Tutorial: Langevin Dynamics methods for aerosol particle trajectory simulations and collision rate constant modeling
The Langevin Dynamics (LD) method (also known in the literature as Brownian Dynamics) is routinely used to simulate aerosol particle trajectories for transport rate constant calculations as well as to understand aerosol particle transport in internal and external fluid flows. This tutorial intends t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of aerosol science 2021-06, Vol.155, p.105746, Article 105746 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Langevin Dynamics (LD) method (also known in the literature as Brownian Dynamics) is routinely used to simulate aerosol particle trajectories for transport rate constant calculations as well as to understand aerosol particle transport in internal and external fluid flows. This tutorial intends to explain the methodological details of setting up a LD simulation of a population of aerosol particles and to deduce rate constants from an ensemble of classical trajectories. We discuss the applicability and limitations of the translational Langevin equation to model the combined stochastic and deterministic motion of particles in fields of force or fluid flow. The drag force and stochastic “diffusion” force terms that appear in the Langevin equation are discussed elaborately, along with a summary of common forces relevant to aerosol systems (electrostatic, gravity, van der Waals, …); a commonly used first order and a fourth order Runge-Kutta time stepping schemes for linear stochastic ordinary differential equations are presented. A MATLAB® implementation of a LD computer code for simulating particle settling under gravity using the first order scheme is included for illustration. Scaling analysis of aerosol transport processes and the selection of timestep and domain size for trajectory simulations are demonstrated through two specific aerosol processes: particle diffusion charging and coagulation. Fortran® implementations of the first order and fourth order time-stepping schemes are included for simulating the 3D motion of a particle in a periodic domain. Potential applications and caveats to the usage of LD are included as a summary.
•The methodological details of Langevin Dynamics are discussed.•The translation Langevin equation is described for calculating particle trajectories.•The drag, diffusion and deterministic forces acting on particles are summarized.•Demonstrations on the usage of Langevin Dynamics are presented.•Potential applications and limitations of Langevin Dynamics is also included. |
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ISSN: | 0021-8502 1879-1964 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jaerosci.2021.105746 |