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  4. i-PI 2.0 : a universal force engine for advanced molecular simulations
 
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i-PI 2.0 : a universal force engine for advanced molecular simulations

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2019-04
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Kapil, Venkat  
Rossi, Mariana  
Marsalek, Ondrej  
Petraglia, Riccardo  
Litman, Yair  
Spura, Thomas  
Cheng, Bingqing  
Cuzzocrea, Alice  
Meißner, Robert  orcid-logo
Wilkins, David M.  
Helfrecht, Benjamin A.  
Juda, Przemyslaw  
Bienvenue, Sébastien P.  
Fang, Wei  
Kessler, Jan  
Poltavsky, Igor  
Vandenbrande, Steven  
Wieme, Jelle  
Corminboeuf, Clémence  
Kühne, Thomas D.  
Manolopoulos, David E.  
Markland, Thomas E.  
Richardson, Jeremy O.  
Tkatchenko, Alexandre  
Tribello, Gareth A.  
Van Speybroeck, Veronique  
Ceriotti, Michele  
Institut
Molekulardynamische Simulation weicher Materie M-EXK2  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/5008
Journal
Computer Physics Communications  
Volume
236
Start Page
214
End Page
223
Citation
Computer Physics Communications (236): 214-223 (2019-04)
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.cpc.2018.09.020
ArXiv ID
1808.03824v2
Progress in the atomic-scale modelling of matter over the past decade has been tremendous. This progress has been brought about by improvements in methods for evaluating interatomic forces that work by either solving the electronic structure problem explicitly, or by computing accurate approximations of the solution and by the development of techniques that use the Born-Oppenheimer (BO) forces to move the atoms on the BO potential energy surface. As a consequence of these developments it is now possible to identify stable or metastable states, to sample configurations consistent with the appropriate thermodynamic ensemble, and to estimate the kinetics of reactions and phase transitions. All too often, however, progress is slowed down by the bottleneck associated with implementing new optimization algorithms and/or sampling techniques into the many existing electronic-structure and empirical-potential codes. To address this problem, we are thus releasing a new version of the i-PI software. This piece of software is an easily extensible framework for implementing advanced atomistic simulation techniques using interatomic potentials and forces calculated by an external driver code. While the original version of the code was developed with a focus on path integral molecular dynamics techniques, this second release of i-PI not only includes several new advanced path integral methods, but also offers other classes of algorithms. In other words, i-PI is moving towards becoming a universal force engine that is both modular and tightly coupled to the driver codes that evaluate the potential energy surface and its derivatives.
Subjects
Physics - Chemical Physics
Physics - Chemical Physics
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