ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
In solid-state physics, energies of crystals are usually computed with a plane-wave discretization of Kohn-Sham equations. However the presence of Coulomb singularities requires the use of large plane-wave cut-offs to produce accurate numerical results. In this paper, an analysis of the plane-wave convergence of the eigenvalues of periodic linear Hamiltonians with Coulomb potentials using the variational projector-augmented wave (VPAW) method is presented. In the VPAW method, an invertible transformation is applied to the original eigenvalue problem, acting locally in balls centered at the singularities. In this setting, a generalized eigenvalue problem needs to be solved using plane-waves. We show that cusps of the eigenfunctions of the VPAW eigenvalue problem at the positions of the nuclei are significantly reduced. These eigenfunctions have however a higher-order derivative discontinuity at the spheres centered at the nuclei. By balancing both sources of error, we show that the VPAW method can drastically improve the plane-wave convergence of the eigenvalues with a minor additional computational cost. Numerical tests are provided confirming the efficiency of the method to treat Coulomb singularities.
In Kohn-Sham electronic structure computations, wave functions have singularities at nuclear positions. Because of these singularities, plane-wave expansions give a poor approximation of the eigenfunctions. In conjunction with the use of pseudo-poten
In this article, a numerical analysis of the projector augmented-wave (PAW) method is presented, restricted to the case of dimension one with Dirac potentials modeling the nuclei in a periodic setting. The PAW method is widely used in electronic ab i
In this paper, we construct an efficient numerical scheme for full-potential electronic structure calculations of periodic systems. In this scheme, the computational domain is decomposed into a set of atomic spheres and an interstitial region, and di
The so-called local density approximation plus the multi-orbital mean-field Hubbard model (LDA+U) has been implemented within the all-electron projector augmented-wave method (PAW), and then used to compute the insulating antiferromagnetic ground sta
Scaling of semiconductor devices has reached a stage where it has become absolutely imperative to consider the quantum mechanical aspects of transport in these ultra small devices. In these simulations, often one excludes a rigorous band structure tr