4.7 Article

Dummy Atoms in Alchemical Free Energy Calculations

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages 4403-4419

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.0c01328

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Austrian Science Foundation (FWF) [P-31024, J-4245]

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In calculations of relative free energy differences, the introduction of dummy atoms is necessary to ensure that their contribution does not influence the result. It is important to make sure that dummy atoms only give a multiplicative contribution to the partition function and maintain their position and orientation relative to the physical system. The treatment of dummy atoms can have a significant impact on the computation results.
In calculations of relative free energy differences, the number of atoms of the initial and final states is rarely the same. This necessitates the introduction of dummy atoms. These placeholders interact with the physical system only by bonded energy terms. We investigate the conditions necessary so that the presence of dummy atoms does not influence the result of a relative free energy calculation. On the one hand, one has to ensure that dummy atoms only give a multiplicative contribution to the partition function so that their contribution cancels from double-free energy differences. On the other hand, the bonded terms used to attach a dummy atom (or group of dummy atoms) to the physical system have to maintain it in a well-defined position and orientation relative to the physical system. A detailed theoretical analysis of both aspects is provided, illustrated by 24 calculations of relative solvation free energy differences, for which all four legs of the underlying thermodynamic cycle were computed. Cycle closure (or lack thereof) was used as a sensitive indicator to probing the effects of dummy atom treatment on the resulting free energy differences. We find that a naive (but often practiced) treatment of dummy atoms results in errors of up to k(BT) when calculating the relative solvation free energy difference between two small solutes, such as methane and ammonia. While our analysis focuses on the so-called single topology approach to set up alchemical transformations, similar considerations apply to dual topology, at least many widely used variants thereof.

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