APS Logo

Electronic density and atomic forces in solids by plane-wave auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo

ORAL

Abstract

We present accurate electronic densities and ionic forces in solids. These results are obtained using the plane-wave basis auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo (PW-AFQMC) method [1] with norm-conserving pseudopotentials. AFQMC has been shown to be an excellent many-body total energy method. Computation of observables other than the ground-state energy requires back-propagation [2], which we implement in the PW-AFQMC framework. The (near-exact) electronic densities we obtained in Si, NaCl, and Cu in the thermodynamic limit are used to benchmark several density functionals, potentially providing a reference in constructing better density functionals. Accurate ionic forces can be applied to an improved steepest-descent method [3] for geometry optimization in solids, which we demonstrate in the silicon beta-tin structure. We also discuss the prospect for phonon calculations, and ab initio many-body computation of thermodynamic properties.

[1] S. Zhang and H. Krakauer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 136401 (2003); M. Suewattana et al., Phys. Rev. B 75, 245123 (2007)
[2] S. Zhang, J. Carlson, and J. E. Gubernatis, Phys. Rev. B 55, 7464 (1997); M. Motta and S. Zhang, J. Chem. Theory Comput. 13, 5367 (2017)
[3] M. Motta and S. Zhang, J. Chem. Phys. 148, 181101 (2018)

Presenters

  • Siyuan Chen

    Department of Physics, William & Mary

Authors

  • Siyuan Chen

    Department of Physics, William & Mary

  • Mario Motta

    IBM Quantum, IBM Research Almaden, IBM Research Almaden, IBM, IBM Almaden Research Center, IBM Research - Almaden

  • Fengjie Ma

    Department of Physics, Beijing Normal University

  • Shiwei Zhang

    Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Simons foundation, Flatiron institute, Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute; William & Mary, Center of Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute, New York City, USA, Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute, Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute, 162 5th Avenue, New York, NY 10010, Simons Foundation, Center for Computational Quantum Physics