Affiliation:
1. University of Bremen
2. University of Hamburg
3. Lund University
4. Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter
5. University of Bristol
6. Hamburg Centre for Ultrafast Imaging
Abstract
The interplay of electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom presents an outstanding problem in condensed matter physics and chemistry. Computational challenges arise especially for large systems, long time scales, in nonequilibrium, or in systems with strong correlations. In this work, we show how downfolding approaches facilitate complexity reduction on the electronic side and thereby boost the simulation of electronic properties and nuclear motion-in particular molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Three different downfolding strategies based on constraining, unscreening, and combinations thereof are benchmarked against full density functional calculations for selected charge density wave (CDW) systems, namely 1H-TaS_22, 1T-TiSe_22, 1H-NbS_22, and a one-dimensional carbon chain. We find that the downfolded models can reproduce potential energy surfaces on supercells accurately and facilitate computational speedup in MD simulations by about five orders of magnitude in comparison to purely ab initio calculations. For monolayer 1H-TaS_22 we report classical and path integral replica exchange MD simulations, revealing the impact of thermal and quantum fluctuations on the CDW transition.
Funder
Crafoordska Stiftelsen
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Horizon 2020
Universität Bremen
Vetenskapsrådet
Cited by
2 articles.
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