Fully implicit ADI schemes for solving the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann equation
The Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) model is an effective approach for the electrostatics analysis of solvated biomolecules. The nonlinearity associated with the PB equation is critical when the underlying electrostatic potential is strong, but is extremely difficult to solve numerically. In this paper, we c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Computational and Mathematical Biophysics 2013-04, Vol.1 (2013), p.109-123 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) model is an effective approach
for the electrostatics analysis of solvated biomolecules. The
nonlinearity associated with the PB equation is critical when
the underlying electrostatic potential is strong, but is extremely
difficult to solve numerically. In this paper, we construct
two operator splitting alternating direction implicit (ADI)
schemes to efficiently and stably solve the nonlinear PB equation
in a pseudo-transient continuation approach. The operator
splitting framework enables an analytical integration of
the nonlinear term that suppresses the nonlinear instability.
A standard finite difference scheme weighted by piecewise
dielectric constants varying across the molecular surface is
employed to discretize the nonhomogeneous diffusion term of
the nonlinear PB equation, and yields tridiagonal matrices in
the Douglas and Douglas-Rachford type ADI schemes. The
proposed time splitting ADI schemes are different from all existing
pseudo-transient continuation approaches for solving
the classical nonlinear PB equation in the sense that they are
fully implicit. In a numerical benchmark example, the steady
state solutions of the fully-implicit ADI schemes based on different
initial values all converge to the time invariant analytical
solution, while those of the explicit Euler and semi-implicit
ADI schemes blow up when the magnitude of the initial solution
is large. For the solvation analysis in applications to real
biomolecules with various sizes, the time stability of the proposed
ADI schemes can be maintained even using very large
time increments, demonstrating the efficiency and stability of
the present methods for biomolecular simulation. |
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ISSN: | 2544-7297 2544-7297 |
DOI: | 10.2478/mlbmb-2013-0006 |