358 research outputs found
Giant magnetic enhancement in Fe/Pd films and its influence on the magnetic interlayer coupling
The magnetic properties of thin Pd fcc(001) films with embedded monolayers of
Fe are investigated by means of first principles density functional theory. The
induced spin polarization in Pd is calculated and analyzed in terms of quantum
interference within the Fe/Pd/Fe bilayer system. An investigation of the
magnetic enhancement effects on the spin polarization is carried out and its
consequences for the magnetic interlayer coupling are discussed. In contrast to
{\it e.g.} the Co/Cu fcc(001) system we find a large effect on the magnetic
interlayer coupling due to magnetic enhancement in the spacer material. In the
case of a single embedded Fe monolayer we find aninduced Pd magnetization
decaying with distance from the magnetic layer as ~ with
. For the bilayer system we find a giant magnetic
enhancement (GME) that oscillates strongly due to interference effects. This
results in a strongly modified magnetic interlayer coupling, both in phase and
magnitude, which may not be described in the pure
Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yoshida (RKKY) picture. No anti-ferromagnetic coupling
was found and by comparison with magnetically constrained calculations we show
that the overall ferromagnetic coupling can be understood from the strong
polarization of the Pd spacer
Ab initio linear scaling response theory: Electric polarizability by perturbed projection
A linear scaling method for calculation of the static {\em ab inito} response
within self-consistent field theory is developed and applied to calculation of
the static electric polarizability. The method is based on density matrix
perturbation theory [Niklasson and Challacombe, cond-mat/0311591], obtaining
response functions directly via a perturbative approach to spectral projection.
The accuracy and efficiency of the linear scaling method is demonstrated for a
series of three-dimensional water clusters at the RHF/6-31G** level of theory.
Locality of the response under a global electric field perturbation is
numerically demonstrated by approximate exponential decay of derivative density
matrix elements.Comment: 4.25 pages in PRL format, 2 figure
Shadow Energy Functionals and Potentials in Born-Oppenheimer Molecular Dynamics
In Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) simulations based on density
functional theory (DFT), the potential energy and the interatomic forces are
calculated from an electronic ground state density that is determined by an
iterative self-consistent field optimization procedure, which in practice never
is fully converged. The calculated energies and the forces are therefore only
approximate, which may lead to an unphysical energy drift and instabilities.
Here we discuss an alternative shadow BOMD approach that is based on a backward
error analysis. Instead of calculating approximate solutions for an underlying
exact regular BO potential, we do the opposite. Instead, we calculate the exact
electron density, energies, and forces, but for an underlying approximate
shadow BO potential. In this way the calculated forces are conservative with
respect to the shadow potential and generate accurate molecular trajectories
with long-term energy stability. We show how such shadow BO potentials can be
constructed at different levels of accuracy as a function of the integration
time step, dt, from the minimization of a sequence of systematically
improvable, but approximate, shadow energy density functionals. For each
functional there is a corresponding ground state BO potential. These pairs of
shadow energy functionals and potentials are higher-level generalizations of
the original "0th-level" shadow energy functionals and potentials used in
extended Lagrangian BOMD [Eur. Phys. J. B vol. 94, 164 (2021)]. The proposed
shadow energy functionals and potentials are useful only within this dynamical
framework, where also the electronic degrees of freedom are propagated together
with the atomic positions and velocities. The theory is general and can be
applied to MD simulations using approximate DFT, Hartree-Fock or semi-empirical
methods, as well as to coarse-grained flexible charge models.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Wavefunction extended Lagrangian Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics
Extended Lagrangian Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics [Niklasson, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 100 123004 (2008)] has been generalized to the propagation of the
electronic wavefunctions. The technique allows highly efficient first
principles molecular dynamics simulations using plane wave pseudopotential
electronic structure methods that are stable and energy conserving also under
incomplete and approximate self-consistency convergence. An implementation of
the method within the planewave basis set is presented and the accuracy and
efficiency is demonstrated both for semi-conductor and metallic materials.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Matrix Diagonalization as a Board Game: Teaching an Eigensolver the Fastest Path to Solution
Matrix diagonalization is at the cornerstone of numerous fields of scientific
computing. Diagonalizing a matrix to solve an eigenvalue problem requires a
sequential path of iterations that eventually reaches a sufficiently converged
and accurate solution for all the eigenvalues and eigenvectors. This typically
translates into a high computational cost. Here we demonstrate how
reinforcement learning, using the AlphaZero framework, can accelerate Jacobi
matrix diagonalizations by viewing the selection of the fastest path to
solution as a board game. To demonstrate the viability of our approach we apply
the Jacobi diagonalization algorithm to symmetric Hamiltonian matrices that
appear in quantum chemistry calculations. We find that a significant
acceleration can often be achieved. Our findings highlight the opportunity to
use machine learning as a promising tool to improve the performance of
numerical linear algebra.Comment: 14 page
Electronic Structures and Bonding of Oxygen on Plutonium Layers
Oxygen adsorption on delta-Pu (100) and (111) surfaces have been studied at
both non-spin-polarized and spin-polarized levels using the generalized
gradient approximation of density functional theory (GGA-DFT)with Perdew and
Wang functionals. The center position of the (100) surface is found to be the
most favorable site with chemisorption energies of 7.386 eV and 7.080 eV at the
two levels of theory. The distances of the oxygen adatom from the Pu surface
are found to be 0.92A and 1.02A, respectively. For the (111) surface
non-spin-polarized calculations, the center position is also the preferred site
with a chemisorption energy of 7.070 eV and the distance of the adatom being
1.31A, but for spin-polarized calculations the bridge and the center sites are
found to be basically degenerate, the difference in chemisorption energies
being only 0.021 eV. In general, due to the adsorption of oxygen, plutonium 5f
orbitals are pushed further below the Fermi energy, compared to the bare
plutonium layers. The work function, in general, increases due to oxygen
adsorption on plutonium surfaces.Comment: Spin-polarization is considered, and the paper is revised accordingl
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