4.4 Article

Efficient mesh refinement for the Poisson-Boltzmann equation with boundary elements

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 42, Issue 12, Pages 855-869

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcc.26506

Keywords

adaptive mesh refinement; boundary element method; goal‐ oriented adjoint‐ based error estimation; implicit solvent; Poisson‐ Boltzmann

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Innovacion, Ciencia y Tecnologia [ANID Basal FB0821]
  2. Fondo de Fomento al Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico [11160768]
  3. National Science Foundation [DMS 1720402]

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The study utilizes adjoint-based analyses to form error estimates, identifying high-error panels and adaptively refining them to achieve optimal surface meshes. Results show that elements with large errors are usually in regions with high electrostatic potential, and the adaptive mesh refinement scheme is more effective and efficient than uniform refinement in reducing errors in solvation energy calculations.
The Poisson-Boltzmann equation is a widely used model to study electrostatics in molecular solvation. Its numerical solution using a boundary integral formulation requires a mesh on the molecular surface only, yielding accurate representations of the solute, which is usually a complicated geometry. Here, we utilize adjoint-based analyses to form two goal-oriented error estimates that allow us to determine the contribution of each discretization element (panel) to the numerical error in the solvation free energy. This information is useful to identify high-error panels to then refine them adaptively to find optimal surface meshes. We present results for spheres and real molecular geometries, and see that elements with large error tend to be in regions where there is a high electrostatic potential. We also find that even though both estimates predict different total errors, they have similar performance as part of an adaptive mesh refinement scheme. Our test cases suggest that the adaptive mesh refinement scheme is very effective, as we are able to reduce the error one order of magnitude by increasing the mesh size less than 20% and come out to be more efficient than uniform refinement when computing error estimations. This result sets the basis toward efficient automatic mesh refinement schemes that produce optimal meshes for solvation energy calculations.

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