An Efficient Self-optimized Sampling Method for Rare Events in Nonequilibrium Systems
Abstract
Rare events such as nucleation processes are of ubiquitous importance in real systems. The most popular method for nonequilibrium systems, forward flux sampling (FFS), samples rare events by using interfaces to partition the whole transition process into sequence of steps along an order parameter connecting the initial and final states. FFS usually suffers from two main difficulties: low computational efficiency due to bad interface locations and even being not applicable when trapping into unknown intermediate metastable states. In the present work, we propose an approach to overcome these difficulties, by self-adaptively locating the interfaces on the fly in an optimized manner. Contrary to the conventional FFS which set the interfaces with euqal distance of the order parameter, our approach determines the interfaces with equal transition probability which is shown to satisfy the optimization condition. This is done by firstly running long local trajectories starting from the current interface i to get the conditional probability distribution Pc, and then determining i+1 by equalling Pc to a give value p0. With these optimized interfaces, FFS can be run in a much efficient way. In addition, our approach can conveniently find the intermediate metastable states by monitoring some special long trajectories that nither end at the initial state nor reach the next interface, the number of which will increase sharply from zero if such metastable states are encountered. We apply our approach to a model two-state system and a two-dimensional lattice gas Ising model. Our approach is shown to be much more efficient than the conventional FFS method without losing accuracy, and it can also well reproduce the two-step nucleation scenario of the Ising model with easy identification of the intermidiate metastable state.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.