The procedures implemented in NAMD are particularly
adapted for performing free
energy calculations that split the 
reaction path into a number of non-physical,
intermediate states, or ``windows''. Separate simulations
can be started for each window.
Alternatively, the TCL scripting ability of
NAMD can be employed advantageously
to perform the complete simulation in a single run.
An example, making use of such a script, is supplied at the end
of this section.
The following keywords can be used to run alchemical free energy calculations, whether FEP or TI.
In the current implementation, the electrostatic interactions of an exnihilated, or appearing, particle are linearly coupled to the simulation over the 
 value range of alchElecLambdaStart - 1.0. At 
 values less than or equal to the user-defined value of alchElecLambdaStart, electrostatic interactions of the exnihilated particle are fully decoupled from the simulation.  Coupling of electrostatic interactions then increases linearly for increasing values of 
 until 
=1.0, at which point electrostatic interactions of the exnihilated particle are fully coupled to the simulation.  
For annihilated, or vanishing, particles the electrostatic interactions are linearly decoupled from the simulation over the 
 value range of 0 - (1.0 - alchElecLambdaStart). At 
=0 electrostatic interactions are fully coupled to the simulation, and then linearly decreased with increasing 
 such that at 
 values greater than or equal to (1.0 - alchElecLambdaStart) electrostatic interactions are completely decoupled from the simulation.  Two examples, shown in Figure 9, describe the relationship between the user-defined value of 
 and the coupling of electrostatic or vdW interactions to the simulation. 
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For an exnihilated particle, vdW interactions are fully decoupled at 
=0.  The coupling of vdW interactions to the simulation is then increased with increasing values of 
 such that at values of 
 greater than or equal to alchVdwLambdaEnd the vdW interactions of the exnihilated particle are fully coupled to the simulation.
For an annihilated particle, vdW interactions are completely coupled to the simulation for 
 values between 0 and (1 - alchVdwLambdaEnd). Then, vdW interactions of the annihilated particle are linearly decoupled over the range of 
 values between (1 - alchVdwLambdaEnd) and 1.0. VdW interactions are only fully decoupled when 
 reaches 1.0.  
New as of version 2.12: The energy and virial terms added by 
LJcorrection on are now also controlled by the vdW 
 schedule.
The average Lennard-Jones 
 and 
 coefficients are computed separately at
both endpoints and then coupled linearly.  In most practical situations the 
energy difference is extremely negligible, but this is more theoretically sound
than the old behavior of averaging both endpoints together.  However, the 
kinetic energy component of the virial does still count the endpoints
together, as if annihilated alchemical atoms were an ideal gas.  Again, this is
likely quite negligible, nor is it clear that this should be treated specially.