On 12/21/09 5:32 PM, Yanmei Song wrote:
Thanks for all the helpful response. But do I have to use dispersion
correction when I use PME? I don't quite understand what dispersion
correction do. Sometime I found using dispersion correction make my
results worse for a large molecule system.
Read th
Thanks for all the helpful response. But do I have to use dispersion
correction when I use PME? I don't quite understand what dispersion
correction do. Sometime I found using dispersion correction make my results
worse for a large molecule system.
On Mon, Dec 21, 2009 at 12:48 AM, David van der Sp
Arden Perkins wrote:
From what my Professor told me it is my understanding that cutoff
length is somewhat a trade-off between accuracy of the simulation and
length of time to generate the simulation. A higher cut-off indicates
more accuracy but will take longer to simulate. I use low cut-offs
From what my Professor told me it is my understanding that cutoff
length is somewhat a trade-off between accuracy of the simulation
and length of time to generate the simulation. A higher cut-off
indicates more accuracy but will take longer to simulate. I use low
cut-offs for less important
>From what my Professor told me it is my understanding that cutoff length is
somewhat a trade-off between accuracy of the simulation and length of time
to generate the simulation. A higher cut-off indicates more accuracy but
will take longer to simulate. I use low cut-offs for less important
simula
On Dec 21, 2009, at 9:01 AM, David van der Spoel wrote:
On 12/21/09 8:55 AM, XAvier Periole wrote:
Would it be all cut-offs: elect + vdW ? Or the increase is separate?
For your info the vdW are attractive potentials at long distances so
an increase of cutoff would result in an increase of at
On 12/21/09 8:55 AM, XAvier Periole wrote:
Would it be all cut-offs: elect + vdW ? Or the increase is separate?
For your info the vdW are attractive potentials at long distances so
an increase of cutoff would result in an increase of attraction and
therefore to an increase of density!
This is
Would it be all cut-offs: elect + vdW ? Or the increase is separate?
For your info the vdW are attractive potentials at long distances so
an increase of cutoff would result in an increase of attraction and
therefore to an increase of density!
This is one good illustration of the fact that you s
On 12/21/09 8:03 AM, Yanmei Song wrote:
Dear Users:
Anyone can explain why the density of the water models increase with
increase the cutoff length. I tried a couple water models in
reaction-field, PME simulations.The cutoff length ranged from 0.9 to
1.5. They all show the same trend. Then there
Dear Users:
Anyone can explain why the density of the water models increase with
increase the cutoff length. I tried a couple water models in reaction-field,
PME simulations.The cutoff length ranged from 0.9 to 1.5. They all show the
same trend. Then there must be some reasons. Anyone can tell me
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