2,914 research outputs found
Fate of density functional theory in high-pressure solid hydrogen
This paper investigates some of the successes and failures of density
functional theory in the study of high-pressure solid hydrogen at low
temperature. We calculate the phase diagram, metallization pressure, phonon
spectrum, and proton zero-point energy using three popular exchange-correlation
functionals: the local density approximation (LDA), the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof
(PBE) generalized gradient approximation, and the semi-local
Becke-Lee-Yang-Parr (BLYP) functional. We focus on the solid molecular
P/m, C2/c, Cmca-12, and Cmca structures in the pressure range from
GPa over which phases I, II and III are observed experimentally. At
the static level of theory, in which proton zero-point energy is ignored, the
LDA, PBE and BLYP functionals give very different structural transition and
metallization pressures, with the BLYP phase diagram in better agreement with
experiment. Nevertheless, all three functionals provide qualitatively the same
information about the band gaps of the four structures and the phase
transitions between them. Going beyond the static level, we find that the
frequencies of the vibron modes observed above 3000 cm depend strongly
on the choice of exchange-correlation functional, although the low-frequency
part of the phonon spectrum is little affected. The largest and smallest values
of the proton zero-point energy, obtained using the BLYP and LDA functionals,
respectively, differ by more than 10 meV/proton. Including the proton
zero-point energy calculated from the phonon spectrum within the harmonic
approximation improves the agreement of the BLYP and PBE phase diagrams with
experiment. Taken as a whole, our results demonstrate the inadequacy of
mean-field-like density functional calculations of solid molecular hydrogen in
phases I, II and III and emphasize the need for more sophisticated methods.Comment: Accepted for publicatio
Systematic study of finite-size effects in quantum Monte Carlo calculations of real metallic systems
Quantum Monte Carlo Analysis of Exchange and Correlation in the Strongly Inhomogeneous Electron Gas
We use variational quantum Monte Carlo to calculate the density-functional
exchange-correlation hole n_{xc}, the exchange-correlation energy density
e_{xc}, and the total exchange-correlation energy E_{xc}, of several electron
gas systems in which strong density inhomogeneities are induced by a
cosine-wave potential. We compare our results with the local density
approximation and the generalized gradient approximation. It is found that the
nonlocal contributions to e_{xc} contain an energetically significant
component, the magnitude, shape, and sign of which are controlled by the
Laplacian of the electron density.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Quantum Monte Carlo Study of High Pressure Solid Molecular Hydrogen
We use the diffusion quantum Monte Carlo (DMC) method to calculate the ground
state phase diagram of solid molecular hydrogen and examine the stability of
the most important insulating phases relative to metallic crystalline molecular
hydrogen. We develop a new method to account for finite-size errors by
combining the use of twist-averaged boundary conditions with corrections
obtained using the Kwee-Zhang-Krakauer (KZK) functional in density functional
theory. To study band-gap closure and find the metallization pressure, we
perform accurate quasi-particle many-body calculations using the method.
In the static approximation, our DMC simulations indicate a transition from the
insulating Cmca-12 structure to the metallic Cmca structure at around 375 GPa.
The band gap of Cmca-12 closes at roughly the same pressure. In the
dynamic DMC phase diagram, which includes the effects of zero-point energy, the
Cmca-12 structure remains stable up to 430 GPa, well above the pressure at
which the band gap closes. Our results predict that the semimetallic state
observed experimentally at around 360 GPa [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 108}, 146402
(2012)] may correspond to the Cmca-12 structure near the pressure at which the
band gap closes. The dynamic DMC phase diagram indicates that the hexagonal
close packed structure, which has the largest band gap of the
insulating structures considered, is stable up to 220 GPa. This is consistent
with recent X-ray data taken at pressures up to 183 GPa [Phys. Rev. B {\bf 82},
060101(R) (2010)], which also reported a hexagonal close packed arrangement of
hydrogen molecules
Dissociation of high-pressure solid molecular hydrogen: Quantum Monte Carlo and anharmonic vibrational study
A theoretical study is reported of the molecular-to-atomic transition in
solid hydrogen at high pressure. We use the diffusion quantum Monte Carlo
method to calculate the static lattice energies of the competing phases and a
density-functional-theory-based vibrational self-consistent field method to
calculate anharmonic vibrational properties. We find a small but significant
contribution to the vibrational energy from anharmonicity. A transition from
the molecular Cmca-12 direct to the atomic I4_1/amd phase is found at 374 GPa.
The vibrational contribution lowers the transition pressure by 91 GPa. The
dissociation pressure is not very sensitive to the isotopic composition. Our
results suggest that quantum melting occurs at finite temperature.Comment: Accepted for publication by Phys. Rev. Let
The effect of quantization on the FCIQMC sign problem
The sign problem in Full Configuration Interaction Quantum Monte Carlo
(FCIQMC) without annihilation can be understood as an instability of the
psi-particle population to the ground state of the matrix obtained by making
all off-diagonal elements of the Hamiltonian negative. Such a matrix, and hence
the sign problem, is basis dependent. In this paper we discuss the properties
of a physically important basis choice: first versus second quantization. For a
given choice of single-particle orbitals, we identify the conditions under
which the fermion sign problem in the second quantized basis of antisymmetric
Slater determinants is identical to the sign problem in the first quantized
basis of unsymmetrized Hartree products. We also show that, when the two
differ, the fermion sign problem is always less severe in the second quantized
basis. This supports the idea that FCIQMC, even in the absence of annihilation,
improves the sign problem relative to first quantized methods. Finally, we
point out some theoretically interesting classes of Hamiltonians where first
and second quantized sign problems differ, and others where they do not.Comment: 4 pages w/ 2 page appendix, 2 figures, 1 tabl
{\em Ab initio} Quantum Monte Carlo simulation of the warm dense electron gas in the thermodynamic limit
We perform \emph{ab initio} quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations of the warm
dense uniform electron gas in the thermodynamic limit. By combining QMC data
with linear response theory we are able to remove finite-size errors from the
potential energy over the entire warm dense regime, overcoming the deficiencies
of the existing finite-size corrections by Brown \emph{et al.}~[PRL
\textbf{110}, 146405 (2013)]. Extensive new QMC results for up to
electrons enable us to compute the potential energy and the
exchange-correlation free energy of the macroscopic electron gas with
an unprecedented accuracy of . A comparison of our new data to the recent parametrization of
by Karasiev {\em et al.} [PRL {\bf 112}, 076403 (2014)] reveals
significant deviations to the latter
Open-source development experiences in scientific software: the HANDE quantum Monte Carlo project
The HANDE quantum Monte Carlo project offers accessible stochastic algorithms
for general use for scientists in the field of quantum chemistry. HANDE is an
ambitious and general high-performance code developed by a
geographically-dispersed team with a variety of backgrounds in computational
science. In the course of preparing a public, open-source release, we have
taken this opportunity to step back and look at what we have done and what we
hope to do in the future. We pay particular attention to development processes,
the approach taken to train students joining the project, and how a flat
hierarchical structure aids communicationComment: 6 pages. Submission to WSSSPE
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