Local elevation


Local elevation is a technique used in computational chemistry or physics, mainly in the field of molecular simulation and Monte Carlo. It was developed in 1994 by Huber, Torda and van Gunsteren
to enhance the searching of conformational space in molecular dynamics simulations and is available in the GROMOS software for molecular dynamics simulation. The method was, together with the conformational flooding method
the first to introduce memory dependence into molecular simulations. Many recent methods build on the principles of the local elevation technique,
including the Engkvist-Karlström
adaptive biasing force
Wang-Landau, metadynamics,
adaptively biased molecular dynamics
,
adaptive reaction coordinate forces
and local elevation umbrella sampling
methods.
The basic principle of the method is to add a memory-dependent potential energy term in the simulation so as to prevent the simulation to revisit already sampled configurations, which leads to the increased probability of discovering new configurations. The method can be seen as a continuous variant of the Tabu search method.

Algorithm

Basic step

The basic step of the algorithm is to add a small, repulsive potential energy function to the current configuration of the molecule such as to penalize this configuration and increase the likelihood of discovering other configurations. This requires the selection of a subset of the degrees of freedom, which define the relevant conformational variables. These are typically a set of conformationally relevant dihedral angles, but can
in principle be any differentiable function of the cartesian coordinates.
The algorithm deforms the physical potential energy surface by introducing a bias energy, such that the total potential energy is defined as







The local elevation bias depends on the simulation time and is set to zero at the start of the simulation
and is gradually built as a sum of small, repulsive functions, giving



,



where is a scaling constant and is a multidimensional, repulsive function with.
The resulting bias potential will be a sum of all the added functions







To reduce the number of added repulsive functions, a common approach is to add the functions to grid points. The original choice of is to use a multidimensional Gaussian function. However, due to the infinite range of the Gaussian as well as the artifacts that can occur with a sum of gridded Gaussians, a better choice is to apply multidimensional truncated polynomial functions

Applications

The local elevation method can be applied to free energy calculations as well as to conformational searching problems. In free energy calculations the local elevation technique is applied to level out the free energy surface along the selected set of variables. It has been shown by Engkvist and Karlström
that the bias potential built by the local elevation method will approximate the negative of the free energy surface. The free energy surface can therefore be approximated directly from the bias potential or the bias potential can be used for umbrella sampling to obtain more accurate free energies.