Title of article :
Introducing PROFESS 2.0: A parallelized, fully linear scaling program for orbital-free density functional theory calculations Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Linda Hung، نويسنده , , Chen Huang، نويسنده , , Ilgyou Shin، نويسنده , , Gregory S. Ho، نويسنده , , Vincent L. Lignères، نويسنده , , Emily A. Carter، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
2
From page :
2208
To page :
2209
Abstract :
Orbital-free density functional theory (OFDFT) is a first principles quantum mechanics method to find the ground-state energy of a system by variationally minimizing with respect to the electron density. No orbitals are used in the evaluation of the kinetic energy (unlike Kohn–Sham DFT), and the method scales nearly linearly with the size of the system. The PRinceton Orbital-Free Electronic Structure Software (PROFESS) uses OFDFT to model materials from the atomic scale to the mesoscale. This new version of PROFESS allows the study of larger systems with two significant changes: PROFESS is now parallelized, and the ion–electron and ion–ion terms scale quasilinearly, instead of quadratically as in PROFESS v1 (L. Hung and E.A. Carter, Chem. Phys. Lett. 475 (2009) 163). At the start of a run, PROFESS reads the various input files that describe the geometry of the system (ion positions and cell dimensions), the type of elements (defined by electron–ion pseudopotentials), the actions you want it to perform (minimize with respect to electron density and/or ion positions and/or cell lattice vectors), and the various options for the computation (such as which functionals you want it to use). Based on these inputs, PROFESS sets up a computation and performs the appropriate optimizations. Energies, forces, stresses, material geometries, and electron density configurations are some of the values that can be output throughout the optimization.
Keywords :
Optimization , Electronic structure , Orbital-free density functional theory
Journal title :
Computer Physics Communications
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Computer Physics Communications
Record number :
1138086
Link To Document :
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