4.6 Review Book Chapter

Multiscale simulation of soft matter: From scale bridging to adaptive resolution

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 59, Issue -, Pages 545-571

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.physchem.59.032607.093707

Keywords

multiscale modeling; generalized equipartition theorem; atomistic simulation; mesoscopic simulation

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The relation between atomistic chemical structure, molecular architecture, molecular weight, and material properties is of basic concern in modern soft material science and includes standard properties of bulk materials and surface and interface aspects, as well as the relation between structure and function in nanoscopic objects and molecular assemblies of both synthetic and biological origin. This all implies a thorough understanding on many length and correspondingly time scales, ranging from (sub)atomistic to macroscopic. Presently, computer simulations play an increasingly important, if not central, role. Some problems do not require specific atomistic details, whereas others require them only locally. However, in many cases this strict separation is not sufficient for a comprehensive understanding of systems, and flexible simulation schemes are required that link the different levels of resolution. We here give a general view of the problem regarding soft matter and discuss some specific examples of linked simulation techniques at different resolution levels. We then discuss a recently developed flexible simulation scheme, the AdResS method, which allows one to adaptively change the resolution in certain regions of space on demand.

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