[Pw_forum] why SCF calculation for isolated atom is tricky
Lorenzo Paulatto
paulatto at sissa.it
Thu Sep 24 10:20:17 CEST 2009
In data 24 settembre 2009 alle ore 06:53:06, udayagiri sai babu
<udayagiri3 at gmail.com> ha scritto:
> In the forum I have seen the statement like doing scf calculation for an
> isolated atom is tricky. Can somebody explain me why is this so?
Because finding the ground-state of an isolated atom often involves
breaking the symmetry, which requires reading the manual (hint:
nosym=.true. and specify a starting magnetization).
The most serious problem is that the ground state is usually degenerate,
e.g. Boron can put it's higher-energy electron in p_x, p_y or p_z or any
linear combination of three and still get exactly the same energy.
As a consequence Self-consistency cycle can start to oscillate between
degenerate ground-states and never converge. That's why an abundant number
of bands and a small smearing is usually a good idea. Other people prefer
to break symmetry by hand, e.g. specifying a non-cubic unit cell, but I
personally find it to be not very effective.
> and then
> while testing a pseudo potential is it a good idea to calculate cohesive
> energies (which involves isolated atom) and compare as we do for lattice
> parameter and bulk modulus.
Yes, it is good idea.
--
Lorenzo Paulatto
SISSA & DEMOCRITOS (Trieste)
phone: +39 040 3787 511
skype: paulatz
www: http://people.sissa.it/~paulatto/
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