First-principles simulation: Ideas, illustrations and the CASTEP code

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Abstract

First-principles simulation, meaning density-functional theory calculations with plane waves and pseudopotentials, has become a prized technique in condensed-matter theory. Here I look at the basics of the subject, give a brief review of the theory, examining the strengths and weaknesses of its implementation, and illustrating some of the ways simulators approach problems through a small case study. I also discuss why and how modern software design methods have been used in writing a completely new modular version of the CASTEP code.

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Segall, M. D., Lindan, P. J. D., Probert, M. J., Pickard, C. J., Hasnip, P. J., Clark, S. J., & Payne, M. C. (2002). First-principles simulation: Ideas, illustrations and the CASTEP code. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter, 14(11), 2717–2744. https://doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/14/11/301

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