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Pseudopotential

In physics, a pseudopotential or effective potential is used as an approximation for the simplified description of complex systems. Applications include atomic physics and neutron scattering. The pseudopotential approximation was first introduced by Hans Hellmann in 1934.[1]

Comparison of a wavefunction in the Coulomb potential of the nucleus (blue) to the one in the pseudopotential (red). The real and the pseudo wavefunction and potentials match above a certain cutoff radius .

Atomic physics edit

The pseudopotential is an attempt to replace the complicated effects of the motion of the core (i.e. non-valence) electrons of an atom and its nucleus with an effective potential, or pseudopotential, so that the Schrödinger equation contains a modified effective potential term instead of the Coulombic potential term for core electrons normally found in the Schrödinger equation.

The pseudopotential is an effective potential constructed to replace the atomic all-electron potential (full-potential) such that core states are eliminated and the valence electrons are described by pseudo-wavefunctions with significantly fewer nodes. This allows the pseudo-wavefunctions to be described with far fewer Fourier modes, thus making plane-wave basis sets practical to use. In this approach usually only the chemically active valence electrons are dealt with explicitly, while the core electrons are 'frozen', being considered together with the nuclei as rigid non-polarizable ion cores. It is possible to self-consistently update the pseudopotential with the chemical environment that it is embedded in, having the effect of relaxing the frozen core approximation, although this is rarely done. In codes using local basis functions, like Gaussian, often effective core potentials are used that only freeze the core electrons.

First-principles pseudopotentials are derived from an atomic reference state, requiring that the pseudo- and all-electron valence eigenstates have the same energies and amplitude (and thus density) outside a chosen core cut-off radius  .

Pseudopotentials with larger cut-off radius are said to be softer, that is more rapidly convergent, but at the same time less transferable, that is less accurate to reproduce realistic features in different environments.

Motivation:

  1. Reduction of basis set size
  2. Reduction of number of electrons
  3. Inclusion of relativistic and other effects

Approximations:

  1. One-electron picture.[clarification needed]
  2. The small-core approximation assumes that there is no significant overlap between core and valence wave-function. Nonlinear core corrections[2] or "semicore" electron inclusion[3] deal with situations where overlap is non-negligible.

Early applications of pseudopotentials to atoms and solids based on attempts to fit atomic spectra achieved only limited success. Solid-state pseudopotentials achieved their present popularity largely because of the successful fits by Walter Harrison to the nearly free electron Fermi surface of aluminum (1958) and by James C. Phillips to the covalent energy gaps of silicon and germanium (1958). Phillips and coworkers (notably Marvin L. Cohen and coworkers) later extended this work to many other semiconductors, in what they called "semiempirical pseudopotentials".[4]

Norm-conserving pseudopotential edit

Norm-conserving and ultrasoft are the two most common forms of pseudopotential used in modern plane-wave electronic structure codes. They allow a basis-set with a significantly lower cut-off (the frequency of the highest Fourier mode) to be used to describe the electron wavefunctions and so allow proper numerical convergence with reasonable computing resources. An alternative would be to augment the basis set around nuclei with atomic-like functions, as is done in LAPW. Norm-conserving pseudopotential was first proposed by Hamann, Schlüter, and Chiang (HSC) in 1979.[5] The original HSC norm-conserving pseudopotential takes the following form:

 

where   projects a one-particle wavefunction, such as one Kohn-Sham orbital, to the angular momentum labeled by  .   is the pseudopotential that acts on the projected component. Different angular momentum states then feel different potentials, thus the HSC norm-conserving pseudopotential is non-local, in contrast to local pseudopotential which acts on all one-particle wave-functions in the same way.

Norm-conserving pseudopotentials are constructed to enforce two conditions.

1. Inside the cut-off radius  , the norm of each pseudo-wavefunction be identical to its corresponding all-electron wavefunction:[6]

 ,
where   and   are the all-electron and pseudo reference states for the pseudopotential on atom  .

2. All-electron and pseudo wavefunctions are identical outside cut-off radius  .

 
Pseudopotential representing the effective core charge.

Ultrasoft pseudopotentials edit

Ultrasoft pseudopotentials relax the norm-conserving constraint to reduce the necessary basis-set size further at the expense of introducing a generalized eigenvalue problem.[7] With a non-zero difference in norms we can now define:

 ,

and so a normalised eigenstate of the pseudo Hamiltonian now obeys the generalized equation

 ,

where the operator   is defined as

 ,

where   are projectors that form a dual basis with the pseudo reference states inside the cut-off radius, and are zero outside:

 .

A related technique[8] is the projector augmented wave (PAW) method.

Fermi pseudopotential edit

Enrico Fermi introduced a pseudopotential,  , to describe the scattering of a free neutron by a nucleus.[9] The scattering is assumed to be s-wave scattering, and therefore spherically symmetric. Therefore, the potential is given as a function of radius,  :

 ,

where   is the Planck constant divided by  ,   is the mass,   is the Dirac delta function,   is the bound coherent neutron scattering length, and   the center of mass of the nucleus.[10] The Fourier transform of this  -function leads to the constant neutron form factor.

Phillips pseudopotential edit

James Charles Phillips developed a simplified pseudopotential while at Bell Labs useful for describing silicon and germanium.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Schwerdtfeger, P. (August 2011), "The Pseudopotential Approximation in Electronic Structure Theory", ChemPhysChem, 12 (17): 3143–3155, doi:10.1002/cphc.201100387, PMID 21809427
  2. ^ Louie, Steven G.; Froyen, Sverre; Cohen, Marvin L. (August 1982), "Nonlinear ionic pseudopotentials in spin-density-functional calculations", Physical Review B, 26 (4): 1738–1742, Bibcode:1982PhRvB..26.1738L, doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.26.1738
  3. ^ Reis, Carlos L.; Pacheco, J. M.; Martins, José Luís (October 2003), "First-principles norm-conserving pseudopotential with explicit incorporation of semicore states", Physical Review B, vol. 68, no. 15, American Physical Society, p. 155111, Bibcode:2003PhRvB..68o5111R, doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.68.155111
  4. ^ M. L. Cohen, J. R. Chelikowsky, "Electronic Structure and Optical Spectra of Semiconductors", (Springer Verlag, Berlin 1988)
  5. ^ Hamann, D. R.; Schlüter, M.; Chiang, C. (1979-11-12). "Norm-Conserving Pseudopotentials". Physical Review Letters. 43 (20): 1494–1497. Bibcode:1979PhRvL..43.1494H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.43.1494.
  6. ^ Bachelet, G. B.; Hamann, D. R.; Schlüter, M. (October 1982), "Pseudopotentials that work: From H to Pu", Physical Review B, vol. 26, no. 8, American Physical Society, pp. 4199–4228, Bibcode:1982PhRvB..26.4199B, doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.26.4199
  7. ^ Vanderbilt, David (April 1990), "Soft self-consistent pseudopotentials in a generalized eigenvalue formalism", Physical Review B, vol. 41, no. 11, American Physical Society, pp. 7892–7895, Bibcode:1990PhRvB..41.7892V, doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.41.7892, PMID 9993096
  8. ^ Kresse, G.; Joubert, D. (1999). "From ultrasoft pseudopotentials to the projector augmented-wave method". Physical Review B. 59 (3): 1758–1775. Bibcode:1999PhRvB..59.1758K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.59.1758.
  9. ^ E. Fermi (July 1936), "Motion of neutrons in hydrogenous substances", Ricerca Scientifica, 7: 13–52
  10. ^ Squires, Introduction to the Theory of Thermal Neutron Scattering, Dover Publications (1996) ISBN 0-486-69447-X
  11. ^ J. C. Phillips (November 1958), "Energy-Band Interpolation Scheme Based on a Pseudopotential", Physical Review, 112 (3): 685–695, Bibcode:1958PhRv..112..685P, doi:10.1103/PhysRev.112.685

Pseudopotential libraries edit

  • Pseudopotential Library : A community website for pseudopotentials/effective core potentials developed for high accuracy correlated many-body methods such as quantum Monte Carlo and quantum chemistry
  • NNIN Virtual Vault for Pseudopotentials : This webpage maintained by the NNIN/C provides a searchable database of pseudopotentials for density functional codes as well as links to pseudopotential generators, converters, and other online databases.
  • Vanderbilt Ultra-Soft Pseudopotential Site : Website of David Vanderbilt with links to codes that implement ultrasoft pseudopotentials and libraries of generated pseudopotentials.
  • GBRV pseudopotential site : This site hosts the GBRV pseudopotential library
  • PseudoDojo : This site collates tested pseudo potentials sorted by type, accuracy, and efficiency, shows information on convergence of various tested properties and provides download options.
  • SSSP : Standard Solid State Pseudopotentials

Further reading edit

  • Hellmann, Hans (1935), "A New Approximation Method in the Problem of Many Electrons", Journal of Chemical Physics, vol. 3, no. 1, Karpow‐Institute for Physical Chemistry, Moscow, p. 61, Bibcode:1935JChPh...3...61H, doi:10.1063/1.1749559, ISSN 0021-9606, archived from the original on 2013-02-23
  • Hellmann, H.; Kassatotschkin, W. (1936), "Metallic Binding According to the Combined Approximation Procedure", Journal of Chemical Physics, vol. 4, no. 5, Karpow‐Institute for Physical Chemistry, Moscow, p. 324, Bibcode:1936JChPh...4..324H, doi:10.1063/1.1749851, ISSN 0021-9606, archived from the original on 2013-02-23
  • Harrison, Walter Ashley (1966), Pseudopotentials in the theory of metals, Frontiers in Physics, University of Virginia
  • Brust, David (1968), Alder, Berni (ed.), "The Pseudopotential Method and the Single-Particle Electronic Excitation Spectra of Crystals", Methods in Computational Physics, vol. 8, New York: Academic Press, pp. 33–61, ISSN 0076-6860
  • Heine, Volker (1970), "The Pseudopotential Concept", Solid State Physics, Solid State Physics, vol. 24, Academic Press, pp. 1–36, doi:10.1016/S0081-1947(08)60069-7, ISBN 9780126077247
  • Pickett, Warren E. (April 1989), "Pseudopotential methods in condensed matter applications", Computer Physics Reports, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 115–197, Bibcode:1989CoPhR...9..115P, doi:10.1016/0167-7977(89)90002-6
  • Hamann, D. R. (2013), "Optimized norm-conserving Vanderbilt pseudopotentials", Physical Review B, vol. 88, no. 8, p. 085117, arXiv:1306.4707, Bibcode:2013PhRvB..88h5117H, doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.88.085117, S2CID 119232272
  • Lejaeghere, K.; Bihlmayer, G.; Bjorkman, T.; Blaha, P.; Blugel, S.; Blum, V.; Caliste, D.; Castelli, I. E.; Clark, S. J.; Dal Corso, A.; de Gironcoli, S.; Deutsch, T.; Dewhurst, J. K.; Di Marco, I.; Draxl, C.; Du ak, M.; Eriksson, O.; Flores-Livas, J. A.; Garrity, K. F.; Genovese, L.; Giannozzi, P.; Giantomassi, M.; Goedecker, S.; Gonze, X.; Granas, O.; Gross, E. K. U.; Gulans, A.; Gygi, F.; Hamann, D. R.; Hasnip, P. J.; Holzwarth, N. A. W.; Iu an, D.; Jochym, D. B.; Jollet, F.; Jones, D.; Kresse, G.; Koepernik, K.; Kucukbenli, E.; Kvashnin, Y. O.; Locht, I. L. M.; Lubeck, S.; Marsman, M.; Marzari, N.; Nitzsche, U.; Nordstrom, L.; Ozaki, T.; Paulatto, L.; Pickard, C. J.; Poelmans, W.; Probert, M. I. J.; Refson, K.; Richter, M.; Rignanese, G.-M.; Saha, S.; Scheffler, M.; Schlipf, M.; Schwarz, K.; Sharma, S.; Tavazza, F.; Thunstrom, P.; Tkatchenko, A.; Torrent, M.; Vanderbilt, D.; van Setten, M. J.; Van Speybroeck, V.; Wills, J. M.; Yates, J. R.; Zhang, G.-X.; Cottenier, S. (2016), "Reproducibility in density functional theory calculations of solids", Science, 351 (6280): aad3000, Bibcode:2016Sci...351.....L, doi:10.1126/science.aad3000, hdl:1854/LU-7191263, ISSN 0036-8075, PMID 27013736
  • Bosoni, Emanuele; Beal, Louis; Bercx, Marnik; Blaha, Peter; Blügel, Stefan; Bröder, Jens; Callsen, Martin; Cottenier, Stefaan; Degomme, Augustin; Dikan, Vladimir; Eimre, Kristjan; Flage-Larsen, Espen; Fornari, Marco; Garcia, Alberto; Genovese, Luigi; Giantomassi, Matteo; Huber, Sebastiaan P.; Janssen, Henning; Kastlunger, Georg; Krack, Matthias; Kresse, Georg; Kühne, Thomas D.; Lejaeghere, Kurt; Madsen, Georg K. H.; Marsman, Martijn; Marzari, Nicola; Michalicek, Gregor; Mirhosseini, Hossein; Müller, Tiziano M. A.; Petretto, Guido; Pickard, Chris J.; Poncé, Samuel; Rignanese, Gian-Marco; Rubel, Oleg; Ruh, Thomas; Sluydts, Michael; Vanpoucke, Danny E. P.; Vijay, Sudarshan; Wolloch, Michael; Wortmann, Daniel; Yakutovich, Aliaksandr V.; Yu, Jusong; Zadoks, Austin; Zhu, Bonan; Pizzi, Giovanni (January 2024). "How to verify the precision of density-functional-theory implementations via reproducible and universal workflows". Nature Reviews Physics. 6 (1): 45–58. arXiv:2305.17274. doi:10.1038/s42254-023-00655-3.

pseudopotential, physics, pseudopotential, effective, potential, used, approximation, simplified, description, complex, systems, applications, include, atomic, physics, neutron, scattering, pseudopotential, approximation, first, introduced, hans, hellmann, 193. In physics a pseudopotential or effective potential is used as an approximation for the simplified description of complex systems Applications include atomic physics and neutron scattering The pseudopotential approximation was first introduced by Hans Hellmann in 1934 1 Comparison of a wavefunction in the Coulomb potential of the nucleus blue to the one in the pseudopotential red The real and the pseudo wavefunction and potentials match above a certain cutoff radius rc displaystyle r c Contents 1 Atomic physics 1 1 Norm conserving pseudopotential 1 2 Ultrasoft pseudopotentials 2 Fermi pseudopotential 3 Phillips pseudopotential 4 See also 5 References 6 Pseudopotential libraries 7 Further readingAtomic physics editThe pseudopotential is an attempt to replace the complicated effects of the motion of the core i e non valence electrons of an atom and its nucleus with an effective potential or pseudopotential so that the Schrodinger equation contains a modified effective potential term instead of the Coulombic potential term for core electrons normally found in the Schrodinger equation The pseudopotential is an effective potential constructed to replace the atomic all electron potential full potential such that core states are eliminated and the valence electrons are described by pseudo wavefunctions with significantly fewer nodes This allows the pseudo wavefunctions to be described with far fewer Fourier modes thus making plane wave basis sets practical to use In this approach usually only the chemically active valence electrons are dealt with explicitly while the core electrons are frozen being considered together with the nuclei as rigid non polarizable ion cores It is possible to self consistently update the pseudopotential with the chemical environment that it is embedded in having the effect of relaxing the frozen core approximation although this is rarely done In codes using local basis functions like Gaussian often effective core potentials are used that only freeze the core electrons First principles pseudopotentials are derived from an atomic reference state requiring that the pseudo and all electron valence eigenstates have the same energies and amplitude and thus density outside a chosen core cut off radius rc displaystyle r c nbsp Pseudopotentials with larger cut off radius are said to be softer that is more rapidly convergent but at the same time less transferable that is less accurate to reproduce realistic features in different environments Motivation Reduction of basis set size Reduction of number of electrons Inclusion of relativistic and other effectsApproximations One electron picture clarification needed The small core approximation assumes that there is no significant overlap between core and valence wave function Nonlinear core corrections 2 or semicore electron inclusion 3 deal with situations where overlap is non negligible Early applications of pseudopotentials to atoms and solids based on attempts to fit atomic spectra achieved only limited success Solid state pseudopotentials achieved their present popularity largely because of the successful fits by Walter Harrison to the nearly free electron Fermi surface of aluminum 1958 and by James C Phillips to the covalent energy gaps of silicon and germanium 1958 Phillips and coworkers notably Marvin L Cohen and coworkers later extended this work to many other semiconductors in what they called semiempirical pseudopotentials 4 Norm conserving pseudopotential edit Norm conserving and ultrasoft are the two most common forms of pseudopotential used in modern plane wave electronic structure codes They allow a basis set with a significantly lower cut off the frequency of the highest Fourier mode to be used to describe the electron wavefunctions and so allow proper numerical convergence with reasonable computing resources An alternative would be to augment the basis set around nuclei with atomic like functions as is done in LAPW Norm conserving pseudopotential was first proposed by Hamann Schluter and Chiang HSC in 1979 5 The original HSC norm conserving pseudopotential takes the following form V ps r l m Ylm Vlm r Ylm displaystyle hat V textit ps r sum l sum m Y lm rangle V lm r langle Y lm nbsp where Ylm displaystyle Y lm rangle nbsp projects a one particle wavefunction such as one Kohn Sham orbital to the angular momentum labeled by l m displaystyle l m nbsp Vlm r displaystyle V lm r nbsp is the pseudopotential that acts on the projected component Different angular momentum states then feel different potentials thus the HSC norm conserving pseudopotential is non local in contrast to local pseudopotential which acts on all one particle wave functions in the same way Norm conserving pseudopotentials are constructed to enforce two conditions 1 Inside the cut off radius rc displaystyle r c nbsp the norm of each pseudo wavefunction be identical to its corresponding all electron wavefunction 6 r lt rcdr3ϕR i r ϕR j r r lt rcdr3ϕ R i r ϕ R j r displaystyle int r lt r c dr 3 phi mathbf R i vec r phi mathbf R j vec r int r lt r c dr 3 tilde phi mathbf R i vec r tilde phi mathbf R j vec r nbsp where ϕR i displaystyle phi mathbf R i nbsp and ϕ R i displaystyle tilde phi mathbf R i nbsp are the all electron and pseudo reference states for the pseudopotential on atom R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp 2 All electron and pseudo wavefunctions are identical outside cut off radius rc displaystyle r c nbsp nbsp Pseudopotential representing the effective core charge Ultrasoft pseudopotentials edit Ultrasoft pseudopotentials relax the norm conserving constraint to reduce the necessary basis set size further at the expense of introducing a generalized eigenvalue problem 7 With a non zero difference in norms we can now define qR ij ϕR i ϕR j ϕ R i ϕ R j displaystyle q mathbf R ij langle phi mathbf R i phi mathbf R j rangle langle tilde phi mathbf R i tilde phi mathbf R j rangle nbsp and so a normalised eigenstate of the pseudo Hamiltonian now obeys the generalized equation H PSi ϵiS PSi displaystyle hat H Psi i rangle epsilon i hat S Psi i rangle nbsp where the operator S displaystyle hat S nbsp is defined as S 1 R i j pR i qR ij pR j displaystyle hat S 1 sum mathbf R i j p mathbf R i rangle q mathbf R ij langle p mathbf R j nbsp where pR i displaystyle p mathbf R i nbsp are projectors that form a dual basis with the pseudo reference states inside the cut off radius and are zero outside pR i ϕ R j r lt rc di j displaystyle langle p mathbf R i tilde phi mathbf R j rangle r lt r c delta i j nbsp A related technique 8 is the projector augmented wave PAW method Fermi pseudopotential editEnrico Fermi introduced a pseudopotential V displaystyle V nbsp to describe the scattering of a free neutron by a nucleus 9 The scattering is assumed to be s wave scattering and therefore spherically symmetric Therefore the potential is given as a function of radius r displaystyle r nbsp V r 4pℏ2mbd r displaystyle V r frac 4 pi hbar 2 m b delta r nbsp where ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp is the Planck constant divided by 2p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp m displaystyle m nbsp is the mass d r displaystyle delta r nbsp is the Dirac delta function b displaystyle b nbsp is the bound coherent neutron scattering length and r 0 displaystyle r 0 nbsp the center of mass of the nucleus 10 The Fourier transform of this d displaystyle delta nbsp function leads to the constant neutron form factor Phillips pseudopotential editJames Charles Phillips developed a simplified pseudopotential while at Bell Labs useful for describing silicon and germanium 11 See also editDensity functional theory Projector augmented wave method Marvin L Cohen Alex ZungerReferences edit Schwerdtfeger P August 2011 The Pseudopotential Approximation in Electronic Structure Theory ChemPhysChem 12 17 3143 3155 doi 10 1002 cphc 201100387 PMID 21809427 Louie Steven G Froyen Sverre Cohen Marvin L August 1982 Nonlinear ionic pseudopotentials in spin density functional calculations Physical Review B 26 4 1738 1742 Bibcode 1982PhRvB 26 1738L doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 26 1738 Reis Carlos L Pacheco J M Martins Jose Luis October 2003 First principles norm conserving pseudopotential with explicit incorporation of semicore states Physical Review B vol 68 no 15 American Physical Society p 155111 Bibcode 2003PhRvB 68o5111R doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 68 155111 M L Cohen J R Chelikowsky Electronic Structure and Optical Spectra of Semiconductors Springer Verlag Berlin 1988 Hamann D R Schluter M Chiang C 1979 11 12 Norm Conserving Pseudopotentials Physical Review Letters 43 20 1494 1497 Bibcode 1979PhRvL 43 1494H doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 43 1494 Bachelet G B Hamann D R Schluter M October 1982 Pseudopotentials that work From H to Pu Physical Review B vol 26 no 8 American Physical Society pp 4199 4228 Bibcode 1982PhRvB 26 4199B doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 26 4199 Vanderbilt David April 1990 Soft self consistent pseudopotentials in a generalized eigenvalue formalism Physical Review B vol 41 no 11 American Physical Society pp 7892 7895 Bibcode 1990PhRvB 41 7892V doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 41 7892 PMID 9993096 Kresse G Joubert D 1999 From ultrasoft pseudopotentials to the projector augmented wave method Physical Review B 59 3 1758 1775 Bibcode 1999PhRvB 59 1758K doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 59 1758 E Fermi July 1936 Motion of neutrons in hydrogenous substances Ricerca Scientifica 7 13 52 Squires Introduction to the Theory of Thermal Neutron Scattering Dover Publications 1996 ISBN 0 486 69447 X J C Phillips November 1958 Energy Band Interpolation Scheme Based on a Pseudopotential Physical Review 112 3 685 695 Bibcode 1958PhRv 112 685P doi 10 1103 PhysRev 112 685Pseudopotential libraries editPseudopotential Library A community website for pseudopotentials effective core potentials developed for high accuracy correlated many body methods such as quantum Monte Carlo and quantum chemistry NNIN Virtual Vault for Pseudopotentials This webpage maintained by the NNIN C provides a searchable database of pseudopotentials for density functional codes as well as links to pseudopotential generators converters and other online databases Vanderbilt Ultra Soft Pseudopotential Site Website of David Vanderbilt with links to codes that implement ultrasoft pseudopotentials and libraries of generated pseudopotentials GBRV pseudopotential site This site hosts the GBRV pseudopotential library PseudoDojo This site collates tested pseudo potentials sorted by type accuracy and efficiency shows information on convergence of various tested properties and provides download options SSSP Standard Solid State PseudopotentialsFurther reading editHellmann Hans 1935 A New Approximation Method in the Problem of Many Electrons Journal of Chemical Physics vol 3 no 1 Karpow Institute for Physical Chemistry Moscow p 61 Bibcode 1935JChPh 3 61H doi 10 1063 1 1749559 ISSN 0021 9606 archived from the original on 2013 02 23 Hellmann H Kassatotschkin W 1936 Metallic Binding According to the Combined Approximation Procedure Journal of Chemical Physics vol 4 no 5 Karpow Institute for Physical Chemistry Moscow p 324 Bibcode 1936JChPh 4 324H doi 10 1063 1 1749851 ISSN 0021 9606 archived from the original on 2013 02 23 Harrison Walter Ashley 1966 Pseudopotentials in the theory of metals Frontiers in Physics University of Virginia Brust David 1968 Alder Berni ed The Pseudopotential Method and the Single Particle Electronic Excitation Spectra of Crystals Methods in Computational Physics vol 8 New York Academic Press pp 33 61 ISSN 0076 6860 Heine Volker 1970 The Pseudopotential Concept Solid State Physics Solid State Physics vol 24 Academic Press pp 1 36 doi 10 1016 S0081 1947 08 60069 7 ISBN 9780126077247 Pickett Warren E April 1989 Pseudopotential methods in condensed matter applications Computer Physics Reports vol 9 no 3 pp 115 197 Bibcode 1989CoPhR 9 115P doi 10 1016 0167 7977 89 90002 6 Hamann D R 2013 Optimized norm conserving Vanderbilt pseudopotentials Physical Review B vol 88 no 8 p 085117 arXiv 1306 4707 Bibcode 2013PhRvB 88h5117H doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 88 085117 S2CID 119232272 Lejaeghere K Bihlmayer G Bjorkman T Blaha P Blugel S Blum V Caliste D Castelli I E Clark S J Dal Corso A de Gironcoli S Deutsch T Dewhurst J K Di Marco I Draxl C Du ak M Eriksson O Flores Livas J A Garrity K F Genovese L Giannozzi P Giantomassi M Goedecker S Gonze X Granas O Gross E K U Gulans A Gygi F Hamann D R Hasnip P J Holzwarth N A W Iu an D Jochym D B Jollet F Jones D Kresse G Koepernik K Kucukbenli E Kvashnin Y O Locht I L M Lubeck S Marsman M Marzari N Nitzsche U Nordstrom L Ozaki T Paulatto L Pickard C J Poelmans W Probert M I J Refson K Richter M Rignanese G M Saha S Scheffler M Schlipf M Schwarz K Sharma S Tavazza F Thunstrom P Tkatchenko A Torrent M Vanderbilt D van Setten M J Van Speybroeck V Wills J M Yates J R Zhang G X Cottenier S 2016 Reproducibility in density functional theory calculations of solids Science 351 6280 aad3000 Bibcode 2016Sci 351 L doi 10 1126 science aad3000 hdl 1854 LU 7191263 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 27013736 Bosoni Emanuele Beal Louis Bercx Marnik Blaha Peter Blugel Stefan Broder Jens Callsen Martin Cottenier Stefaan Degomme Augustin Dikan Vladimir Eimre Kristjan Flage Larsen Espen Fornari Marco Garcia Alberto Genovese Luigi Giantomassi Matteo Huber Sebastiaan P Janssen Henning Kastlunger Georg Krack Matthias Kresse Georg Kuhne Thomas D Lejaeghere Kurt Madsen Georg K H Marsman Martijn Marzari Nicola Michalicek Gregor Mirhosseini Hossein Muller Tiziano M A Petretto Guido Pickard Chris J Ponce Samuel Rignanese Gian Marco Rubel Oleg Ruh Thomas Sluydts Michael Vanpoucke Danny E P Vijay Sudarshan Wolloch Michael Wortmann Daniel Yakutovich Aliaksandr V Yu Jusong Zadoks Austin Zhu Bonan Pizzi Giovanni January 2024 How to verify the precision of density functional theory implementations via reproducible and universal workflows Nature Reviews Physics 6 1 45 58 arXiv 2305 17274 doi 10 1038 s42254 023 00655 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pseudopotential amp oldid 1195830354, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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