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Accelerating real-space methods by discontinuous projection

ORAL

Abstract

By virtue of multiple advances over the past two decades, real-space electronic structure methods have surpassed planewave methods in large-scale calculations of isolated and extended systems alike. Combining advances in both finite-difference and finite-element methods, we discuss a new approach to accelerate real-space methods further still, while retaining the simplicity, systematic convergence, and parallelizability inherent in the methodology. The key idea is to compress the large, sparse real-space Hamiltonian by projection in a strictly local, systematically improvable, discontinuous basis spanning the occupied subspace. We show how this basis can be constructed and employed to reduce the dimension of the real-space Hamiltonian by up to three orders of magnitude. Molecular dynamics step times of a few minutes for systems containing thousands of atoms demonstrate the scalability of the methodology in a discontinuous Galerkin formulation. Results for 1D, 2D, and 3D systems demonstrate the additional advantages afforded by the new projection formulation [1].
[1] J. Chem. Phys. 149, 094104 (2018).

Presenters

  • John Pask

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

Authors

  • John Pask

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

  • Qimen Xu

    Georgia Inst of Tech, Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Phanish Suryanarayana

    Georgia Inst of Tech, Georgia Institute of Technology