Polynomial-filtered Spectrum Slicing Method for Real-space Pseudopotential Density Functional Theory Calculations
ORAL
Abstract
First-principles electronic structure calculations are a popular avenue to understanding and predicting properties of materials. However, solving the electronic structures of the materials of interest, such as complex biomolecules, nanostructures, and interfacial systems can involve many atoms, e.g., systems with over 10,000 atoms. Systems of this size pose a challenge to current electronic structure software. We will present the recent work of a spectrum slicing algorithm, which is implemented in a real-space pseudopotential density functional theory code, PARSEC. The spectrum slicing method builds an additional layer of parallelization on top of the Chebyshev-filtered subspace iteration. Our approach provides more flexibility to fully utilize the computing power of modern distributed parallel computers. We will demonstrate the scalability of the algorithm and discuss outstanding challenges.
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Presenters
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James Chelikowsky
The University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas, Austin
Authors
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James Chelikowsky
The University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas at Austin, University of Texas, Austin
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Kai-Hsin Liou
University of Texas at Austin
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Chao Yang
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory