forked from lijiext/lammps
858 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
858 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
"LAMMPS WWW Site"_lws - "LAMMPS Documentation"_ld - "LAMMPS Commands"_lc :c
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:link(lws,http://lammps.sandia.gov)
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:link(ld,Manual.html)
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:link(lc,Commands_all.html)
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:line
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fix rigid command :h3
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fix rigid/omp command :h3
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fix rigid/nve command :h3
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fix rigid/nve/omp command :h3
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fix rigid/nvt command :h3
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fix rigid/nvt/omp command :h3
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fix rigid/npt command :h3
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fix rigid/npt/omp command :h3
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fix rigid/nph command :h3
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fix rigid/nph/omp command :h3
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fix rigid/small command :h3
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fix rigid/small/omp command :h3
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fix rigid/nve/small command :h3
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fix rigid/nvt/small command :h3
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fix rigid/npt/small command :h3
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fix rigid/nph/small command :h3
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[Syntax:]
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fix ID group-ID style bodystyle args keyword values ... :pre
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ID, group-ID are documented in "fix"_fix.html command :ulb,l
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style = {rigid} or {rigid/nve} or {rigid/nvt} or {rigid/npt} or {rigid/nph} or {rigid/small} or {rigid/nve/small} or {rigid/nvt/small} or {rigid/npt/small} or {rigid/nph/small} :l
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bodystyle = {single} or {molecule} or {group} :l
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{single} args = none
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{molecule} args = none
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{custom} args = {i_propname} or {v_varname}
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i_propname = an integer property defined via fix property/atom
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v_varname = an atom-style or atomfile-style variable
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{group} args = N groupID1 groupID2 ...
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N = # of groups
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groupID1, groupID2, ... = list of N group IDs :pre
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zero or more keyword/value pairs may be appended :l
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keyword = {langevin} or {reinit} or {temp} or {iso} or {aniso} or {x} or {y} or {z} or {couple} or {tparam} or {pchain} or {dilate} or {force} or {torque} or {infile} :l
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{langevin} values = Tstart Tstop Tperiod seed
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Tstart,Tstop = desired temperature at start/stop of run (temperature units)
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Tdamp = temperature damping parameter (time units)
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seed = random number seed to use for white noise (positive integer)
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{reinit} = {yes} or {no}
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{temp} values = Tstart Tstop Tdamp
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Tstart,Tstop = desired temperature at start/stop of run (temperature units)
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Tdamp = temperature damping parameter (time units)
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{iso} or {aniso} values = Pstart Pstop Pdamp
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Pstart,Pstop = scalar external pressure at start/end of run (pressure units)
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Pdamp = pressure damping parameter (time units)
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{x} or {y} or {z} values = Pstart Pstop Pdamp
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Pstart,Pstop = external stress tensor component at start/end of run (pressure units)
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Pdamp = stress damping parameter (time units)
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{couple} = {none} or {xyz} or {xy} or {yz} or {xz}
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{tparam} values = Tchain Titer Torder
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Tchain = length of Nose/Hoover thermostat chain
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Titer = number of thermostat iterations performed
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Torder = 3 or 5 = Yoshida-Suzuki integration parameters
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{pchain} values = Pchain
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Pchain = length of the Nose/Hoover thermostat chain coupled with the barostat
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{dilate} value = dilate-group-ID
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dilate-group-ID = only dilate atoms in this group due to barostat volume changes
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{force} values = M xflag yflag zflag
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M = which rigid body from 1-Nbody (see asterisk form below)
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xflag,yflag,zflag = off/on if component of center-of-mass force is active
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{torque} values = M xflag yflag zflag
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M = which rigid body from 1-Nbody (see asterisk form below)
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xflag,yflag,zflag = off/on if component of center-of-mass torque is active
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{infile} filename
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filename = file with per-body values of mass, center-of-mass, moments of inertia
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{mol} value = template-ID
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template-ID = ID of molecule template specified in a separate "molecule"_molecule.html command :pre
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:ule
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[Examples:]
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fix 1 clump rigid single reinit yes
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fix 1 clump rigid/small molecule
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fix 1 clump rigid single force 1 off off on langevin 1.0 1.0 1.0 428984
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fix 1 polychains rigid/nvt molecule temp 1.0 1.0 5.0 reinit no
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fix 1 polychains rigid molecule force 1*5 off off off force 6*10 off off on
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fix 1 polychains rigid/small molecule langevin 1.0 1.0 1.0 428984
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fix 2 fluid rigid group 3 clump1 clump2 clump3 torque * off off off
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fix 1 rods rigid/npt molecule temp 300.0 300.0 100.0 iso 0.5 0.5 10.0
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fix 1 particles rigid/npt molecule temp 1.0 1.0 5.0 x 0.5 0.5 1.0 z 0.5 0.5 1.0 couple xz
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fix 1 water rigid/nph molecule iso 0.5 0.5 1.0
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fix 1 particles rigid/npt/small molecule temp 1.0 1.0 1.0 iso 0.5 0.5 1.0 :pre
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variable bodyid atom 1.0*gmask(clump1)+2.0*gmask(clump2)+3.0*gmask(clump3)
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fix 1 clump rigid custom v_bodyid :pre
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variable bodyid atomfile bodies.txt
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fix 1 clump rigid custom v_bodyid :pre
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fix 0 all property/atom i_bodyid
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read_restart data.rigid fix 0 NULL Bodies
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fix 1 clump rigid/small custom i_bodyid :pre
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[Description:]
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Treat one or more sets of atoms as independent rigid bodies. This
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means that each timestep the total force and torque on each rigid body
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is computed as the sum of the forces and torques on its constituent
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particles. The coordinates, velocities, and orientations of the atoms
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in each body are then updated so that the body moves and rotates as a
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single entity. This is implemented by creating internal data structures
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for each rigid body and performing time integration on these data
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structures. Positions, velocities, and orientations of the constituent
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particles are regenerated from the rigid body data structures in every
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time step. This restricts which operations and fixes can be applied to
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rigid bodies. See below for a detailed discussion.
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Examples of large rigid bodies are a colloidal particle, or portions
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of a biomolecule such as a protein.
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Example of small rigid bodies are patchy nanoparticles, such as those
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modeled in "this paper"_#Zhang1 by Sharon Glotzer's group, clumps of
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granular particles, lipid molecules consisting of one or more point
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dipoles connected to other spheroids or ellipsoids, irregular
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particles built from line segments (2d) or triangles (3d), and
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coarse-grain models of nano or colloidal particles consisting of a
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small number of constituent particles. Note that the "fix
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shake"_fix_shake.html command can also be used to rigidify small
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molecules of 2, 3, or 4 atoms, e.g. water molecules. That fix treats
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the constituent atoms as point masses.
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These fixes also update the positions and velocities of the atoms in
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each rigid body via time integration, in the NVE, NVT, NPT, or NPH
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ensemble, as described below.
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There are two main variants of this fix, fix rigid and fix
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rigid/small. The NVE/NVT/NPT/NHT versions belong to one of the two
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variants, as their style names indicate.
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NOTE: Not all of the {bodystyle} options and keyword/value options are
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available for both the {rigid} and {rigid/small} variants. See
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details below.
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The {rigid} styles are typically the best choice for a system with a
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small number of large rigid bodies, each of which can extend across
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the domain of many processors. It operates by creating a single
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global list of rigid bodies, which all processors contribute to.
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MPI_Allreduce operations are performed each timestep to sum the
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contributions from each processor to the force and torque on all the
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bodies. This operation will not scale well in parallel if large
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numbers of rigid bodies are simulated.
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The {rigid/small} styles are typically best for a system with a large
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number of small rigid bodies. Each body is assigned to the atom
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closest to the geometrical center of the body. The fix operates using
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local lists of rigid bodies owned by each processor and information is
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exchanged and summed via local communication between neighboring
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processors when ghost atom info is accumulated.
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NOTE: To use the {rigid/small} styles the ghost atom cutoff must be
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large enough to span the distance between the atom that owns the body
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and every other atom in the body. This distance value is printed out
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when the rigid bodies are defined. If the
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"pair_style"_pair_style.html cutoff plus neighbor skin does not span
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this distance, then you should use the "comm_modify
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cutoff"_comm_modify.html command with a setting epsilon larger than
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the distance.
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Which of the two variants is faster for a particular problem is hard
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to predict. The best way to decide is to perform a short test run.
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Both variants should give identical numerical answers for short runs.
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Long runs should give statistically similar results, but round-off
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differences may accumulate to produce divergent trajectories.
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NOTE: You should not update the atoms in rigid bodies via other
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time-integration fixes (e.g. "fix nve"_fix_nve.html, "fix
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nvt"_fix_nh.html, "fix npt"_fix_nh.html, "fix move"_fix_move.html),
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or you will have conflicting updates to positions and velocities
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resulting in unphysical behavior in most cases. When performing a hybrid
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simulation with some atoms in rigid bodies, and some not, a separate
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time integration fix like "fix nve"_fix_nve.html or "fix
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nvt"_fix_nh.html should be used for the non-rigid particles.
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NOTE: These fixes are overkill if you simply want to hold a collection
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of atoms stationary or have them move with a constant velocity. A
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simpler way to hold atoms stationary is to not include those atoms in
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your time integration fix. E.g. use "fix 1 mobile nve" instead of
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"fix 1 all nve", where "mobile" is the group of atoms that you want to
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move. You can move atoms with a constant velocity by assigning them
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an initial velocity (via the "velocity"_velocity.html command),
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setting the force on them to 0.0 (via the "fix
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setforce"_fix_setforce.html command), and integrating them as usual
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(e.g. via the "fix nve"_fix_nve.html command).
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IMPORTANT NOTE: The aggregate properties of each rigid body are
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calculated at the start of a simulation run and are maintained in
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internal data structures. The properties include the position and
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velocity of the center-of-mass of the body, its moments of inertia, and
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its angular momentum. This is done using the properties of the
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constituent atoms of the body at that point in time (or see the {infile}
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keyword option). Thereafter, changing these properties of individual
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atoms in the body will have no effect on a rigid body's dynamics, unless
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they effect any computation of per-atom forces or torques. If the
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keyword {reinit} is set to {yes} (the default), the rigid body data
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structures will be recreated at the beginning of each {run} command;
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if the keyword {reinit} is set to {no}, the rigid body data structures
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will be built only at the very first {run} command and maintained for
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as long as the rigid fix is defined. For example, you might think you
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could displace the atoms in a body or add a large velocity to each atom
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in a body to make it move in a desired direction before a 2nd run is
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performed, using the "set"_set.html or
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"displace_atoms"_displace_atoms.html or "velocity"_velocity.html
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commands. But these commands will not affect the internal attributes
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of the body unless {reinit} is set to {yes}. With {reinit} set to {no}
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(or using the {infile} option, which implies {reinit} {no}) the position
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and velocity of individual atoms in the body will be reset when time
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integration starts again.
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:line
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Each rigid body must have two or more atoms. An atom can belong to at
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most one rigid body. Which atoms are in which bodies can be defined
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via several options.
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NOTE: With the {rigid/small} styles, which require that {bodystyle} be
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specified as {molecule} or {custom}, you can define a system that has
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no rigid bodies initially. This is useful when you are using the
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{mol} keyword in conjunction with another fix that is adding rigid
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bodies on-the-fly as molecules, such as "fix deposit"_fix_deposit.html
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or "fix pour"_fix_pour.html.
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For bodystyle {single} the entire fix group of atoms is treated as one
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rigid body. This option is only allowed for the {rigid} styles.
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For bodystyle {molecule}, atoms are grouped into rigid bodies by their
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respective molecule IDs: each set of atoms in the fix group with the
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same molecule ID is treated as a different rigid body. This option is
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allowed for both the {rigid} and {rigid/small} styles. Note that
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atoms with a molecule ID = 0 will be treated as a single rigid body.
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For a system with atomic solvent (typically this is atoms with
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molecule ID = 0) surrounding rigid bodies, this may not be what you
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want. Thus you should be careful to use a fix group that only
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includes atoms you want to be part of rigid bodies.
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Bodystyle {custom} is similar to bodystyle {molecule} except that it
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is more flexible in using other per-atom properties to define the sets
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of atoms that form rigid bodies. An integer vector defined by the
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"fix property/atom"_fix_property_atom.html command can be used. Or an
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"atom-style or atomfile-style variable"_variable.html can be used; the
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floating-point value produced by the variable is rounded to an
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integer. As with bodystyle {molecule}, each set of atoms in the fix
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groups with the same integer value is treated as a different rigid
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body. Since fix property/atom vectors and atom-style variables
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produce values for all atoms, you should be careful to use a fix group
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that only includes atoms you want to be part of rigid bodies.
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NOTE: To compute the initial center-of-mass position and other
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properties of each rigid body, the image flags for each atom in the
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body are used to "unwrap" the atom coordinates. Thus you must insure
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that these image flags are consistent so that the unwrapping creates a
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valid rigid body (one where the atoms are close together),
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particularly if the atoms in a single rigid body straddle a periodic
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boundary. This means the input data file or restart file must define
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the image flags for each atom consistently or that you have used the
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"set"_set.html command to specify them correctly. If a dimension is
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non-periodic then the image flag of each atom must be 0 in that
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dimension, else an error is generated.
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The {force} and {torque} keywords discussed next are only allowed for
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the {rigid} styles.
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By default, each rigid body is acted on by other atoms which induce an
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external force and torque on its center of mass, causing it to
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translate and rotate. Components of the external center-of-mass force
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and torque can be turned off by the {force} and {torque} keywords.
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This may be useful if you wish a body to rotate but not translate, or
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vice versa, or if you wish it to rotate or translate continuously
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unaffected by interactions with other particles. Note that if you
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expect a rigid body not to move or rotate by using these keywords, you
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must insure its initial center-of-mass translational or angular
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velocity is 0.0. Otherwise the initial translational or angular
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momentum the body has will persist.
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An xflag, yflag, or zflag set to {off} means turn off the component of
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force of torque in that dimension. A setting of {on} means turn on
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the component, which is the default. Which rigid body(s) the settings
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apply to is determined by the first argument of the {force} and
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{torque} keywords. It can be an integer M from 1 to Nbody, where
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Nbody is the number of rigid bodies defined. A wild-card asterisk can
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be used in place of, or in conjunction with, the M argument to set the
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flags for multiple rigid bodies. This takes the form "*" or "*n" or
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"n*" or "m*n". If N = the number of rigid bodies, then an asterisk
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with no numeric values means all bodies from 1 to N. A leading
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asterisk means all bodies from 1 to n (inclusive). A trailing
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asterisk means all bodies from n to N (inclusive). A middle asterisk
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means all types from m to n (inclusive). Note that you can use the
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{force} or {torque} keywords as many times as you like. If a
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particular rigid body has its component flags set multiple times, the
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settings from the final keyword are used.
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NOTE: For computational efficiency, you may wish to turn off pairwise
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and bond interactions within each rigid body, as they no longer
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contribute to the motion. The "neigh_modify
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exclude"_neigh_modify.html and "delete_bonds"_delete_bonds.html
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commands are used to do this. If the rigid bodies have strongly
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overlapping atoms, you may need to turn off these interactions to
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avoid numerical problems due to large equal/opposite intra-body forces
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swamping the contribution of small inter-body forces.
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For computational efficiency, you should typically define one fix
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rigid or fix rigid/small command which includes all the desired rigid
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bodies. LAMMPS will allow multiple rigid fixes to be defined, but it
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is more expensive.
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:line
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The constituent particles within a rigid body can be point particles
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(the default in LAMMPS) or finite-size particles, such as spheres or
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ellipsoids or line segments or triangles. See the "atom_style sphere
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and ellipsoid and line and tri"_atom_style.html commands for more
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details on these kinds of particles. Finite-size particles contribute
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differently to the moment of inertia of a rigid body than do point
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particles. Finite-size particles can also experience torque (e.g. due
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to "frictional granular interactions"_pair_gran.html) and have an
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orientation. These contributions are accounted for by these fixes.
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Forces between particles within a body do not contribute to the
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external force or torque on the body. Thus for computational
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efficiency, you may wish to turn off pairwise and bond interactions
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between particles within each rigid body. The "neigh_modify
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exclude"_neigh_modify.html and "delete_bonds"_delete_bonds.html
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commands are used to do this. For finite-size particles this also
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means the particles can be highly overlapped when creating the rigid
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body.
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:line
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The {rigid}, {rigid/nve}, {rigid/small}, and {rigid/small/nve} styles
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perform constant NVE time integration. They are referred to below as
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the 4 NVE rigid styles. The only difference is that the {rigid} and
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{rigid/small} styles use an integration technique based on Richardson
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iterations. The {rigid/nve} and {rigid/small/nve} styles uses the
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methods described in the paper by "Miller"_#Miller3, which are thought
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to provide better energy conservation than an iterative approach.
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The {rigid/nvt} and {rigid/nvt/small} styles performs constant NVT
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integration using a Nose/Hoover thermostat with chains as described
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originally in "(Hoover)"_#Hoover and "(Martyna)"_#Martyna2, which
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thermostats both the translational and rotational degrees of freedom
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of the rigid bodies. They are referred to below as the 2 NVT rigid
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styles. The rigid-body algorithm used by {rigid/nvt} is described in
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the paper by "Kamberaj"_#Kamberaj.
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The {rigid/npt}, {rigid/nph}, {rigid/npt/small}, and {rigid/nph/small}
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styles perform constant NPT or NPH integration using a Nose/Hoover
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barostat with chains. They are referred to below as the 4 NPT and NPH
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rigid styles. For the NPT case, the same Nose/Hoover thermostat is
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also used as with {rigid/nvt} and {rigid/nvt/small}.
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The barostat parameters are specified using one or more of the {iso},
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{aniso}, {x}, {y}, {z} and {couple} keywords. These keywords give you
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the ability to specify 3 diagonal components of the external stress
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tensor, and to couple these components together so that the dimensions
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they represent are varied together during a constant-pressure
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simulation. The effects of these keywords are similar to those
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defined in "fix npt/nph"_fix_nh.html
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NOTE: Currently the {rigid/npt}, {rigid/nph}, {rigid/npt/small}, and
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{rigid/nph/small} styles do not support triclinic (non-orthogonal)
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boxes.
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The target pressures for each of the 6 components of the stress tensor
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can be specified independently via the {x}, {y}, {z} keywords, which
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correspond to the 3 simulation box dimensions. For each component,
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the external pressure or tensor component at each timestep is a ramped
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value during the run from {Pstart} to {Pstop}. If a target pressure is
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specified for a component, then the corresponding box dimension will
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change during a simulation. For example, if the {y} keyword is used,
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the y-box length will change. A box dimension will not change if that
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component is not specified, although you have the option to change
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that dimension via the "fix deform"_fix_deform.html command.
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For all barostat keywords, the {Pdamp} parameter operates like the
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{Tdamp} parameter, determining the time scale on which pressure is
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relaxed. For example, a value of 10.0 means to relax the pressure in
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a timespan of (roughly) 10 time units (e.g. tau or fmsec or psec - see
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the "units"_units.html command).
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Regardless of what atoms are in the fix group (the only atoms which
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are time integrated), a global pressure or stress tensor is computed
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for all atoms. Similarly, when the size of the simulation box is
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changed, all atoms are re-scaled to new positions, unless the keyword
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{dilate} is specified with a {dilate-group-ID} for a group that
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represents a subset of the atoms. This can be useful, for example, to
|
|
leave the coordinates of atoms in a solid substrate unchanged and
|
|
controlling the pressure of a surrounding fluid. Another example is a
|
|
system consisting of rigid bodies and point particles where the
|
|
barostat is only coupled with the rigid bodies. This option should be
|
|
used with care, since it can be unphysical to dilate some atoms and
|
|
not others, because it can introduce large, instantaneous
|
|
displacements between a pair of atoms (one dilated, one not) that are
|
|
far from the dilation origin.
|
|
|
|
The {couple} keyword allows two or three of the diagonal components of
|
|
the pressure tensor to be "coupled" together. The value specified
|
|
with the keyword determines which are coupled. For example, {xz}
|
|
means the {Pxx} and {Pzz} components of the stress tensor are coupled.
|
|
{Xyz} means all 3 diagonal components are coupled. Coupling means two
|
|
things: the instantaneous stress will be computed as an average of the
|
|
corresponding diagonal components, and the coupled box dimensions will
|
|
be changed together in lockstep, meaning coupled dimensions will be
|
|
dilated or contracted by the same percentage every timestep. The
|
|
{Pstart}, {Pstop}, {Pdamp} parameters for any coupled dimensions must
|
|
be identical. {Couple xyz} can be used for a 2d simulation; the {z}
|
|
dimension is simply ignored.
|
|
|
|
The {iso} and {aniso} keywords are simply shortcuts that are
|
|
equivalent to specifying several other keywords together.
|
|
|
|
The keyword {iso} means couple all 3 diagonal components together when
|
|
pressure is computed (hydrostatic pressure), and dilate/contract the
|
|
dimensions together. Using "iso Pstart Pstop Pdamp" is the same as
|
|
specifying these 4 keywords:
|
|
|
|
x Pstart Pstop Pdamp
|
|
y Pstart Pstop Pdamp
|
|
z Pstart Pstop Pdamp
|
|
couple xyz :pre
|
|
|
|
The keyword {aniso} means {x}, {y}, and {z} dimensions are controlled
|
|
independently using the {Pxx}, {Pyy}, and {Pzz} components of the
|
|
stress tensor as the driving forces, and the specified scalar external
|
|
pressure. Using "aniso Pstart Pstop Pdamp" is the same as specifying
|
|
these 4 keywords:
|
|
|
|
x Pstart Pstop Pdamp
|
|
y Pstart Pstop Pdamp
|
|
z Pstart Pstop Pdamp
|
|
couple none :pre
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
The keyword/value option pairs are used in the following ways.
|
|
|
|
The {reinit} keyword determines, whether the rigid body properties
|
|
are re-initialized between run commands. With the option {yes} (the
|
|
default) this is done, with the option {no} this is not done. Turning
|
|
off the re-initialization can be helpful to protect rigid bodies against
|
|
unphysical manipulations between runs or when properties cannot be
|
|
easily re-computed (e.g. when read from a file). When using the {infile}
|
|
keyword, the {reinit} option is automatically set to {no}.
|
|
|
|
The {langevin} and {temp} and {tparam} keywords perform thermostatting
|
|
of the rigid bodies, altering both their translational and rotational
|
|
degrees of freedom. What is meant by "temperature" of a collection of
|
|
rigid bodies and how it can be monitored via the fix output is
|
|
discussed below.
|
|
|
|
The {langevin} keyword applies a Langevin thermostat to the constant
|
|
NVE time integration performed by any of the 4 NVE rigid styles:
|
|
{rigid}, {rigid/nve}, {rigid/small}, {rigid/small/nve}. It cannot be
|
|
used with the 2 NVT rigid styles: {rigid/nvt}, {rigid/small/nvt}. The
|
|
desired temperature at each timestep is a ramped value during the run
|
|
from {Tstart} to {Tstop}. The {Tdamp} parameter is specified in time
|
|
units and determines how rapidly the temperature is relaxed. For
|
|
example, a value of 100.0 means to relax the temperature in a timespan
|
|
of (roughly) 100 time units (tau or fmsec or psec - see the
|
|
"units"_units.html command). The random # {seed} must be a positive
|
|
integer.
|
|
|
|
The way that Langevin thermostatting operates is explained on the "fix
|
|
langevin"_fix_langevin.html doc page. If you wish to simply viscously
|
|
damp the rotational motion without thermostatting, you can set
|
|
{Tstart} and {Tstop} to 0.0, which means only the viscous drag term in
|
|
the Langevin thermostat will be applied. See the discussion on the
|
|
"fix viscous"_fix_viscous.html doc page for details.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: When the {langevin} keyword is used with fix rigid versus fix
|
|
rigid/small, different dynamics will result for parallel runs. This
|
|
is because of the way random numbers are used in the two cases. The
|
|
dynamics for the two cases should be statistically similar, but will
|
|
not be identical, even for a single timestep.
|
|
|
|
The {temp} and {tparam} keywords apply a Nose/Hoover thermostat to the
|
|
NVT time integration performed by the 2 NVT rigid styles. They cannot
|
|
be used with the 4 NVE rigid styles. The desired temperature at each
|
|
timestep is a ramped value during the run from {Tstart} to {Tstop}.
|
|
The {Tdamp} parameter is specified in time units and determines how
|
|
rapidly the temperature is relaxed. For example, a value of 100.0
|
|
means to relax the temperature in a timespan of (roughly) 100 time
|
|
units (tau or fmsec or psec - see the "units"_units.html command).
|
|
|
|
Nose/Hoover chains are used in conjunction with this thermostat. The
|
|
{tparam} keyword can optionally be used to change the chain settings
|
|
used. {Tchain} is the number of thermostats in the Nose Hoover chain.
|
|
This value, along with {Tdamp} can be varied to dampen undesirable
|
|
oscillations in temperature that can occur in a simulation. As a rule
|
|
of thumb, increasing the chain length should lead to smaller
|
|
oscillations. The keyword {pchain} specifies the number of
|
|
thermostats in the chain thermostatting the barostat degrees of
|
|
freedom.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: There are alternate ways to thermostat a system of rigid bodies.
|
|
You can use "fix langevin"_fix_langevin.html to treat the individual
|
|
particles in the rigid bodies as effectively immersed in an implicit
|
|
solvent, e.g. a Brownian dynamics model. For hybrid systems with both
|
|
rigid bodies and solvent particles, you can thermostat only the
|
|
solvent particles that surround one or more rigid bodies by
|
|
appropriate choice of groups in the compute and fix commands for
|
|
temperature and thermostatting. The solvent interactions with the
|
|
rigid bodies should then effectively thermostat the rigid body
|
|
temperature as well without use of the Langevin or Nose/Hoover options
|
|
associated with the fix rigid commands.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
The {mol} keyword can only be used with the {rigid/small} styles. It
|
|
must be used when other commands, such as "fix
|
|
deposit"_fix_deposit.html or "fix pour"_fix_pour.html, add rigid
|
|
bodies on-the-fly during a simulation. You specify a {template-ID}
|
|
previously defined using the "molecule"_molecule.html command, which
|
|
reads a file that defines the molecule. You must use the same
|
|
{template-ID} that the other fix which is adding rigid bodies uses.
|
|
The coordinates, atom types, atom diameters, center-of-mass, and
|
|
moments of inertia can be specified in the molecule file. See the
|
|
"molecule"_molecule.html command for details. The only settings
|
|
required to be in this file are the coordinates and types of atoms in
|
|
the molecule, in which case the molecule command calculates the other
|
|
quantities itself.
|
|
|
|
Note that these other fixes create new rigid bodies, in addition to
|
|
those defined initially by this fix via the {bodystyle} setting.
|
|
|
|
Also note that when using the {mol} keyword, extra restart information
|
|
about all rigid bodies is written out whenever a restart file is
|
|
written out. See the NOTE in the next section for details.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
The {infile} keyword allows a file of rigid body attributes to be read
|
|
in from a file, rather then having LAMMPS compute them. There are 5
|
|
such attributes: the total mass of the rigid body, its center-of-mass
|
|
position, its 6 moments of inertia, its center-of-mass velocity, and
|
|
the 3 image flags of the center-of-mass position. For rigid bodies
|
|
consisting of point particles or non-overlapping finite-size
|
|
particles, LAMMPS can compute these values accurately. However, for
|
|
rigid bodies consisting of finite-size particles which overlap each
|
|
other, LAMMPS will ignore the overlaps when computing these 4
|
|
attributes. The amount of error this induces depends on the amount of
|
|
overlap. To avoid this issue, the values can be pre-computed
|
|
(e.g. using Monte Carlo integration).
|
|
|
|
The format of the file is as follows. Note that the file does not
|
|
have to list attributes for every rigid body integrated by fix rigid.
|
|
Only bodies which the file specifies will have their computed
|
|
attributes overridden. The file can contain initial blank lines or
|
|
comment lines starting with "#" which are ignored. The first
|
|
non-blank, non-comment line should list N = the number of lines to
|
|
follow. The N successive lines contain the following information:
|
|
|
|
ID1 masstotal xcm ycm zcm ixx iyy izz ixy ixz iyz vxcm vycm vzcm lx ly lz ixcm iycm izcm
|
|
ID2 masstotal xcm ycm zcm ixx iyy izz ixy ixz iyz vxcm vycm vzcm lx ly lz ixcm iycm izcm
|
|
...
|
|
IDN masstotal xcm ycm zcm ixx iyy izz ixy ixz iyz vxcm vycm vzcm lx ly lz ixcm iycm izcm :pre
|
|
|
|
The rigid body IDs are all positive integers. For the {single}
|
|
bodystyle, only an ID of 1 can be used. For the {group} bodystyle,
|
|
IDs from 1 to Ng can be used where Ng is the number of specified
|
|
groups. For the {molecule} bodystyle, use the molecule ID for the
|
|
atoms in a specific rigid body as the rigid body ID.
|
|
|
|
The masstotal and center-of-mass coordinates (xcm,ycm,zcm) are
|
|
self-explanatory. The center-of-mass should be consistent with what
|
|
is calculated for the position of the rigid body with all its atoms
|
|
unwrapped by their respective image flags. If this produces a
|
|
center-of-mass that is outside the simulation box, LAMMPS wraps it
|
|
back into the box.
|
|
|
|
The 6 moments of inertia (ixx,iyy,izz,ixy,ixz,iyz) should be the
|
|
values consistent with the current orientation of the rigid body
|
|
around its center of mass. The values are with respect to the
|
|
simulation box XYZ axes, not with respect to the principal axes of the
|
|
rigid body itself. LAMMPS performs the latter calculation internally.
|
|
|
|
The (vxcm,vycm,vzcm) values are the velocity of the center of mass.
|
|
The (lx,ly,lz) values are the angular momentum of the body. The
|
|
(vxcm,vycm,vzcm) and (lx,ly,lz) values can simply be set to 0 if you
|
|
wish the body to have no initial motion.
|
|
|
|
The (ixcm,iycm,izcm) values are the image flags of the center of mass
|
|
of the body. For periodic dimensions, they specify which image of the
|
|
simulation box the body is considered to be in. An image of 0 means
|
|
it is inside the box as defined. A value of 2 means add 2 box lengths
|
|
to get the true value. A value of -1 means subtract 1 box length to
|
|
get the true value. LAMMPS updates these flags as the rigid bodies
|
|
cross periodic boundaries during the simulation.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: If you use the {infile} or {mol} keywords and write restart
|
|
files during a simulation, then each time a restart file is written,
|
|
the fix also write an auxiliary restart file with the name
|
|
rfile.rigid, where "rfile" is the name of the restart file,
|
|
e.g. tmp.restart.10000 and tmp.restart.10000.rigid. This auxiliary
|
|
file is in the same format described above. Thus it can be used in a
|
|
new input script that restarts the run and re-specifies a rigid fix
|
|
using an {infile} keyword and the appropriate filename. Note that the
|
|
auxiliary file will contain one line for every rigid body, even if the
|
|
original file only listed a subset of the rigid bodies.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
If you use a "temperature compute"_compute.html with a group that
|
|
includes particles in rigid bodies, the degrees-of-freedom removed by
|
|
each rigid body are accounted for in the temperature (and pressure)
|
|
computation, but only if the temperature group includes all the
|
|
particles in a particular rigid body.
|
|
|
|
A 3d rigid body has 6 degrees of freedom (3 translational, 3
|
|
rotational), except for a collection of point particles lying on a
|
|
straight line, which has only 5, e.g a dimer. A 2d rigid body has 3
|
|
degrees of freedom (2 translational, 1 rotational).
|
|
|
|
NOTE: You may wish to explicitly subtract additional
|
|
degrees-of-freedom if you use the {force} and {torque} keywords to
|
|
eliminate certain motions of one or more rigid bodies. LAMMPS does
|
|
not do this automatically.
|
|
|
|
The rigid body contribution to the pressure of the system (virial) is
|
|
also accounted for by this fix.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
If your simulation is a hybrid model with a mixture of rigid bodies
|
|
and non-rigid particles (e.g. solvent) there are several ways these
|
|
rigid fixes can be used in tandem with "fix nve"_fix_nve.html, "fix
|
|
nvt"_fix_nh.html, "fix npt"_fix_nh.html, and "fix nph"_fix_nh.html.
|
|
|
|
If you wish to perform NVE dynamics (no thermostatting or
|
|
barostatting), use one of 4 NVE rigid styles to integrate the rigid
|
|
bodies, and "fix nve"_fix_nve.html to integrate the non-rigid
|
|
particles.
|
|
|
|
If you wish to perform NVT dynamics (thermostatting, but no
|
|
barostatting), you can use one of the 2 NVT rigid styles for the rigid
|
|
bodies, and any thermostatting fix for the non-rigid particles ("fix
|
|
nvt"_fix_nh.html, "fix langevin"_fix_langevin.html, "fix
|
|
temp/berendsen"_fix_temp_berendsen.html). You can also use one of the
|
|
4 NVE rigid styles for the rigid bodies and thermostat them using "fix
|
|
langevin"_fix_langevin.html on the group that contains all the
|
|
particles in the rigid bodies. The net force added by "fix
|
|
langevin"_fix_langevin.html to each rigid body effectively thermostats
|
|
its translational center-of-mass motion. Not sure how well it does at
|
|
thermostatting its rotational motion.
|
|
|
|
If you with to perform NPT or NPH dynamics (barostatting), you cannot
|
|
use both "fix npt"_fix_nh.html and the NPT or NPH rigid styles. This
|
|
is because there can only be one fix which monitors the global
|
|
pressure and changes the simulation box dimensions. So you have 3
|
|
choices:
|
|
|
|
Use one of the 4 NPT or NPH styles for the rigid bodies. Use the
|
|
{dilate} all option so that it will dilate the positions of the
|
|
non-rigid particles as well. Use "fix nvt"_fix_nh.html (or any other
|
|
thermostat) for the non-rigid particles. :ulb,l
|
|
|
|
Use "fix npt"_fix_nh.html for the group of non-rigid particles. Use
|
|
the {dilate} all option so that it will dilate the center-of-mass
|
|
positions of the rigid bodies as well. Use one of the 4 NVE or 2 NVT
|
|
rigid styles for the rigid bodies. :l
|
|
|
|
Use "fix press/berendsen"_fix_press_berendsen.html to compute the
|
|
pressure and change the box dimensions. Use one of the 4 NVE or 2 NVT
|
|
rigid styles for the rigid bodies. Use "fix nvt"_fix_nh.html (or any
|
|
other thermostat) for the non-rigid particles. :l
|
|
:ule
|
|
|
|
In all case, the rigid bodies and non-rigid particles both contribute
|
|
to the global pressure and the box is scaled the same by any of the
|
|
barostatting fixes.
|
|
|
|
You could even use the 2nd and 3rd options for a non-hybrid simulation
|
|
consisting of only rigid bodies, assuming you give "fix
|
|
npt"_fix_nh.html an empty group, though it's an odd thing to do. The
|
|
barostatting fixes ("fix npt"_fix_nh.html and "fix
|
|
press/berensen"_fix_press_berendsen.html) will monitor the pressure
|
|
and change the box dimensions, but not time integrate any particles.
|
|
The integration of the rigid bodies will be performed by fix
|
|
rigid/nvt.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
Styles with a {gpu}, {intel}, {kk}, {omp}, or {opt} suffix are
|
|
functionally the same as the corresponding style without the suffix.
|
|
They have been optimized to run faster, depending on your available
|
|
hardware, as discussed on the "Speed packages"_Speed_packages.html doc
|
|
page. The accelerated styles take the same arguments and should
|
|
produce the same results, except for round-off and precision issues.
|
|
|
|
These accelerated styles are part of the GPU, USER-INTEL, KOKKOS,
|
|
USER-OMP and OPT packages, respectively. They are only enabled if
|
|
LAMMPS was built with those packages. See the "Build
|
|
package"_Build_package.html doc page for more info.
|
|
|
|
You can specify the accelerated styles explicitly in your input script
|
|
by including their suffix, or you can use the "-suffix command-line
|
|
switch"_Run_options.html when you invoke LAMMPS, or you can use the
|
|
"suffix"_suffix.html command in your input script.
|
|
|
|
See the "Speed packages"_Speed_packages.html doc page for more
|
|
instructions on how to use the accelerated styles effectively.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
[Restart, fix_modify, output, run start/stop, minimize info:]
|
|
|
|
No information about the 4 NVE rigid styles is written to "binary
|
|
restart files"_restart.html. The exception is if the {infile} or
|
|
{mol} keyword is used, in which case an auxiliary file is written out
|
|
with rigid body information each time a restart file is written, as
|
|
explained above for the {infile} keyword. For the 2 NVT rigid styles,
|
|
the state of the Nose/Hoover thermostat is written to "binary restart
|
|
files"_restart.html. Ditto for the 4 NPT and NPH rigid styles, and
|
|
the state of the Nose/Hoover barostat. See the
|
|
"read_restart"_read_restart.html command for info on how to re-specify
|
|
a fix in an input script that reads a restart file, so that the
|
|
operation of the fix continues in an uninterrupted fashion.
|
|
|
|
The "fix_modify"_fix_modify.html {energy} option is supported by the 6
|
|
NVT, NPT, NPH rigid styles to add the energy change induced by the
|
|
thermostatting to the system's potential energy as part of
|
|
"thermodynamic output"_thermo_style.html.
|
|
|
|
The "fix_modify"_fix_modify.html {virial} option is supported by this
|
|
fix to add the contribution due to keeping the objects rigid to the
|
|
system's virial as part of "thermodynamic output"_thermo_style.html.
|
|
The default is {virial yes}
|
|
|
|
The "fix_modify"_fix_modify.html {temp} and {press} options are
|
|
supported by the 4 NPT and NPH rigid styles to change the computes
|
|
used to calculate the instantaneous pressure tensor. Note that the 2
|
|
NVT rigid fixes do not use any external compute to compute
|
|
instantaneous temperature.
|
|
|
|
The "fix_modify"_fix_modify.html {bodyforces} option is supported by
|
|
all rigid styles to set whether per-body forces and torques are
|
|
computed early or late in a timestep, i.e. at the post-force stage or
|
|
at the final-integrate stage or the timestep, respectively.
|
|
|
|
The 2 NVE rigid fixes compute a global scalar which can be accessed by
|
|
various "output commands"_Howto_output.html. The scalar value
|
|
calculated by these fixes is "intensive". The scalar is the current
|
|
temperature of the collection of rigid bodies. This is averaged over
|
|
all rigid bodies and their translational and rotational degrees of
|
|
freedom. The translational energy of a rigid body is 1/2 m v^2, where
|
|
m = total mass of the body and v = the velocity of its center of mass.
|
|
The rotational energy of a rigid body is 1/2 I w^2, where I = the
|
|
moment of inertia tensor of the body and w = its angular velocity.
|
|
Degrees of freedom constrained by the {force} and {torque} keywords
|
|
are removed from this calculation, but only for the {rigid} and
|
|
{rigid/nve} fixes.
|
|
|
|
The 6 NVT, NPT, NPH rigid fixes compute a global scalar which can be
|
|
accessed by various "output commands"_Howto_output.html. The scalar
|
|
value calculated by these fixes is "extensive". The scalar is the
|
|
cumulative energy change due to the thermostatting and barostatting
|
|
the fix performs.
|
|
|
|
All of the {rigid} styles (not the {rigid/small} styles) compute a
|
|
global array of values which can be accessed by various "output
|
|
commands"_Howto_output.html. Similar information about the bodies
|
|
defined by the {rigid/small} styles can be accessed via the "compute
|
|
rigid/local"_compute_rigid_local.html command.
|
|
|
|
The number of rows in the array is equal to the number of rigid
|
|
bodies. The number of columns is 15. Thus for each rigid body, 15
|
|
values are stored: the xyz coords of the center of mass (COM), the xyz
|
|
components of the COM velocity, the xyz components of the force acting
|
|
on the COM, the xyz components of the torque acting on the COM, and
|
|
the xyz image flags of the COM.
|
|
|
|
The center of mass (COM) for each body is similar to unwrapped
|
|
coordinates written to a dump file. It will always be inside (or
|
|
slightly outside) the simulation box. The image flags have the same
|
|
meaning as image flags for atom positions (see the "dump" command).
|
|
This means you can calculate the unwrapped COM by applying the image
|
|
flags to the COM, the same as when unwrapped coordinates are written
|
|
to a dump file.
|
|
|
|
The force and torque values in the array are not affected by the
|
|
{force} and {torque} keywords in the fix rigid command; they reflect
|
|
values before any changes are made by those keywords.
|
|
|
|
The ordering of the rigid bodies (by row in the array) is as follows.
|
|
For the {single} keyword there is just one rigid body. For the
|
|
{molecule} keyword, the bodies are ordered by ascending molecule ID.
|
|
For the {group} keyword, the list of group IDs determines the ordering
|
|
of bodies.
|
|
|
|
The array values calculated by these fixes are "intensive", meaning
|
|
they are independent of the number of atoms in the simulation.
|
|
|
|
No parameter of these fixes can be used with the {start/stop} keywords
|
|
of the "run"_run.html command. These fixes are not invoked during
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"energy minimization"_minimize.html.
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:line
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[Restrictions:]
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These fixes are all part of the RIGID package. It is only enabled if
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LAMMPS was built with that package. See the "Build
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|
package"_Build_package.html doc page for more info.
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Assigning a temperature via the "velocity create"_velocity.html
|
|
command to a system with "rigid bodies"_fix_rigid.html may not have
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|
the desired outcome for two reasons. First, the velocity command can
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|
be invoked before the rigid-body fix is invoked or initialized and the
|
|
number of adjusted degrees of freedom (DOFs) is known. Thus it is not
|
|
possible to compute the target temperature correctly. Second, the
|
|
assigned velocities may be partially canceled when constraints are
|
|
first enforced, leading to a different temperature than desired. A
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workaround for this is to perform a "run 0"_run.html command, which
|
|
insures all DOFs are accounted for properly, and then rescale the
|
|
temperature to the desired value before performing a simulation. For
|
|
example:
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velocity all create 300.0 12345
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run 0 # temperature may not be 300K
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velocity all scale 300.0 # now it should be :pre
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[Related commands:]
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|
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"delete_bonds"_delete_bonds.html, "neigh_modify"_neigh_modify.html
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exclude, "fix shake"_fix_shake.html
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|
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|
[Default:]
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|
The option defaults are force * on on on and torque * on on on,
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|
meaning all rigid bodies are acted on by center-of-mass force and
|
|
torque. Also Tchain = Pchain = 10, Titer = 1, Torder = 3, reinit = yes.
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|
:line
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|
|
:link(Hoover)
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|
[(Hoover)] Hoover, Phys Rev A, 31, 1695 (1985).
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|
|
|
:link(Kamberaj)
|
|
[(Kamberaj)] Kamberaj, Low, Neal, J Chem Phys, 122, 224114 (2005).
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|
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|
:link(Martyna2)
|
|
[(Martyna)] Martyna, Klein, Tuckerman, J Chem Phys, 97, 2635 (1992);
|
|
Martyna, Tuckerman, Tobias, Klein, Mol Phys, 87, 1117.
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|
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|
:link(Miller3)
|
|
[(Miller)] Miller, Eleftheriou, Pattnaik, Ndirango, and Newns,
|
|
J Chem Phys, 116, 8649 (2002).
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|
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|
:link(Zhang1)
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|
[(Zhang)] Zhang, Glotzer, Nanoletters, 4, 1407-1413 (2004).
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