1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2009
Summary
We consider a molecular description of solutions of one or more molecular components. An essential feature will be the complication of treating molecular species of practical interest since those chemical features are typically a dominating limitation of current work. Thus, liquids of atomic species only, and the conventional simple liquids, will only be relevant to the extent that they teach about molecular solutions. In this chapter, we will introduce examples of current theoretical, simulation, and experimental interest in order to give a feeling for the scope of the activity to be taken up.
The Potential Distribution Theorem (PDT) (Widom, 1963), sometimes called Widom's particle insertion formula (Valleau and Torrie, 1977), is emerging as a central organizing principle in the theory and realistic modeling of molecular solutions. This point is not broadly recognized, and there are a couple of reasons for that lack of recognition. One reason is that results have accumulated over several decades, and haven't been brought together in a unified presentation that makes that central position clear. Another reason is that the PDT has been primarily considered from the point of view of simulation rather than molecular theory. An initial view was that the PDT does not change simulation problems (Valleau and Torrie, 1977). In a later view, the PDT does assist simulations (Frenkel and Smit, 2002). More importantly though, it does give vital theoretical insight into molecular modeling tackled either with simulation or other computational tools, or for theory generally.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006