Grazie Derek.
Thanks.

I will have a look around Fermi so!
ok!

thanks for the suggestion
federico.

On 04/04/2012 04:01 PM, Derek Stewart wrote:
Hi Federico,

I can see two ways that semicore states could be important:

(1) They could shift the position of your higher valence bands and change the density of states at the Fermi energy. This will directly affect your electronic conductance at low bias.

(2) If you apply a large bias to your system, you could get into a regime where the semicore states participate directly in transport.

For low bias calculations, I would suggest first running two self-consistent electronic structure calculations, one with the semicore states and one without. You can then calculate the density of states for the two runs and compare. If the density of states near the Fermi energy doesn't change much, I wouldn't expect the calculated transport to change much either.

Hope that helps!

Derek

################################
Derek Stewart, Ph. D.
Senior Research Associate
http://sites.google.com/site/dft4nano/
250 Duffield Hall
Cornell Nanoscale Facility (CNF)
Ithaca, NY 14853
stewart (at) cnf.cornell.edu
(607) 255-2856



On 4/4/2012 8:27 AM, Federico Iori wrote:
Hi all, once more.
I have a question related to the use of semicore states in transport:
I know semicores are important in several materials to get a proper electronic structure and optical properties. Nonetheless, what about transport done with the siesta package for example ? To my experience I would include them a priori, but maybe is there any rule of thumb about their use for different materials when dealing with transport ?

Thanks a lot
federico








--
Dr. Federico Iori, PhD!

Dipartimento di Scienze e Metodi per l' Ingegneria (DISMI)
Universita' di Modena e Reggio Emilia
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42122 Reggio Emilia (Italy)

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