The Helmholtz free energy () of a fully interacting system (1) can be expressed in terms of that of system harmonic in Cartesian coordinates (0,) as follows
where is anharmonic free energy. The latter term can be determined by means of thermodynamic integration[1] (TI)
with being the potential energy of system , is a coupling constant and is the NVT ensemble average of the system driven by the Hamiltonian
Free energy of harmonic reference system within the quasi-classical theory writes
with the electronic free energy for the
configuration corresponding to the potential energy minimum with the
atomic position vector ,
the number of vibrational degrees of freedom , and the angular frequency of vibrational mode obtained using the Hesse matrix .
Finally, the harmonic potential energy is expressed as
Thus, a conventional TI calculation consists of the following steps:
- determine and in structural relaxation
- compute in vibrational analysis
- use the data obtained in the point 2 to determine that defines the harmonic forcefield
- perform NVT MD simulations for several values of and determine
- integrate over the grid and compute
Unfortunately, there are several problems linked with such a straightforward approach. First, the systems with rotational and/or translational degrees of freedom cannot be treated in a straightforward manner because is not invariant under rotations and translations. Conventional TI is thus unsuitable for simulations of gas phase molecules or adsorbate-substrate systems. and this problem also imposes restrictions on the choice of thermostat used in NVT simulation (Langevin thermostat, for instance, does not conserve position of the center of mass and is therefore unsuitable for the use in conventional TI).