Siesta: Recent developments and applications
Ver/ Abrir
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10902/20680DOI: 10.1063/5.0005077
ISSN: 0021-9606
ISSN: 1089-7690
Registro completo
Mostrar el registro completo DCAutoría
García, Alberto; Papior, Nick; Akhtar, Arsalan; Artacho, Emilio; Blum, Volker; Bosoni, Emanuele; Brandimarte, Pedro; Brandbyge, Mads; Cerdá, J. I.; Corsetti, Fabiano; Cuadrado, Ramón; Dikan, Vladimir; Ferrer, Jaime; Gale, Julian; García Fernández, Pablo (físico)
Fecha
2020-04Derechos
© American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. The following article appeared in J. Chem. Phys. 152, 204108 (2020); and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0005077
Publicado en
J. Chem. Phys. 152, 204108 (2020)
Editorial
American Institute of Physics
Enlace a la publicación
Resumen/Abstract
A review of the present status, recent enhancements, and applicability of the Siesta program is presented. Since its debut in the mid-1990s, Siesta?s flexibility, efficiency, and free distribution have given advanced materials simulation capabilities to many groups worldwide. The core methodological scheme of Siesta combines finite-support pseudo-atomic orbitals as basis sets, norm-conserving pseudopotentials, and a real-space grid for the representation of charge density and potentials and the computation of their associated matrix elements. Here, we describe the more recent implementations on top of that core scheme, which include full spin?orbit interaction, non-repeated and multiple-contact ballistic electron transport, density functional theory (DFT)+U and hybrid functionals, time-dependent DFT, novel reduced-scaling solvers, density-functional perturbation theory, efficient van der Waals non-local density functionals, and enhanced molecular-dynamics options. In addition, a substantial effort has been made in enhancing interoperability and interfacing with other codes and utilities, such as wannier90 and the second-principles modeling it can be used for, an AiiDA plugin for workflow automatization, interface to Lua for steering Siesta runs, and various post-processing utilities. Siesta has also been engaged in the Electronic Structure Library effort from its inception, which has allowed the sharing of various low-level libraries, as well as data standards and support for them, particularly the PSeudopotential Markup Language definition and library for transferable pseudopotentials, and the interface to the ELectronic Structure Infrastructure library of solvers. Code sharing is made easier by the new open-source licensing model of the program. This review also presents examples of application of the capabilities of the code, as well as a view of on-going and future developments.
Colecciones a las que pertenece
- D29 Artículos [337]
- D29 Proyectos de Investigación [261]