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Accelerating Materials Discovery through Bezier Interpolation of Electronic Band Structure

ORAL

Abstract

One important part of DFT calculations is the numerical integral of the electronic band structure. Unfortunately, this critical step of DFT simulation is the most computationally expensive, because each k-point requires solving the Kohn-Sham equations, an eigenproblem, in a large basis set. Almost all of the error in the band energy integral comes from misrepresenting the Fermi surface, so the most important part of any integration technique is approximating the Fermi surface correctly. Current DFT codes approximate the bands using three-dimensional Riemann sums, which represent the Fermi surface very poorly. We present an integration technique of interpolating the bands using Bezier surfaces in order to more accurately represent the Fermi surface, and thereby achieve the same accuracy with fewer k-points. We also explore further improvement by using an adaptive mesh refinement technique in those integration regions which contain the Fermi surface. Preliminary results suggest that 1 meV accuracy can be achieved using ~10× fewer k-points.

Presenters

  • Nathan Foulk

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young University

Authors

  • Nathan Foulk

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young University

  • Jeremy Jorgensen

    Brigham Young Univ - Provo, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young University

  • Gus Hart

    Brigham Young Univ - Provo, Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young University