4,156 research outputs found
The ReaxFF reactive force-field : development, applications and future directions
The reactive force-field (ReaxFF) interatomic potential is a powerful computational tool for exploring, developing and optimizing material properties. Methods based on the principles of quantum mechanics (QM), while offering valuable theoretical guidance at the electronic level, are often too computationally intense for simulations that consider the full dynamic evolution of a system. Alternatively, empirical interatomic potentials that are based on classical principles require significantly fewer computational resources, which enables simulations to better describe dynamic processes over longer timeframes and on larger scales. Such methods, however, typically require a predefined connectivity between atoms, precluding simulations that involve reactive events. The ReaxFF method was developed to help bridge this gap. Approaching the gap from the classical side, ReaxFF casts the empirical interatomic potential within a bond-order formalism, thus implicitly describing chemical bonding without expensive QM calculations. This article provides an overview of the development, application, and future directions of the ReaxFF method
Roadmap on semiconductor-cell biointerfaces.
This roadmap outlines the role semiconductor-based materials play in understanding the complex biophysical dynamics at multiple length scales, as well as the design and implementation of next-generation electronic, optoelectronic, and mechanical devices for biointerfaces. The roadmap emphasizes the advantages of semiconductor building blocks in interfacing, monitoring, and manipulating the activity of biological components, and discusses the possibility of using active semiconductor-cell interfaces for discovering new signaling processes in the biological world
QuantumATK: An integrated platform of electronic and atomic-scale modelling tools
QuantumATK is an integrated set of atomic-scale modelling tools developed
since 2003 by professional software engineers in collaboration with academic
researchers. While different aspects and individual modules of the platform
have been previously presented, the purpose of this paper is to give a general
overview of the platform. The QuantumATK simulation engines enable
electronic-structure calculations using density functional theory or
tight-binding model Hamiltonians, and also offers bonded or reactive empirical
force fields in many different parametrizations. Density functional theory is
implemented using either a plane-wave basis or expansion of electronic states
in a linear combination of atomic orbitals. The platform includes a long list
of advanced modules, including Green's-function methods for electron transport
simulations and surface calculations, first-principles electron-phonon and
electron-photon couplings, simulation of atomic-scale heat transport, ion
dynamics, spintronics, optical properties of materials, static polarization,
and more. Seamless integration of the different simulation engines into a
common platform allows for easy combination of different simulation methods
into complex workflows. Besides giving a general overview and presenting a
number of implementation details not previously published, we also present four
different application examples. These are calculations of the phonon-limited
mobility of Cu, Ag and Au, electron transport in a gated 2D device, multi-model
simulation of lithium ion drift through a battery cathode in an external
electric field, and electronic-structure calculations of the
composition-dependent band gap of SiGe alloys.Comment: Submitted to Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
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De Novo Ultrascale Atomistic Simulations On High-End Parallel Supercomputers
We present a de novo hierarchical simulation framework for first-principles based predictive simulations of materials and their validation on high-end parallel supercomputers and geographically distributed clusters. In this framework, high-end chemically reactive and non-reactive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations explore a wide solution space to discover microscopic mechanisms that govern macroscopic material properties, into which highly accurate quantum mechanical (QM) simulations are embedded to validate the discovered mechanisms and quantify the uncertainty of the solution. The framework includes an embedded divide-and-conquer (EDC) algorithmic framework for the design of linear-scaling simulation algorithms with minimal bandwidth complexity and tight error control. The EDC framework also enables adaptive hierarchical simulation with automated model transitioning assisted by graph-based event tracking. A tunable hierarchical cellular decomposition parallelization framework then maps the O(N) EDC algorithms onto Petaflops computers, while achieving performance tunability through a hierarchy of parameterized cell data/computation structures, as well as its implementation using hybrid Grid remote procedure call + message passing + threads programming. High-end computing platforms such as IBM BlueGene/L, SGI Altix 3000 and the NSF TeraGrid provide an excellent test grounds for the framework. On these platforms, we have achieved unprecedented scales of quantum-mechanically accurate and well validated, chemically reactive atomistic simulations--1.06 billion-atom fast reactive force-field MD and 11.8 million-atom (1.04 trillion grid points) quantum-mechanical MD in the framework of the EDC density functional theory on adaptive multigrids--in addition to 134 billion-atom non-reactive space-time multiresolution MD, with the parallel efficiency as high as 0.998 on 65,536 dual-processor BlueGene/L nodes. We have also achieved an automated execution of hierarchical QM/MD simulation on a Grid consisting of 6 supercomputer centers in the US and Japan (in total of 150 thousand processor-hours), in which the number of processors change dynamically on demand and resources are allocated and migrated dynamically in response to faults. Furthermore, performance portability has been demonstrated on a wide range of platforms such as BlueGene/L, Altix 3000, and AMD Opteron-based Linux clusters
The 1998 Center for Simulation of Dynamic Response in Materials Annual Technical Report
Introduction:
This annual report describes research accomplishments for FY 98 of the Center for Simulation
of Dynamic Response of Materials. The Center is constructing a virtual shock physics facility
in which the full three dimensional response of a variety of target materials can be computed
for a wide range of compressive, tensional, and shear loadings, including those produced by
detonation of energetic materials. The goals are to facilitate computation of a variety of
experiments in which strong shock and detonation waves are made to impinge on targets
consisting of various combinations of materials, compute the subsequent dynamic response
of the target materials, and validate these computations against experimental data
Computational Methods in Science and Engineering : Proceedings of the Workshop SimLabs@KIT, November 29 - 30, 2010, Karlsruhe, Germany
In this proceedings volume we provide a compilation of article contributions equally covering applications from different research fields and ranging from capacity up to capability computing. Besides classical computing aspects such as parallelization, the focus of these proceedings is on multi-scale approaches and methods for tackling algorithm and data complexity. Also practical aspects regarding the usage of the HPC infrastructure and available tools and software at the SCC are presented
Optimal Control of Hybrid Systems and Renewable Energies
This book is a collection of papers covering various aspects of the optimal control of power and energy production from renewable resources (wind, PV, biomass, hydrogen, etc.). In particular, attention is focused both on the optimal control of new technologies and on their integration in buildings, microgrids, and energy markets. The examples presented in this book are among the most promising technologies for satisfying an increasing share of thermal and electrical demands with renewable sources: from solar cooling plants to offshore wind generation; hybrid plants, combining traditional and renewable sources, are also considered, as well as traditional and innovative storage systems. Innovative solutions for transportation systems are also explored for both railway infrastructures and advanced light rail vehicles. The optimization and control of new solutions for the power network are addressed in detail: specifically, special attention is paid to microgrids as new paradigms for distribution networks, but also in other applications (e.g., shipboards). Finally, optimization and simulation models within SCADA and energy management systems are considered. This book is intended for engineers, researchers, and practitioners that work in the field of energy, smart grid, renewable resources, and their optimization and control
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