Dear Dr. Oliviero Andreussi,

Thanks a lot for your kind reply. It has cleared my questions.

Best,
Chi-Ta
University of Iowa
Postdoc
________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of 
Oliviero Andreussi <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2016 3:28 AM
To: PWSCF Forum
Subject: Re: [Pw_forum] Environ-0.2 support Born-Oppenheimer MD ?

Dear Chi-Ta,

In the pw.x code the MD engine is indeed Born-Oppenheimer (BO). In the cp.x 
code you also have Car-Parrinello and damped dynamics available. BO in pw.x was 
supported from the very first version of Environ-0.1 and from QE-5.1.X. 
Starting from the new releases of QE (5.3.0) and Environ (0.2), the effects of 
Environ can be used also with the cp.x code and with similar results. More info 
on what is supported and what is not can be found on the project/releases 
webpage http://www.quantum-environment.org/releases.html
[http://nebula.wsimg.com/a7ae43af29a30f7be916064b1327310d?AccessKeyId=ECF106C2B7F0B5C40F7B&disposition=0&alloworigin=1]<http://www.quantum-environment.org/releases.html>

Releases - Environ<http://www.quantum-environment.org/releases.html>
www.quantum-environment.org
Environ-0.1 is the first official release of Environ. It is interfaced with . 
the Quantum-ESPRESSO package and compatible with. versions QE-5.1, QE-5.1.1, 
and QE-5.1.2.




Please note the following points:
- the implemented environment embedding schemes are not (yet) dynamic, in the 
sense that, at any given time, they are computed on the given charge density of 
the QM system, with no retardation/memory/history effects. Thus, the dynamics 
performed with the continuum dielectric of Environ will not have its true 
meaning, but will provide a sort of more statistically averaged dynamics, in 
which at every step the solvent is fully equilibrated with the solute. Whether 
this suits your applications is hard to tell, but for sure it may provide some 
useful insights (and won't cost too much, compared to an explicit solvent 
simulation).
- the overhead of the Environ calculation with the two codes (pw.x and cp.x) is 
not the same, it is significantly smaller for the BO MD in the PW code: the 
cost of computing the embedding potential is the same in the two codes, but the 
cost of each electronic step is significantly different (much smaller in cp.x).

Please let me know if the above answers are not clear enough or if you have 
more doubts.

Best,

Oliviero Andreussi

P.S. Please remind to sign with your affiliation, when asking questions to this 
forum.



On 01/25/2016 04:08 PM, Yang, Chi-Ta wrote:

Dear All,


Sorry to ask this question. First, I would like to make sure that is MD in 
PWscf (PW) Born-Oppenheimer MD ?  Does Environ-0.2 support this MD?


Thanks a lot,

Chi-Ta




_______________________________________________
Pw_forum mailing list
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://pwscf.org/mailman/listinfo/pw_forum


--
Senior Postdoctoral Researcher
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and
Università della Svizzera Italiana (USI) of Lugano
USI Campus, Via G. Buffi 17, 6904 Lugano, Switzerland
Emails: oliviero.andreussi @ epfl.ch -or- usi.ch
Tel: +41-(0)58-666-4810 / Skype: olivieroandreussi
Web: https://sites.google.com/site/olivieroandreussi
_______________________________________________
Pw_forum mailing list
[email protected]
http://pwscf.org/mailman/listinfo/pw_forum

Reply via email to