Hybrid finite-element/molecular-dynamics/electronic-density-functional approach to materials simulations on parallel computers (Q5944553): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 19:14, 3 June 2024
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1654671
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English | Hybrid finite-element/molecular-dynamics/electronic-density-functional approach to materials simulations on parallel computers |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1654671 |
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Hybrid finite-element/molecular-dynamics/electronic-density-functional approach to materials simulations on parallel computers (English)
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10 October 2001
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A hybrid simulation approach is developed to study chemical reactions coupled with long-range mechanical phenomena in materials. The finite-element method for continuum mechanics is coupled with the molecular dynamics method for an atomic system that embeds a cluster of atoms described quantum-mechanically with the electronic density-functional method based on real-space multigrids. The hybrid simulation approach is implemented on parallel computers using both task and spatial decompositions. Additive hybridization and unified finite-element/molecular-dynamics schemes allow scalable parallel implementation and rapid code development, respectively. A hybrid simulation of oxidation of Si(111) surface demonstrates seamless coupling of the continuum region with the classical and the quantum atomic regions.
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Hybrid simulation
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Finite-element method
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Density-functional theory
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Molecular dynamics
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Parallel computation
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