Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
science/chemistry

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Bond order potential

Bond order potential

Illustration of how the value of the bond order in a Tersoff-type potential shifts the potential energy minimum towards weaker bond energies and longer bond distances.
Potential energy per bond, illustrating of how the value of the bond order in a Tersoff-type potential shifts the potential energy minimum.

Bond order potential is a class of empirical (analytical) interatomic potentials which is used in molecular dynamics and molecular statics simulations. Examples include the Tersoff potential,{{cite journal and the second-moment tight-binding potentials.{{cite journal They have the advantage over conventional molecular mechanics force fields in that they can, with the same parameters, describe several different bonding states of an atom, and thus to some extent may be able to describe chemical reactions correctly. The potentials were developed partly independently of each other, but share the common idea that the strength of a chemical bond depends on the bonding environment, including the number of bonds and possibly also angles and bond lengths. It is based on the Linus Pauling bond order concept and can be written in the form

: V_{ij}(r_{ij}) = V_\mathrm{repulsive}(r_{ij}) + b_{ijk} V_\mathrm{attractive}(r_{ij})

This means that the potential is written as a simple pair potential depending on the distance between two atoms r_{ij}, but the strength of this bond is modified by the environment of the atom i via the bond order b_{ijk}. b_{ijk} is a function that in Tersoff-type potentials depends inversely on the number of bonds to the atom i, the bond angles between sets of three atoms ijk, and optionally on the relative bond lengths r_{ij}, r_{ik}. In case of only one atomic bond (like in a diatomic molecule), b_{ijk} = 1 which corresponds to the strongest and shortest possible bond. The other limiting case, for increasingly many number of bonds within some interaction range, b_{ijk} \to 0 and the potential turns completely repulsive (as illustrated in the figure to the right).

Alternatively, the potential energy can be written in the embedded atom model form

: V_{ij}(r_{ij}) = V_\mathrm{pair}(r_{ij}) - D \sqrt{\rho_i}

where \rho_i is the electron density at the location of atom i. These two forms for the energy can be shown to be equivalent (in the special case that the bond-order function b_{ijk} contains no angular dependence).{{cite journal

A more detailed summary of how the bond order concept can be motivated by the second-moment approximation of tight binding and both of these functional forms derived from it can be found in.{{cite journal | article-number = 195124

The original bond order potential concept has been developed further to include distinct bond orders for sigma bonds and pi bonds in the so-called BOP potentials.{{cite journal

Extending the analytical expression for the bond order of the sigma bonds to include fourth moments of the exact tight binding bond order reveals contributions from both sigma- and pi- bond integrals between neighboring atoms. These pi-bond contributions to the sigma bond order are responsible to stabilize the asymmetric before the symmetric (2x1) dimerized reconstruction of the Si(100) surface.{{cite journal | article-number = 014306

Also the ReaxFF potential can be considered a bond order potential, although the motivation of its bond order terms is different from that described here.

References

References

  1. ReaxFF:  A Reactive Force Field for Hydrocarbons, Adri C. T. van Duin, Siddharth Dasgupta, Francois Lorant, and William A. Goddard III, J. Phys. Chem. A, 2001, 105 (41), pp 9396–9409
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Bond order potential — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report