The implementation of an original Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics module is presented, which is able to perform simulations of large and complex condensed phase systems for sufficiently long time scales at the level of density functional theory with hybrid functionals, in the microcanonical (NVE) and canonical (NVT) ensembles. The algorithm is fully integrated in the Crystal code, a program for quantum mechanical simulations of materials, whose peculiarity stems from the use of atom-centered basis functions within a linear combination of atomic orbitals to describe the wave function. The corresponding efficiency in the evaluation of the exact Fock exchange series has led to the implementation of a rich variety of hybrid density functionals at a low computational cost. In addition, the molecular dynamics implementation benefits also from the effective MPI parallelization of the code, suited to exploit high-performance computing resources available on current generation supercomputer architectures. Furthermore, the information contained in the trajectory of the dynamics is extracted through a series of postprocessing algorithms that provide the radial distribution function, the diffusion coefficient and the vibrational density of states. In this work, we present a detailed description of the theoretical framework and the algorithmic implementation, followed by a critical evaluation of the accuracy and parallel performance (e.g., strong and weak scaling) of this approach, when ice and liquid water simulations are performed in the microcanonical and canonical ensembles.

Born–Oppenheimer Molecular Dynamics with a Linear Combination of Atomic Orbitals and Hybrid Functionals for Condensed Matter Simulations Made Possible. Theory and Performance for the Microcanonical and Canonical Ensembles

Ribaldone, Chiara
;
Casassa, Silvia
2024-01-01

Abstract

The implementation of an original Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics module is presented, which is able to perform simulations of large and complex condensed phase systems for sufficiently long time scales at the level of density functional theory with hybrid functionals, in the microcanonical (NVE) and canonical (NVT) ensembles. The algorithm is fully integrated in the Crystal code, a program for quantum mechanical simulations of materials, whose peculiarity stems from the use of atom-centered basis functions within a linear combination of atomic orbitals to describe the wave function. The corresponding efficiency in the evaluation of the exact Fock exchange series has led to the implementation of a rich variety of hybrid density functionals at a low computational cost. In addition, the molecular dynamics implementation benefits also from the effective MPI parallelization of the code, suited to exploit high-performance computing resources available on current generation supercomputer architectures. Furthermore, the information contained in the trajectory of the dynamics is extracted through a series of postprocessing algorithms that provide the radial distribution function, the diffusion coefficient and the vibrational density of states. In this work, we present a detailed description of the theoretical framework and the algorithmic implementation, followed by a critical evaluation of the accuracy and parallel performance (e.g., strong and weak scaling) of this approach, when ice and liquid water simulations are performed in the microcanonical and canonical ensembles.
2024
20
9
3954
3975
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.jctc.3c01231
ab initio molecular dynamics, hybrids, DFT, solid state chemistry
Ribaldone, Chiara; Casassa, Silvia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2049850
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