Between 4ps and 6ps it
1278 decreases to 298K, and then it starts over with the same pattern
1279 again, *i.e.* rising linearly from 298K to 320K between 6ps and
1280 8ps. Check the summary printed by :ref:`gmx grompp` if you are unsure!
1290 Do not generate velocities. The velocities are set to zero
1291 when there are no velocities in the input structure file.
1295 Generate velocities in :ref:`gmx grompp` according to a
1296 Maxwell distribution at temperature :mdp:`gen-temp`, with
1297 random seed :mdp:`gen-seed`. This is only meaningful with
1298 integrator :mdp-value:`integrator=md`.
1303 temperature for Maxwell distribution
1308 used to initialize random generator for random velocities,
1309 when :mdp:`gen-seed` is set to -1, a pseudo random seed is
1316 .. mdp:: constraints
1320 No constraints except for those defined explicitly in the
1321 topology, *i.e.* bonds are represented by a harmonic (or other)
1322 potential or a Morse potential (depending on the setting of
1323 :mdp:`morse`) and angles by a harmonic (or other) potential.
1325 .. mdp-value:: h-bonds
1327 Convert the bonds with H-atoms to constraints.
1329 .. mdp-value:: all-bonds
1331 Convert all bonds to constraints.
1333 .. mdp-value:: h-angles
1335 Convert all bonds and additionally the angles that involve
1336 H-atoms to bond-constraints.
1338 .. mdp-value:: all-angles
1340 Convert all bonds and angles to bond-constraints.
1342 .. mdp:: constraint-algorithm
1344 .. mdp-value:: LINCS
1346 LINear Constraint Solver. With domain decomposition the parallel
1347 version P-LINCS is used. The accuracy in set with
1348 :mdp:`lincs-order`, which sets the number of matrices in the
1349 expansion for the matrix inversion. After the matrix inversion
1350 correction the algorithm does an iterative correction to
1351 compensate for lengthening due to rotation. The number of such
1352 iterations can be controlled with :mdp:`lincs-iter`. The root
1353 mean square relative constraint deviation is printed to the log
1354 file every :mdp:`nstlog` steps. If a bond rotates more than
1355 :mdp:`lincs-warnangle` in one step, a warning will be printed
1356 both to the log file and to ``stderr``. LINCS should not be used
1357 with coupled angle constraints.
1359 .. mdp-value:: SHAKE
1361 SHAKE is slightly slower and less stable than LINCS, but does
1362 work with angle constraints. The relative tolerance is set with
1363 :mdp:`shake-tol`, 0.0001 is a good value for "normal" MD. SHAKE
1364 does not support constraints between atoms on different nodes,
1365 thus it can not be used with domain decompositon when inter
1366 charge-group constraints are present. SHAKE can not be used with
1367 energy minimization.
1369 .. mdp:: continuation
1371 This option was formerly known as unconstrained-start.
1375 apply constraints to the start configuration and reset shells
1379 do not apply constraints to the start configuration and do not
1380 reset shells, useful for exact coninuation and reruns
1385 relative tolerance for SHAKE
1387 .. mdp:: lincs-order
1390 Highest order in the expansion of the constraint coupling
1391 matrix. When constraints form triangles, an additional expansion of
1392 the same order is applied on top of the normal expansion only for
1393 the couplings within such triangles. For "normal" MD simulations an
1394 order of 4 usually suffices, 6 is needed for large time-steps with
1395 virtual sites or BD. For accurate energy minimization an order of 8
1396 or more might be required. With domain decomposition, the cell size
1397 is limited by the distance spanned by :mdp:`lincs-order` +1
1398 constraints. When one wants to scale further than this limit, one
1399 can decrease :mdp:`lincs-order` and increase :mdp:`lincs-iter`,
1400 since the accuracy does not deteriorate when (1+ :mdp:`lincs-iter`
1401 )* :mdp:`lincs-order` remains constant.
1406 Number of iterations to correct for rotational lengthening in
1407 LINCS. For normal runs a single step is sufficient, but for NVE
1408 runs where you want to conserve energy accurately or for accurate
1409 energy minimization you might want to increase it to 2.
1411 .. mdp:: lincs-warnangle
1414 maximum angle that a bond can rotate before LINCS will complain
1420 bonds are represented by a harmonic potential
1424 bonds are represented by a Morse potential
1427 Energy group exclusions
1428 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1430 .. mdp:: energygrp-excl
1432 Pairs of energy groups for which all non-bonded interactions are
1433 excluded. An example: if you have two energy groups ``Protein`` and
1434 ``SOL``, specifying ``energygrp-excl = Protein Protein SOL SOL``
1435 would give only the non-bonded interactions between the protein and
1436 the solvent. This is especially useful for speeding up energy
1437 calculations with ``mdrun -rerun`` and for excluding interactions
1438 within frozen groups.
1447 When set to 1 there is a wall at ``z=0``, when set to 2 there is
1448 also a wall at ``z=z-box``. Walls can only be used with :mdp:`pbc`
1449 ``=xy``. When set to 2 pressure coupling and Ewald summation can be
1450 used (it is usually best to use semiisotropic pressure coupling
1451 with the ``x/y`` compressibility set to 0, as otherwise the surface
1452 area will change). Walls interact wit the rest of the system
1453 through an optional :mdp:`wall-atomtype`. Energy groups ``wall0``
1454 and ``wall1`` (for :mdp:`nwall` =2) are added automatically to
1455 monitor the interaction of energy groups with each wall. The center
1456 of mass motion removal will be turned off in the ``z``-direction.
1458 .. mdp:: wall-atomtype
1460 the atom type name in the force field for each wall. By (for
1461 example) defining a special wall atom type in the topology with its
1462 own combination rules, this allows for independent tuning of the
1463 interaction of each atomtype with the walls.
1469 LJ integrated over the volume behind the wall: 9-3 potential
1473 LJ integrated over the wall surface: 10-4 potential
1477 direct LJ potential with the ``z`` distance from the wall
1481 user defined potentials indexed with the ``z`` distance from the
1482 wall, the tables are read analogously to the
1483 :mdp:`energygrp-table` option, where the first name is for a
1484 "normal" energy group and the second name is ``wall0`` or
1485 ``wall1``, only the dispersion and repulsion columns are used
1487 .. mdp:: wall-r-linpot
1490 Below this distance from the wall the potential is continued
1491 linearly and thus the force is constant. Setting this option to a
1492 postive value is especially useful for equilibration when some
1493 atoms are beyond a wall. When the value is <=0 (<0 for
1494 :mdp:`wall-type` =table), a fatal error is generated when atoms
1497 .. mdp:: wall-density
1500 the number density of the atoms for each wall for wall types 9-3
1503 .. mdp:: wall-ewald-zfac
1506 The scaling factor for the third box vector for Ewald summation
1507 only, the minimum is 2. Ewald summation can only be used with
1508 :mdp:`nwall` =2, where one should use :mdp:`ewald-geometry`
1509 ``=3dc``. The empty layer in the box serves to decrease the
1510 unphysical Coulomb interaction between periodic images.
1516 Note that where pulling coordinate are applicable, there can be more
1517 than one (set with :mdp:`pull-ncoords`) and multiple related :ref:`mdp`
1518 variables will exist accordingly. Documentation references to things
1519 like :mdp:`pull-coord1-vec` should be understood to apply to to the
1520 applicable pulling coordinate.
1526 No center of mass pulling. All the following pull options will
1527 be ignored (and if present in the :ref:`mdp` file, they unfortunately
1532 Center of mass pulling will be applied on 1 or more groups using
1533 1 or more pull coordinates.
1535 .. mdp:: pull-cylinder-r
1538 the radius of the cylinder for
1539 :mdp:`pull-coord1-geometry` = :mdp-value:`cylinder`
1541 .. mdp:: pull-constr-tol
1544 the relative constraint tolerance for constraint pulling
1546 .. mdp:: pull-print-com
1550 do not print the COM for any group
1554 print the COM of all groups for all pull coordinates
1556 .. mdp:: pull-print-ref-value
1560 do not print the reference value for each pull coordinate
1564 print the reference value for each pull coordinate
1566 .. mdp:: pull-print-components
1570 only print the distance for each pull coordinate
1574 print the distance and Cartesian components selected in
1575 :mdp:`pull-coord1-dim`
1577 .. mdp:: pull-nstxout
1580 frequency for writing out the COMs of all the pull group (0 is
1583 .. mdp:: pull-nstfout
1586 frequency for writing out the force of all the pulled group
1590 .. mdp:: pull-ngroups
1593 The number of pull groups, not including the absolute reference
1594 group, when used. Pull groups can be reused in multiple pull
1595 coordinates. Below only the pull options for group 1 are given,
1596 further groups simply increase the group index number.
1598 .. mdp:: pull-ncoords
1601 The number of pull coordinates. Below only the pull options for
1602 coordinate 1 are given, further coordinates simply increase the
1603 coordinate index number.
1605 .. mdp:: pull-group1-name
1607 The name of the pull group, is looked up in the index file or in
1608 the default groups to obtain the atoms involved.
1610 .. mdp:: pull-group1-weights
1612 Optional relative weights which are multiplied with the masses of
1613 the atoms to give the total weight for the COM. The number should
1614 be 0, meaning all 1, or the number of atoms in the pull group.
1616 .. mdp:: pull-group1-pbcatom
1619 The reference atom for the treatment of periodic boundary
1620 conditions inside the group (this has no effect on the treatment of
1621 the pbc between groups). This option is only important when the
1622 diameter of the pull group is larger than half the shortest box
1623 vector. For determining the COM, all atoms in the group are put at
1624 their periodic image which is closest to
1625 :mdp:`pull-group1-pbcatom`. A value of 0 means that the middle
1626 atom (number wise) is used. This parameter is not used with
1627 :mdp:`pull-coord1-geometry` cylinder. A value of -1 turns on cosine
1628 weighting, which is useful for a group of molecules in a periodic
1629 system, *e.g.* a water slab (see Engin et al. J. Chem. Phys. B
1632 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-type
1634 .. mdp-value:: umbrella
1636 Center of mass pulling using an umbrella potential between the
1637 reference group and one or more groups.
1639 .. mdp-value:: constraint
1641 Center of mass pulling using a constraint between the reference
1642 group and one or more groups. The setup is identical to the
1643 option umbrella, except for the fact that a rigid constraint is
1644 applied instead of a harmonic potential.
1646 .. mdp-value:: constant-force
1648 Center of mass pulling using a linear potential and therefore a
1649 constant force. For this option there is no reference position
1650 and therefore the parameters :mdp:`pull-coord1-init` and
1651 :mdp:`pull-coord1-rate` are not used.
1653 .. mdp-value:: flat-bottom
1655 At distances above :mdp:`pull-coord1-init` a harmonic potential
1656 is applied, otherwise no potential is applied.
1658 .. mdp-value:: flat-bottom-high
1660 At distances below :mdp:`pull-coord1-init` a harmonic potential
1661 is applied, otherwise no potential is applied.
1663 .. mdp-value:: external-potential
1665 An external potential that needs to be provided by another
1668 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-potential-provider
1670 The name of the external module that provides the potential for
1671 the case where :mdp:`pull-coord1-type` is external-potential.
1673 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-geometry
1675 .. mdp-value:: distance
1677 Pull along the vector connecting the two groups. Components can
1678 be selected with :mdp:`pull-coord1-dim`.
1680 .. mdp-value:: direction
1682 Pull in the direction of :mdp:`pull-coord1-vec`.
1684 .. mdp-value:: direction-periodic
1686 As :mdp-value:`direction`, but allows the distance to be larger
1687 than half the box size. With this geometry the box should not be
1688 dynamic (*e.g.* no pressure scaling) in the pull dimensions and
1689 the pull force is not added to virial.
1691 .. mdp-value:: direction-relative
1693 As :mdp-value:`direction`, but the pull vector is the vector
1694 that points from the COM of a third to the COM of a fourth pull
1695 group. This means that 4 groups need to be supplied in
1696 :mdp:`pull-coord1-groups`. Note that the pull force will give
1697 rise to a torque on the pull vector, which is turn leads to
1698 forces perpendicular to the pull vector on the two groups
1699 defining the vector. If you want a pull group to move between
1700 the two groups defining the vector, simply use the union of
1701 these two groups as the reference group.
1703 .. mdp-value:: cylinder
1705 Designed for pulling with respect to a layer where the reference
1706 COM is given by a local cylindrical part of the reference group.
1707 The pulling is in the direction of :mdp:`pull-coord1-vec`. From
1708 the first of the two groups in :mdp:`pull-coord1-groups` a
1709 cylinder is selected around the axis going through the COM of
1710 the second group with direction :mdp:`pull-coord1-vec` with
1711 radius :mdp:`pull-cylinder-r`. Weights of the atoms decrease
1712 continously to zero as the radial distance goes from 0 to
1713 :mdp:`pull-cylinder-r` (mass weighting is also used). The radial
1714 dependence gives rise to radial forces on both pull groups.
1715 Note that the radius should be smaller than half the box size.
1716 For tilted cylinders they should be even smaller than half the
1717 box size since the distance of an atom in the reference group
1718 from the COM of the pull group has both a radial and an axial
1719 component. This geometry is not supported with constraint
1722 .. mdp-value:: angle
1724 Pull along an angle defined by four groups. The angle is
1725 defined as the angle between two vectors: the vector connecting
1726 the COM of the first group to the COM of the second group and
1727 the vector connecting the COM of the third group to the COM of
1730 .. mdp-value:: angle-axis
1732 As :mdp-value:`angle` but the second vector is given by :mdp:`pull-coord1-vec`.
1733 Thus, only the two groups that define the first vector need to be given.
1735 .. mdp-value:: dihedral
1737 Pull along a dihedral angle defined by six groups. These pairwise
1738 define three vectors: the vector connecting the COM of group 1
1739 to the COM of group 2, the COM of group 3 to the COM of group 4,
1740 and the COM of group 5 to the COM group 6. The dihedral angle is
1741 then defined as the angle between two planes: the plane spanned by the
1742 the two first vectors and the plane spanned the two last vectors.
1745 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-groups
1747 The group indices on which this pull coordinate will operate.
1748 The number of group indices required is geometry dependent.
1749 The first index can be 0, in which case an
1750 absolute reference of :mdp:`pull-coord1-origin` is used. With an
1751 absolute reference the system is no longer translation invariant
1752 and one should think about what to do with the center of mass
1755 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-dim
1758 Selects the dimensions that this pull coordinate acts on and that
1759 are printed to the output files when
1760 :mdp:`pull-print-components` = :mdp-value:`yes`. With
1761 :mdp:`pull-coord1-geometry` = :mdp-value:`distance`, only Cartesian
1762 components set to Y contribute to the distance. Thus setting this
1763 to Y Y N results in a distance in the x/y plane. With other
1764 geometries all dimensions with non-zero entries in
1765 :mdp:`pull-coord1-vec` should be set to Y, the values for other
1766 dimensions only affect the output.
1768 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-origin
1771 The pull reference position for use with an absolute reference.
1773 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-vec
1776 The pull direction. :ref:`gmx grompp` normalizes the vector.
1778 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-start
1782 do not modify :mdp:`pull-coord1-init`
1786 add the COM distance of the starting conformation to
1787 :mdp:`pull-coord1-init`
1789 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-init
1791 (0.0) \[nm\] / \[deg\]
1792 The reference distance at t=0.
1794 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-rate
1796 (0) \[nm/ps\] / \[deg/ps\]
1797 The rate of change of the reference position.
1799 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-k
1801 (0) \[kJ mol-1 nm-2\] / \[kJ mol-1 nm-1\] / \[kJ mol-1 rad-2\] / \[kJ mol-1 rad-1\]
1802 The force constant. For umbrella pulling this is the harmonic force
1803 constant in kJ mol-1 nm-2 (or kJ mol-1 rad-2 for angles). For constant force pulling this is the
1804 force constant of the linear potential, and thus the negative (!)
1805 of the constant force in kJ mol-1 nm-1 (or kJ mol-1 rad-1 for angles).
1806 Note that for angles the force constant is expressed in terms of radians
1807 (while :mdp:`pull-coord1-init` and :mdp:`pull-coord1-rate` are expressed in degrees).
1809 .. mdp:: pull-coord1-kB
1811 (pull-k1) \[kJ mol-1 nm-2\] / \[kJ mol-1 nm-1\] / \[kJ mol-1 rad-2\] / \[kJ mol-1 rad-1\]
1812 As :mdp:`pull-coord1-k`, but for state B. This is only used when
1813 :mdp:`free-energy` is turned on. The force constant is then (1 -
1814 lambda) * :mdp:`pull-coord1-k` + lambda * :mdp:`pull-coord1-kB`.
1824 ignore distance restraint information in topology file
1826 .. mdp-value:: simple
1828 simple (per-molecule) distance restraints.
1830 .. mdp-value:: ensemble
1832 distance restraints over an ensemble of molecules in one
1833 simulation box. Normally, one would perform ensemble averaging
1834 over multiple subsystems, each in a separate box, using ``mdrun
1835 -multi``. Supply ``topol0.tpr``, ``topol1.tpr``, ... with
1836 different coordinates and/or velocities. The environment
1837 variable ``GMX_DISRE_ENSEMBLE_SIZE`` sets the number of systems
1838 within each ensemble (usually equal to the ``mdrun -multi``
1841 .. mdp:: disre-weighting
1843 .. mdp-value:: equal
1845 divide the restraint force equally over all atom pairs in the
1848 .. mdp-value:: conservative
1850 the forces are the derivative of the restraint potential, this
1851 results in an weighting of the atom pairs to the reciprocal
1852 seventh power of the displacement. The forces are conservative
1853 when :mdp:`disre-tau` is zero.
1855 .. mdp:: disre-mixed
1859 the violation used in the calculation of the restraint force is
1860 the time-averaged violation
1864 the violation used in the calculation of the restraint force is
1865 the square root of the product of the time-averaged violation
1866 and the instantaneous violation
1870 (1000) \[kJ mol-1 nm-2\]
1871 force constant for distance restraints, which is multiplied by a
1872 (possibly) different factor for each restraint given in the `fac`
1873 column of the interaction in the topology file.
1878 time constant for distance restraints running average. A value of
1879 zero turns off time averaging.
1881 .. mdp:: nstdisreout
1884 period between steps when the running time-averaged and
1885 instantaneous distances of all atom pairs involved in restraints
1886 are written to the energy file (can make the energy file very
1893 ignore orientation restraint information in topology file
1897 use orientation restraints, ensemble averaging can be performed
1903 force constant for orientation restraints, which is multiplied by a
1904 (possibly) different weight factor for each restraint, can be set
1905 to zero to obtain the orientations from a free simulation
1910 time constant for orientation restraints running average. A value
1911 of zero turns off time averaging.
1913 .. mdp:: orire-fitgrp
1915 fit group for orientation restraining. This group of atoms is used
1916 to determine the rotation **R** of the system with respect to the
1917 reference orientation. The reference orientation is the starting
1918 conformation of the first subsystem. For a protein, backbone is a
1921 .. mdp:: nstorireout
1924 period between steps when the running time-averaged and
1925 instantaneous orientations for all restraints, and the molecular
1926 order tensor are written to the energy file (can make the energy
1930 Free energy calculations
1931 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1933 .. mdp:: free-energy
1937 Only use topology A.
1941 Interpolate between topology A (lambda=0) to topology B
1942 (lambda=1) and write the derivative of the Hamiltonian with
1943 respect to lambda (as specified with :mdp:`dhdl-derivatives`),
1944 or the Hamiltonian differences with respect to other lambda
1945 values (as specified with foreign lambda) to the energy file
1946 and/or to ``dhdl.xvg``, where they can be processed by, for
1947 example :ref:`gmx bar`. The potentials, bond-lengths and angles
1948 are interpolated linearly as described in the manual. When
1949 :mdp:`sc-alpha` is larger than zero, soft-core potentials are
1950 used for the LJ and Coulomb interactions.
1954 Turns on expanded ensemble simulation, where the alchemical state
1955 becomes a dynamic variable, allowing jumping between different
1956 Hamiltonians. See the expanded ensemble options for controlling how
1957 expanded ensemble simulations are performed. The different
1958 Hamiltonians used in expanded ensemble simulations are defined by
1959 the other free energy options.
1961 .. mdp:: init-lambda
1964 starting value for lambda (float). Generally, this should only be
1965 used with slow growth (*i.e.* nonzero :mdp:`delta-lambda`). In
1966 other cases, :mdp:`init-lambda-state` should be specified
1967 instead. Must be greater than or equal to 0.
1969 .. mdp:: delta-lambda
1972 increment per time step for lambda
1974 .. mdp:: init-lambda-state
1977 starting value for the lambda state (integer). Specifies which
1978 columm of the lambda vector (:mdp:`coul-lambdas`,
1979 :mdp:`vdw-lambdas`, :mdp:`bonded-lambdas`,
1980 :mdp:`restraint-lambdas`, :mdp:`mass-lambdas`,
1981 :mdp:`temperature-lambdas`, :mdp:`fep-lambdas`) should be
1982 used. This is a zero-based index: :mdp:`init-lambda-state` 0 means
1983 the first column, and so on.
1985 .. mdp:: fep-lambdas
1988 Zero, one or more lambda values for which Delta H values will be
1989 determined and written to dhdl.xvg every :mdp:`nstdhdl`
1990 steps. Values must be between 0 and 1. Free energy differences
1991 between different lambda values can then be determined with
1992 :ref:`gmx bar`. :mdp:`fep-lambdas` is different from the
1993 other -lambdas keywords because all components of the lambda vector
1994 that are not specified will use :mdp:`fep-lambdas` (including
1995 :mdp:`restraint-lambdas` and therefore the pull code restraints).
1997 .. mdp:: coul-lambdas
2000 Zero, one or more lambda values for which Delta H values will be
2001 determined and written to dhdl.xvg every :mdp:`nstdhdl`
2002 steps. Values must be between 0 and 1. Only the electrostatic
2003 interactions are controlled with this component of the lambda
2004 vector (and only if the lambda=0 and lambda=1 states have differing
2005 electrostatic interactions).
2007 .. mdp:: vdw-lambdas
2010 Zero, one or more lambda values for which Delta H values will be
2011 determined and written to dhdl.xvg every :mdp:`nstdhdl`
2012 steps. Values must be between 0 and 1. Only the van der Waals
2013 interactions are controlled with this component of the lambda
2016 .. mdp:: bonded-lambdas
2019 Zero, one or more lambda values for which Delta H values will be
2020 determined and written to dhdl.xvg every :mdp:`nstdhdl`
2021 steps. Values must be between 0 and 1. Only the bonded interactions
2022 are controlled with this component of the lambda vector.
2024 .. mdp:: restraint-lambdas
2027 Zero, one or more lambda values for which Delta H values will be
2028 determined and written to dhdl.xvg every :mdp:`nstdhdl`
2029 steps. Values must be between 0 and 1. Only the restraint
2030 interactions: dihedral restraints, and the pull code restraints are
2031 controlled with this component of the lambda vector.
2033 .. mdp:: mass-lambdas
2036 Zero, one or more lambda values for which Delta H values will be
2037 determined and written to dhdl.xvg every :mdp:`nstdhdl`
2038 steps. Values must be between 0 and 1. Only the particle masses are
2039 controlled with this component of the lambda vector.
2041 .. mdp:: temperature-lambdas
2044 Zero, one or more lambda values for which Delta H values will be
2045 determined and written to dhdl.xvg every :mdp:`nstdhdl`
2046 steps. Values must be between 0 and 1. Only the temperatures
2047 controlled with this component of the lambda vector. Note that
2048 these lambdas should not be used for replica exchange, only for
2049 simulated tempering.
2051 .. mdp:: calc-lambda-neighbors
2054 Controls the number of lambda values for which Delta H values will
2055 be calculated and written out, if :mdp:`init-lambda-state` has
2056 been set. A positive value will limit the number of lambda points
2057 calculated to only the nth neighbors of :mdp:`init-lambda-state`:
2058 for example, if :mdp:`init-lambda-state` is 5 and this parameter
2059 has a value of 2, energies for lambda points 3-7 will be calculated
2060 and writen out. A value of -1 means all lambda points will be
2061 written out. For normal BAR such as with :ref:`gmx bar`, a value of
2062 1 is sufficient, while for MBAR -1 should be used.
2067 the soft-core alpha parameter, a value of 0 results in linear
2068 interpolation of the LJ and Coulomb interactions
2073 the power of the radial term in the soft-core equation. Possible
2074 values are 6 and 48. 6 is more standard, and is the default. When
2075 48 is used, then sc-alpha should generally be much lower (between
2081 Whether to apply the soft-core free energy interaction
2082 transformation to the Columbic interaction of a molecule. Default
2083 is no, as it is generally more efficient to turn off the Coulomic
2084 interactions linearly before turning off the van der Waals
2085 interactions. Note that it is only taken into account when lambda
2086 states are used, not with :mdp:`couple-lambda0` /
2087 :mdp:`couple-lambda1`, and you can still turn off soft-core
2088 interactions by setting :mdp:`sc-alpha` to 0.
2093 the power for lambda in the soft-core function, only the values 1
2099 the soft-core sigma for particles which have a C6 or C12 parameter
2100 equal to zero or a sigma smaller than :mdp:`sc-sigma`
2102 .. mdp:: couple-moltype
2104 Here one can supply a molecule type (as defined in the topology)
2105 for calculating solvation or coupling free energies. There is a
2106 special option ``system`` that couples all molecule types in the
2107 system. This can be useful for equilibrating a system starting from
2108 (nearly) random coordinates. :mdp:`free-energy` has to be turned
2109 on. The Van der Waals interactions and/or charges in this molecule
2110 type can be turned on or off between lambda=0 and lambda=1,
2111 depending on the settings of :mdp:`couple-lambda0` and
2112 :mdp:`couple-lambda1`. If you want to decouple one of several
2113 copies of a molecule, you need to copy and rename the molecule
2114 definition in the topology.
2116 .. mdp:: couple-lambda0
2118 .. mdp-value:: vdw-q
2120 all interactions are on at lambda=0
2124 the charges are zero (no Coulomb interactions) at lambda=0
2128 the Van der Waals interactions are turned at lambda=0; soft-core
2129 interactions will be required to avoid singularities
2133 the Van der Waals interactions are turned off and the charges
2134 are zero at lambda=0; soft-core interactions will be required to
2135 avoid singularities.
2137 .. mdp:: couple-lambda1
2139 analogous to :mdp:`couple-lambda1`, but for lambda=1
2141 .. mdp:: couple-intramol
2145 All intra-molecular non-bonded interactions for moleculetype
2146 :mdp:`couple-moltype` are replaced by exclusions and explicit
2147 pair interactions. In this manner the decoupled state of the
2148 molecule corresponds to the proper vacuum state without
2149 periodicity effects.
2153 The intra-molecular Van der Waals and Coulomb interactions are
2154 also turned on/off. This can be useful for partitioning
2155 free-energies of relatively large molecules, where the
2156 intra-molecular non-bonded interactions might lead to
2157 kinetically trapped vacuum conformations. The 1-4 pair
2158 interactions are not turned off.
2163 the frequency for writing dH/dlambda and possibly Delta H to
2164 dhdl.xvg, 0 means no ouput, should be a multiple of
2165 :mdp:`nstcalcenergy`.
2167 .. mdp:: dhdl-derivatives
2171 If yes (the default), the derivatives of the Hamiltonian with
2172 respect to lambda at each :mdp:`nstdhdl` step are written
2173 out. These values are needed for interpolation of linear energy
2174 differences with :ref:`gmx bar` (although the same can also be
2175 achieved with the right foreign lambda setting, that may not be as
2176 flexible), or with thermodynamic integration
2178 .. mdp:: dhdl-print-energy
2182 Include either the total or the potential energy in the dhdl
2183 file. Options are 'no', 'potential', or 'total'. This information
2184 is needed for later free energy analysis if the states of interest
2185 are at different temperatures. If all states are at the same
2186 temperature, this information is not needed. 'potential' is useful
2187 in case one is using ``mdrun -rerun`` to generate the ``dhdl.xvg``
2188 file. When rerunning from an existing trajectory, the kinetic
2189 energy will often not be correct, and thus one must compute the
2190 residual free energy from the potential alone, with the kinetic
2191 energy component computed analytically.
2193 .. mdp:: separate-dhdl-file
2197 The free energy values that are calculated (as specified with
2198 the foreign lambda and :mdp:`dhdl-derivatives` settings) are
2199 written out to a separate file, with the default name
2200 ``dhdl.xvg``. This file can be used directly with :ref:`gmx
2205 The free energy values are written out to the energy output file
2206 (``ener.edr``, in accumulated blocks at every :mdp:`nstenergy`
2207 steps), where they can be extracted with :ref:`gmx energy` or
2208 used directly with :ref:`gmx bar`.
2210 .. mdp:: dh-hist-size
2213 If nonzero, specifies the size of the histogram into which the
2214 Delta H values (specified with foreign lambda) and the derivative
2215 dH/dl values are binned, and written to ener.edr. This can be used
2216 to save disk space while calculating free energy differences. One
2217 histogram gets written for each foreign lambda and two for the
2218 dH/dl, at every :mdp:`nstenergy` step. Be aware that incorrect
2219 histogram settings (too small size or too wide bins) can introduce
2220 errors. Do not use histograms unless you're certain you need it.
2222 .. mdp:: dh-hist-spacing
2225 Specifies the bin width of the histograms, in energy units. Used in
2226 conjunction with :mdp:`dh-hist-size`. This size limits the
2227 accuracy with which free energies can be calculated. Do not use
2228 histograms unless you're certain you need it.
2231 Expanded Ensemble calculations
2232 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2234 .. mdp:: nstexpanded
2236 The number of integration steps beween attempted moves changing the
2237 system Hamiltonian in expanded ensemble simulations. Must be a
2238 multiple of :mdp:`nstcalcenergy`, but can be greater or less than
2245 No Monte Carlo in state space is performed.
2247 .. mdp-value:: metropolis-transition
2249 Uses the Metropolis weights to update the expanded ensemble
2250 weight of each state. Min{1,exp(-(beta_new u_new - beta_old
2253 .. mdp-value:: barker-transition
2255 Uses the Barker transition critera to update the expanded
2256 ensemble weight of each state i, defined by exp(-beta_new
2257 u_new)/(exp(-beta_new u_new)+exp(-beta_old u_old))
2259 .. mdp-value:: wang-landau
2261 Uses the Wang-Landau algorithm (in state space, not energy
2262 space) to update the expanded ensemble weights.
2264 .. mdp-value:: min-variance
2266 Uses the minimum variance updating method of Escobedo et al. to
2267 update the expanded ensemble weights. Weights will not be the
2268 free energies, but will rather emphasize states that need more
2269 sampling to give even uncertainty.
2271 .. mdp:: lmc-mc-move
2275 No Monte Carlo in state space is performed.
2277 .. mdp-value:: metropolis-transition
2279 Randomly chooses a new state up or down, then uses the
2280 Metropolis critera to decide whether to accept or reject:
2281 Min{1,exp(-(beta_new u_new - beta_old u_old)}
2283 .. mdp-value:: barker-transition
2285 Randomly chooses a new state up or down, then uses the Barker
2286 transition critera to decide whether to accept or reject:
2287 exp(-beta_new u_new)/(exp(-beta_new u_new)+exp(-beta_old u_old))
2289 .. mdp-value:: gibbs
2291 Uses the conditional weights of the state given the coordinate
2292 (exp(-beta_i u_i) / sum_k exp(beta_i u_i) to decide which state
2295 .. mdp-value:: metropolized-gibbs
2297 Uses the conditional weights of the state given the coordinate
2298 (exp(-beta_i u_i) / sum_k exp(beta_i u_i) to decide which state
2299 to move to, EXCLUDING the current state, then uses a rejection
2300 step to ensure detailed balance. Always more efficient that
2301 Gibbs, though only marginally so in many situations, such as
2302 when only the nearest neighbors have decent phase space
2308 random seed to use for Monte Carlo moves in state space. When
2309 :mdp:`lmc-seed` is set to -1, a pseudo random seed is us
2311 .. mdp:: mc-temperature
2313 Temperature used for acceptance/rejection for Monte Carlo moves. If
2314 not specified, the temperature of the simulation specified in the
2315 first group of :mdp:`ref-t` is used.
2320 The cutoff for the histogram of state occupancies to be reset, and
2321 the free energy incrementor to be changed from delta to delta *
2322 :mdp:`wl-scale`. If we define the Nratio = (number of samples at
2323 each histogram) / (average number of samples at each
2324 histogram). :mdp:`wl-ratio` of 0.8 means that means that the
2325 histogram is only considered flat if all Nratio > 0.8 AND
2326 simultaneously all 1/Nratio > 0.8.
2331 Each time the histogram is considered flat, then the current value
2332 of the Wang-Landau incrementor for the free energies is multiplied
2333 by :mdp:`wl-scale`. Value must be between 0 and 1.
2335 .. mdp:: init-wl-delta
2338 The initial value of the Wang-Landau incrementor in kT. Some value
2339 near 1 kT is usually most efficient, though sometimes a value of
2340 2-3 in units of kT works better if the free energy differences are
2343 .. mdp:: wl-oneovert
2346 Set Wang-Landau incrementor to scale with 1/(simulation time) in
2347 the large sample limit. There is significant evidence that the
2348 standard Wang-Landau algorithms in state space presented here
2349 result in free energies getting 'burned in' to incorrect values
2350 that depend on the initial state. when :mdp:`wl-oneovert` is true,
2351 then when the incrementor becomes less than 1/N, where N is the
2352 mumber of samples collected (and thus proportional to the data
2353 collection time, hence '1 over t'), then the Wang-Lambda
2354 incrementor is set to 1/N, decreasing every step. Once this occurs,
2355 :mdp:`wl-ratio` is ignored, but the weights will still stop
2356 updating when the equilibration criteria set in
2357 :mdp:`lmc-weights-equil` is achieved.
2359 .. mdp:: lmc-repeats
2362 Controls the number of times that each Monte Carlo swap type is
2363 performed each iteration. In the limit of large numbers of Monte
2364 Carlo repeats, then all methods converge to Gibbs sampling. The
2365 value will generally not need to be different from 1.
2367 .. mdp:: lmc-gibbsdelta
2370 Limit Gibbs sampling to selected numbers of neighboring states. For
2371 Gibbs sampling, it is sometimes inefficient to perform Gibbs
2372 sampling over all of the states that are defined. A positive value
2373 of :mdp:`lmc-gibbsdelta` means that only states plus or minus
2374 :mdp:`lmc-gibbsdelta` are considered in exchanges up and down. A
2375 value of -1 means that all states are considered. For less than 100
2376 states, it is probably not that expensive to include all states.
2378 .. mdp:: lmc-forced-nstart
2381 Force initial state space sampling to generate weights. In order to
2382 come up with reasonable initial weights, this setting allows the
2383 simulation to drive from the initial to the final lambda state,
2384 with :mdp:`lmc-forced-nstart` steps at each state before moving on
2385 to the next lambda state. If :mdp:`lmc-forced-nstart` is
2386 sufficiently long (thousands of steps, perhaps), then the weights
2387 will be close to correct. However, in most cases, it is probably
2388 better to simply run the standard weight equilibration algorithms.
2390 .. mdp:: nst-transition-matrix
2393 Frequency of outputting the expanded ensemble transition matrix. A
2394 negative number means it will only be printed at the end of the
2397 .. mdp:: symmetrized-transition-matrix
2400 Whether to symmetrize the empirical transition matrix. In the
2401 infinite limit the matrix will be symmetric, but will diverge with
2402 statistical noise for short timescales. Forced symmetrization, by
2403 using the matrix T_sym = 1/2 (T + transpose(T)), removes problems
2404 like the existence of (small magnitude) negative eigenvalues.
2406 .. mdp:: mininum-var-min
2409 The min-variance strategy (option of :mdp:`lmc-stats` is only
2410 valid for larger number of samples, and can get stuck if too few
2411 samples are used at each state. :mdp:`mininum-var-min` is the
2412 minimum number of samples that each state that are allowed before
2413 the min-variance strategy is activated if selected.
2415 .. mdp:: init-lambda-weights
2417 The initial weights (free energies) used for the expanded ensemble
2418 states. Default is a vector of zero weights. format is similar to
2419 the lambda vector settings in :mdp:`fep-lambdas`, except the
2420 weights can be any floating point number. Units are kT. Its length
2421 must match the lambda vector lengths.
2423 .. mdp:: lmc-weights-equil
2427 Expanded ensemble weights continue to be updated throughout the
2432 The input expanded ensemble weights are treated as equilibrated,
2433 and are not updated throughout the simulation.
2435 .. mdp-value:: wl-delta
2437 Expanded ensemble weight updating is stopped when the
2438 Wang-Landau incrementor falls below this value.
2440 .. mdp-value:: number-all-lambda
2442 Expanded ensemble weight updating is stopped when the number of
2443 samples at all of the lambda states is greater than this value.
2445 .. mdp-value:: number-steps
2447 Expanded ensemble weight updating is stopped when the number of
2448 steps is greater than the level specified by this value.
2450 .. mdp-value:: number-samples
2452 Expanded ensemble weight updating is stopped when the number of
2453 total samples across all lambda states is greater than the level
2454 specified by this value.
2456 .. mdp-value:: count-ratio
2458 Expanded ensemble weight updating is stopped when the ratio of
2459 samples at the least sampled lambda state and most sampled
2460 lambda state greater than this value.
2462 .. mdp:: simulated-tempering
2465 Turn simulated tempering on or off. Simulated tempering is
2466 implemented as expanded ensemble sampling with different
2467 temperatures instead of different Hamiltonians.
2469 .. mdp:: sim-temp-low
2472 Low temperature for simulated tempering.
2474 .. mdp:: sim-temp-high
2477 High temperature for simulated tempering.
2479 .. mdp:: simulated-tempering-scaling
2481 Controls the way that the temperatures at intermediate lambdas are
2482 calculated from the :mdp:`temperature-lambdas` part of the lambda
2485 .. mdp-value:: linear
2487 Linearly interpolates the temperatures using the values of
2488 :mdp:`temperature-lambdas`, *i.e.* if :mdp:`sim-temp-low`
2489 =300, :mdp:`sim-temp-high` =400, then lambda=0.5 correspond to
2490 a temperature of 350. A nonlinear set of temperatures can always
2491 be implemented with uneven spacing in lambda.
2493 .. mdp-value:: geometric
2495 Interpolates temperatures geometrically between
2496 :mdp:`sim-temp-low` and :mdp:`sim-temp-high`. The i:th state
2497 has temperature :mdp:`sim-temp-low` * (:mdp:`sim-temp-high` /
2498 :mdp:`sim-temp-low`) raised to the power of
2499 (i/(ntemps-1)). This should give roughly equal exchange for
2500 constant heat capacity, though of course things simulations that
2501 involve protein folding have very high heat capacity peaks.
2503 .. mdp-value:: exponential
2505 Interpolates temperatures exponentially between
2506 :mdp:`sim-temp-low` and :mdp:`sim-temp-high`. The i:th state
2507 has temperature :mdp:`sim-temp-low` + (:mdp:`sim-temp-high` -
2508 :mdp:`sim-temp-low`)*((exp(:mdp:`temperature-lambdas`
2509 (i))-1)/(exp(1.0)-i)).
2517 groups for constant acceleration (*e.g.* ``Protein Sol``) all atoms
2518 in groups Protein and Sol will experience constant acceleration as
2519 specified in the :mdp:`accelerate` line
2524 acceleration for :mdp:`acc-grps`; x, y and z for each group
2525 (*e.g.* ``0.1 0.0 0.0 -0.1 0.0 0.0`` means that first group has
2526 constant acceleration of 0.1 nm ps-2 in X direction, second group
2531 Groups that are to be frozen (*i.e.* their X, Y, and/or Z position
2532 will not be updated; *e.g.* ``Lipid SOL``). :mdp:`freezedim`
2533 specifies for which dimension the freezing applies. To avoid
2534 spurious contibrutions to the virial and pressure due to large
2535 forces between completely frozen atoms you need to use energy group
2536 exclusions, this also saves computing time. Note that coordinates
2537 of frozen atoms are not scaled by pressure-coupling algorithms.
2541 dimensions for which groups in :mdp:`freezegrps` should be frozen,
2542 specify `Y` or `N` for X, Y and Z and for each group (*e.g.* ``Y Y
2543 N N N N`` means that particles in the first group can move only in
2544 Z direction. The particles in the second group can move in any
2547 .. mdp:: cos-acceleration
2550 the amplitude of the acceleration profile for calculating the
2551 viscosity. The acceleration is in the X-direction and the magnitude
2552 is :mdp:`cos-acceleration` cos(2 pi z/boxheight). Two terms are
2553 added to the energy file: the amplitude of the velocity profile and
2558 (0 0 0 0 0 0) \[nm ps-1\]
2559 The velocities of deformation for the box elements: a(x) b(y) c(z)
2560 b(x) c(x) c(y). Each step the box elements for which :mdp:`deform`
2561 is non-zero are calculated as: box(ts)+(t-ts)*deform, off-diagonal
2562 elements are corrected for periodicity. The coordinates are
2563 transformed accordingly. Frozen degrees of freedom are (purposely)
2564 also transformed. The time ts is set to t at the first step and at
2565 steps at which x and v are written to trajectory to ensure exact
2566 restarts. Deformation can be used together with semiisotropic or
2567 anisotropic pressure coupling when the appropriate
2568 compressibilities are set to zero. The diagonal elements can be
2569 used to strain a solid. The off-diagonal elements can be used to
2570 shear a solid or a liquid.
2576 .. mdp:: E-x ; E-y ; E-z
2578 If you want to use an electric field in a direction, enter 3
2579 numbers after the appropriate E-direction, the first number: the
2580 number of cosines, only 1 is implemented (with frequency 0) so
2581 enter 1, the second number: the strength of the electric field in V
2582 nm^-1, the third number: the phase of the cosine, you can enter any
2583 number here since a cosine of frequency zero has no phase.
2585 .. mdp:: E-xt; E-yt; E-zt
2587 Here you can specify a pulsed alternating electric field. The field
2588 has the form of a gaussian laser pulse:
2590 E(t) = E0 exp ( -(t-t0)^2/(2 sigma^2) ) cos(omega (t-t0))
2592 For example, the four parameters for direction x are set in the
2593 three fields of :mdp:`E-x` and :mdp:`E-xt` like
2597 E-xt = omega t0 sigma
2599 In the special case that sigma = 0, the exponential term is omitted
2600 and only the cosine term is used.
2602 More details in Carl Caleman and David van der Spoel: Picosecond
2603 Melting of Ice by an Infrared Laser Pulse - A Simulation Study
2604 Angew. Chem. Intl. Ed. 47 pp. 14 17-1420 (2008)
2608 Mixed quantum/classical molecular dynamics
2609 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2619 Do a QM/MM simulation. Several groups can be described at
2620 different QM levels separately. These are specified in the
2621 :mdp:`QMMM-grps` field separated by spaces. The level of *ab
2622 initio* theory at which the groups are described is specified by
2623 :mdp:`QMmethod` and :mdp:`QMbasis` Fields. Describing the
2624 groups at different levels of theory is only possible with the
2625 ONIOM QM/MM scheme, specified by :mdp:`QMMMscheme`.
2629 groups to be descibed at the QM level
2633 .. mdp-value:: normal
2635 normal QM/MM. There can only be one :mdp:`QMMM-grps` that is
2636 modelled at the :mdp:`QMmethod` and :mdp:`QMbasis` level of
2637 *ab initio* theory. The rest of the system is described at the
2638 MM level. The QM and MM subsystems interact as follows: MM point
2639 charges are included in the QM one-electron hamiltonian and all
2640 Lennard-Jones interactions are described at the MM level.
2642 .. mdp-value:: ONIOM
2644 The interaction between the subsystem is described using the
2645 ONIOM method by Morokuma and co-workers. There can be more than
2646 one :mdp:`QMMM-grps` each modeled at a different level of QM
2647 theory (:mdp:`QMmethod` and :mdp:`QMbasis`).
2652 Method used to compute the energy and gradients on the QM
2653 atoms. Available methods are AM1, PM3, RHF, UHF, DFT, B3LYP, MP2,
2654 CASSCF, and MMVB. For CASSCF, the number of electrons and orbitals
2655 included in the active space is specified by :mdp:`CASelectrons`
2656 and :mdp:`CASorbitals`.
2661 Basis set used to expand the electronic wavefuntion. Only Gaussian
2662 basis sets are currently available, *i.e.* ``STO-3G, 3-21G, 3-21G*,
2663 3-21+G*, 6-21G, 6-31G, 6-31G*, 6-31+G*,`` and ``6-311G``.
2668 The total charge in `e` of the :mdp:`QMMM-grps`. In case there are
2669 more than one :mdp:`QMMM-grps`, the total charge of each ONIOM
2670 layer needs to be specified separately.
2675 The multiplicity of the :mdp:`QMMM-grps`. In case there are more
2676 than one :mdp:`QMMM-grps`, the multiplicity of each ONIOM layer
2677 needs to be specified separately.
2679 .. mdp:: CASorbitals
2682 The number of orbitals to be included in the active space when
2683 doing a CASSCF computation.
2685 .. mdp:: CASelectrons
2688 The number of electrons to be included in the active space when
2689 doing a CASSCF computation.
2695 No surface hopping. The system is always in the electronic
2700 Do a QM/MM MD simulation on the excited state-potential energy
2701 surface and enforce a *diabatic* hop to the ground-state when
2702 the system hits the conical intersection hyperline in the course
2703 the simulation. This option only works in combination with the
2710 .. mdp:: implicit-solvent
2718 Do a simulation with implicit solvent using the Generalized Born
2719 formalism. Three different methods for calculating the Born
2720 radii are available, Still, HCT and OBC. These are specified
2721 with the :mdp:`gb-algorithm` field. The non-polar solvation is
2722 specified with the :mdp:`sa-algorithm` field.
2724 .. mdp:: gb-algorithm
2726 .. mdp-value:: Still
2728 Use the Still method to calculate the Born radii
2732 Use the Hawkins-Cramer-Truhlar method to calculate the Born
2737 Use the Onufriev-Bashford-Case method to calculate the Born
2743 Frequency to (re)-calculate the Born radii. For most practial
2744 purposes, setting a value larger than 1 violates energy
2745 conservation and leads to unstable trajectories.
2750 Cut-off for the calculation of the Born radii. Currently must be
2753 .. mdp:: gb-epsilon-solvent
2756 Dielectric constant for the implicit solvent
2758 .. mdp:: gb-saltconc
2761 Salt concentration for implicit solvent models, currently not used
2763 .. mdp:: gb-obc-alpha
2764 .. mdp:: gb-obc-beta
2765 .. mdp:: gb-obc-gamma
2767 Scale factors for the OBC model. Default values of 1, 0.78 and 4.85
2768 respectively are for OBC(II). Values for OBC(I) are 0.8, 0 and 2.91
2771 .. mdp:: gb-dielectric-offset
2774 Distance for the di-electric offset when calculating the Born
2775 radii. This is the offset between the center of each atom the
2776 center of the polarization energy for the corresponding atom
2778 .. mdp:: sa-algorithm
2780 .. mdp-value:: Ace-approximation
2782 Use an Ace-type approximation
2786 No non-polar solvation calculation done. For GBSA only the polar
2787 part gets calculated
2789 .. mdp:: sa-surface-tension
2792 Default value for surface tension with SA algorithms. The default
2793 value is -1; Note that if this default value is not changed it will
2794 be overridden by :ref:`gmx grompp` using values that are specific
2795 for the choice of radii algorithm (0.0049 kcal/mol/Angstrom^2 for
2796 Still, 0.0054 kcal/mol/Angstrom2 for HCT/OBC) Setting it to 0 will
2797 while using an sa-algorithm other than None means no non-polar
2798 calculations are done.
2801 Computational Electrophysiology
2802 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2803 Use these options to switch on and control ion/water position exchanges in "Computational
2804 Electrophysiology" simulation setups. (See the `reference manual`_ for details).
2810 Do not enable ion/water position exchanges.
2812 .. mdp-value:: X ; Y ; Z
2814 Allow for ion/water position exchanges along the chosen direction.
2815 In a typical setup with the membranes parallel to the x-y plane,
2816 ion/water pairs need to be exchanged in Z direction to sustain the
2817 requested ion concentrations in the compartments.
2819 .. mdp:: swap-frequency
2821 (1) The swap attempt frequency, i.e. every how many time steps the ion counts
2822 per compartment are determined and exchanges made if necessary.
2823 Normally it is not necessary to check at every time step.
2824 For typical Computational Electrophysiology setups, a value of about 100 is
2825 sufficient and yields a negligible performance impact.
2827 .. mdp:: split-group0
2829 Name of the index group of the membrane-embedded part of channel #0.
2830 The center of mass of these atoms defines one of the compartment boundaries
2831 and should be chosen such that it is near the center of the membrane.
2833 .. mdp:: split-group1
2835 Channel #1 defines the position of the other compartment boundary.
2837 .. mdp:: massw-split0
2839 (no) Defines whether or not mass-weighting is used to calculate the split group center.
2843 Use the geometrical center.
2847 Use the center of mass.
2849 .. mdp:: massw-split1
2851 (no) As above, but for split-group #1.
2853 .. mdp:: solvent-group
2855 Name of the index group of solvent molecules.
2857 .. mdp:: coupl-steps
2859 (\10) Average the number of ions per compartment over these many swap attempt steps.
2860 This can be used to prevent that ions near a compartment boundary
2861 (diffusing through a channel, e.g.) lead to unwanted back and forth swaps.
2865 (1) The number of different ion types to be controlled. These are during the
2866 simulation exchanged with solvent molecules to reach the desired reference numbers.
2868 .. mdp:: iontype0-name
2870 Name of the first ion type.
2872 .. mdp:: iontype0-in-A
2874 (-1) Requested (=reference) number of ions of type 0 in compartment A.
2875 The default value of -1 means: use the number of ions as found in time step 0
2878 .. mdp:: iontype0-in-B
2880 (-1) Reference number of ions of type 0 for compartment B.
2882 .. mdp:: bulk-offsetA
2884 (0.0) Offset of the first swap layer from the compartment A midplane.
2885 By default (i.e. bulk offset = 0.0), ion/water exchanges happen between layers
2886 at maximum distance (= bulk concentration) to the split group layers. However,
2887 an offset b (-1.0 < b < +1.0) can be specified to offset the bulk layer from the middle at 0.0
2888 towards one of the compartment-partitioning layers (at +/- 1.0).
2890 .. mdp:: bulk-offsetB
2892 (0.0) Offset of the other swap layer from the compartment B midplane.
2897 (\1) Only swap ions if threshold difference to requested count is reached.
2901 (2.0) \[nm\] Radius of the split cylinder #0.
2902 Two split cylinders (mimicking the channel pores) can optionally be defined
2903 relative to the center of the split group. With the help of these cylinders
2904 it can be counted which ions have passed which channel. The split cylinder
2905 definition has no impact on whether or not ion/water swaps are done.
2909 (1.0) \[nm\] Upper extension of the split cylinder #0.
2913 (1.0) \[nm\] Lower extension of the split cylinder #0.
2917 (2.0) \[nm\] Radius of the split cylinder #1.
2921 (1.0) \[nm\] Upper extension of the split cylinder #1.
2925 (1.0) \[nm\] Lower extension of the split cylinder #1.
2928 User defined thingies
2929 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2933 .. mdp:: userint1 (0)
2934 .. mdp:: userint2 (0)
2935 .. mdp:: userint3 (0)
2936 .. mdp:: userint4 (0)
2937 .. mdp:: userreal1 (0)
2938 .. mdp:: userreal2 (0)
2939 .. mdp:: userreal3 (0)
2940 .. mdp:: userreal4 (0)
2942 These you can use if you modify code. You can pass integers and
2943 reals and groups to your subroutine. Check the inputrec definition
2944 in ``src/gromacs/mdtypes/inputrec.h``
2949 This feature has been removed from |Gromacs|, but so that old
2950 :ref:`mdp` and :ref:`tpr` files cannot be mistakenly misused, we still
2951 parse this option. :ref:`gmx grompp` and :ref:`gmx mdrun` will issue a
2952 fatal error if this is set.
2958 .. _reference manual: gmx-manual-parent-dir_