The Open Databases Integration for Materials Design (OPTIMADE) application programming interface (API) empowers users with holistic access to a growing federation of databases, enhancing the accessibility and discoverability of materials and chemical data. Since the first release of the OPTIMADE specification (v1.0), the API has undergone significant development, leading to the v1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRare events include many of the most interesting transformation processes in condensed matter, from phase transitions to biomolecular conformational changes to chemical reactions. Access to the corresponding mechanisms, free-energy landscapes and kinetic rates can in principle be obtained by different techniques after projecting the high-dimensional atomic dynamics on one (or a few) collective variable. Even though it is well-known that the projected dynamics approximately follows - in a statistical sense - the generalized, underdamped or overdamped Langevin equations (depending on the time resolution), to date it is nontrivial to parameterize such equations starting from a limited, practically accessible amount of non-ergodic trajectories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new algorithm for efficient and fully time-reversible integration of first-principles molecular dynamics based on orbital-free density functional theory (OFDFT) is presented. The algorithm adapts to this nontrivial case, the recently introduced Mass-Zero (MaZe) constrained dynamics. The formalism ensures that full adiabatic separation is enforced between nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom and, consequently, that the exact Born-Oppenheimer probability for the nuclei is sampled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrochemistry is central to many applications, ranging from biology to energy science. Studies now involve a wide range of techniques, both experimental and theoretical. Modeling and simulations methods, such as density functional theory or molecular dynamics, provide key information on the structural and dynamic properties of the systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe performance of different approximate algorithms for computing anharmonic features in vibrational spectra is analyzed and compared on model and more realistic systems that present relevant nuclear quantum effects. The methods considered combine approximate sampling of the quantum thermal distribution with classical time propagation and include Matsubara dynamics, path integral dynamics approaches, linearized initial value representation, and the recently introduced adaptive quantum thermal bath. A perturbative analysis of these different methods enables us to account for the observed numerical performance on prototypes for overtones and combination bands and to draw qualitatively correct trends for the numerical results obtained for Fermi resonances.
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