To be more precise: it does not make any sense to "displace" any atom by any 
specific amount. Forces on any other atoms will be linear in the amplitude of 
the displacement by construction (they are calculated in the linear-response 
regime), and energy difference quadratic therein. It can make sense to ask what 
it is the force linear responce to the displacement of any specific atom in any 
specific direction, though: this is obtained by calculating the interatomic 
force constants, by using a procedure that you certainly know. If you don't, it 
may be worthwhile to take a glance at how this is done, starting from google, 
or, even better, from some good old fashioned bibliographic search ... SB

On May 7, 2010, at 7:07 PM, Paolo Giannozzi wrote:

> partha sarathi ghosh wrote:
> 
>> How to calculate phonon dispersion curve using ph.x that I know
>> but I want to displace a particular atom in a particular direction
>> with adjustable displacement.
> 
> doesn't make sense to me. There is no "real" dispacement in the
> phonon code (unlike in "frozen phonon" method): the linear response
> to a displacement is calculated instead
> 
> P.
> -- 
> Paolo Giannozzi, Democritos and University of Udine, Italy
> _______________________________________________
> Pw_forum mailing list
> Pw_forum at pwscf.org
> http://www.democritos.it/mailman/listinfo/pw_forum

---
Stefano Baroni - SISSA  &  DEMOCRITOS National Simulation Center - Trieste
http://stefano.baroni.me [+39] 040 3787 406 (tel) -528 (fax) / stefanobaroni 
(skype)

La morale est une logique de l'action comme la logique est une morale de la 
pens?e - Jean Piaget

Please, if possible, don't  send me MS Word or PowerPoint attachments
Why? See:  http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html







-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
http://www.democritos.it/pipermail/pw_forum/attachments/20100508/9132ca87/attachment.htm
 

Reply via email to