Electronic-structure theory is a strong pillar of materials science.Many different computer codes that employ different approaches are used by the community to solve various scientific problems.Still,the precision of ...Electronic-structure theory is a strong pillar of materials science.Many different computer codes that employ different approaches are used by the community to solve various scientific problems.Still,the precision of different packages has only been scrutinized thoroughly not long ago,focusing on a specific task,namely selecting a popular density functional,and using unusually high,extremely precise numerical settings for investigating 71 monoatomic crystals^(1).Little is known,however,about method- and code-specific uncertainties that arise under numerical settings that are commonly used in practice.We shed light on this issue by investigating the deviations in total and relative energies as a function of computational parameters.Using typical settings for basis sets and k-grids,we compare results for 71 elemental^(1) and 63 binary solids obtained by three different electronic-structure codes that employ fundamentally different strategies.On the basis of the observed trends,we propose a simple,analytical model for the estimation of the errors associated with the basis-set incompleteness.We cross-validate this model using ternary systems obtained from the Novel Materials Discovery (NOMAD) Repository and discuss how our approach enables the comparison of the heterogeneous data present in computational materials databases.展开更多
基金This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No.676580 and No.740233 (TEC1p)O.T.H.and E.W.gratefully acknowledge funding by the Austrian Science Fund,FWF,under the project P27868-N36.
文摘Electronic-structure theory is a strong pillar of materials science.Many different computer codes that employ different approaches are used by the community to solve various scientific problems.Still,the precision of different packages has only been scrutinized thoroughly not long ago,focusing on a specific task,namely selecting a popular density functional,and using unusually high,extremely precise numerical settings for investigating 71 monoatomic crystals^(1).Little is known,however,about method- and code-specific uncertainties that arise under numerical settings that are commonly used in practice.We shed light on this issue by investigating the deviations in total and relative energies as a function of computational parameters.Using typical settings for basis sets and k-grids,we compare results for 71 elemental^(1) and 63 binary solids obtained by three different electronic-structure codes that employ fundamentally different strategies.On the basis of the observed trends,we propose a simple,analytical model for the estimation of the errors associated with the basis-set incompleteness.We cross-validate this model using ternary systems obtained from the Novel Materials Discovery (NOMAD) Repository and discuss how our approach enables the comparison of the heterogeneous data present in computational materials databases.