The automatic three-dimensional mesh generation system for molecular geometries developed in our laboratory is used to solve the Poisson᎐Boltzmann equation numerically using a finite element method. For a number of different systems, the results are found to be in good agreement with those obtained
Solution of the Nonlinear Poisson–Boltzmann Equation Using Pseudo-transient Continuation and the Finite Element Method
✍ Scribed by A.I. Shestakov; J.L. Milovich; A. Noy
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 256 KB
- Volume
- 247
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
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✦ Synopsis
The nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) equation is solved using Newton-Krylov iterations coupled with pseudo-transient continuation. The PB potential is used to compute the electrostatic energy and evaluate the force on a user-specified contour. The PB solver is embedded in a existing, 3D, massively parallel, unstructured-grid, finite element code. Either Dirichlet or mixed boundary conditions are allowed. The latter specifies surface charges, approximates far-field conditions, or linearizes conditions "regulating" the surface charge. Stability and robustness are proved using results for backward Euler differencing of diffusion equations. Potentials and energies of charged spheres and plates are computed and results compared to analysis. An approximation to the potential of the nonlinear, spherical charge is derived by combining two analytic formulae. The potential and force due to a conical probe interacting with a flat plate are computed for two types of boundary conditions: constant potential and constant charge. The second case is compared with direct force measurements by chemical force microscopy. The problem is highly nonlinear-surface potentials of the linear and nonlinear PB equations differ by over an order of magnitude. Comparison of the simulated and experimentally measured forces shows that approximately half of the surface carboxylic acid groups, of density 1/(0.2 nm2), ionize in the electrolyte implying surface charges of 0.4 C/m2, surface potentials of 0.27 V, and a force of 0.6 nN when the probe and plate are 8.7 nm apart.
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