Stability and Metastability of Liquid water in a Machine-learned Coarse-grained Model with Short-range Interactions

03 November 2022, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Coarse-grained water models are ~100 times more efficient than all-atom models, enabling simulations of supercooled water and crystallization. The machine-learned monatomic model ML-BOP reproduces the experimental equation of state (EOS) and ice-liquid thermodynamics at 0.1 MPa on par with all-atom TIP4P/2005 and TIP4/Ice. These all-atom models were parameterized using high-pressure experimental data, and are either accurate for water’s EOS (TIP4P/2005) or ice-liquid equilibrium (TIP4P/Ice). ML-BOP was parameter-ized from temperature-dependent ice and liquid experimental densities and melting data at 0.1 MPa; its only pressure training is from com-pression of TIP4P/2005 ice at 0 K. Here we investigate whether ML-BOP replicates the experimental EOS and ice-water thermodynamics along all pressures of ice I. We find that ML-BOP reproduce the temperature, enthalpy, entropy and volume of melting of hexagonal ice up to 400 MPa and the EOS of water along the melting line with accuracy that rivals both TIP4P/2005 and TIP4P/Ice. We interpret that the accu-racy of ML-BOP originates from its ability to capture the shift between compact and open local structures to changes in pressure and temper-ature. ML-BOP reproduces the sharpening of the tetrahedral peak of the pair distribution function of water upon supercooling, and its pres-sure dependence. We characterize the region of metastability of liquid ML-BOP with respect to crystallization and cavitation. The accessibil-ity of ice crystallization to simulations of ML-BOP, together with its accurate representation of the thermodynamics of water, makes it prom-ising for investigating the interplay between anomalies, glass transition, and crystallization under conditions challenging to access through experiments.

Keywords

water
coarse-grained models
equation of state
crystallization
cavitation
phase equilibria
tetrahedral liquids
supercooled water
two-state thermodynamics

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
Description
Simulation setup for the calculation of melting temperature of ice Ih; identification of maximum crystallization rate using CHILL+; Supplementary plots for the temperature and pressure dependence of gOO(r) and SOO(q); temperature dependence of S1 and S2; cutoff-distance dependence in the calculation of ADFs; interatomic angular potential g(𝜃) for the three monatomic models considered here; pressure dependence of angular distribution function at 248 K; change in tetrahedrality of monatomic and all-atom water models with the change in pressure; density of water and Ice Ih along the melting line of mW model.
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