Energy cutoff smearing

A technique that has been employed in the literature to ensure smooth energy bands for finite Ecut values is energy cutoff smearing.

As recalled in the Problems and plane-wave discretization section, the energy of periodic systems is computed by solving eigenvalue problems of the form

\[H_k u_k = ε_k u_k,\]

for each $k$-point in the first Brillouin zone of the system. Each of these eigenvalue problem is discretized with a plane-wave basis $\mathcal{B}_k^{E_c}=\{x ↦ e^{iG · x} \;\;|\;G ∈ \mathcal{R}^*,\;\; |k+G|^2 ≤ 2E_c\}$ whose size highly depends on the choice of $k$-point, cell size or cutoff energy $\rm E_c$ (the Ecut parameter of DFTK). As a result, energy bands computed along a $k$-path in the Brillouin zone or with respect to the system's unit cell volume - in the case of geometry optimization for example - display big irregularities when Ecut is taken too small.

Here is for example the variation of the ground state energy of face cubic centred (FCC) silicon with respect to its lattice parameter, around the experimental lattice constant.

using DFTK
using Statistics

a0 = 10.26  # Experimental lattice constant of silicon in bohr
a_list = range(a0 - 1/2, a0 + 1/2; length=20)

function compute_ground_state_energy(a; Ecut, kgrid, kinetic_blowup, kwargs...)
    lattice = a / 2 * [[0 1 1.];
                       [1 0 1.];
                       [1 1 0.]]
    Si = ElementPsp(:Si; psp=load_psp("hgh/lda/Si-q4"))
    atoms = [Si, Si]
    positions = [ones(3)/8, -ones(3)/8]
    model = model_PBE(lattice, atoms, positions; kinetic_blowup)
    basis = PlaneWaveBasis(model; Ecut, kgrid)
    self_consistent_field(basis; callback=identity, kwargs...).energies.total
end

Ecut  = 5          # Very low Ecut to display big irregularities
kgrid = (2, 2, 2)  # Very sparse k-grid to speed up convergence
E0_naive = compute_ground_state_energy.(a_list; kinetic_blowup=BlowupIdentity(), Ecut, kgrid);

To be compared with the same computation for a high Ecut=100. The naive approximation of the energy is shifted for the legibility of the plot.

E0_ref = [-7.839775223322127, -7.843031658146996, -7.845961005280923,
          -7.848576991754026, -7.850892888614151, -7.852921532056932,
          -7.854675317792186, -7.85616622262217,  -7.85740584131599,
          -7.858405359984107, -7.859175611288143, -7.859727053496513,
          -7.860069804791132, -7.860213631865354, -7.8601679947736915,
          -7.859942011410533, -7.859544518721661, -7.858984032385052,
          -7.858268793303855, -7.857406769423708]

using Plots
shift = mean(abs.(E0_naive .- E0_ref))
p = plot(a_list, E0_naive .- shift, label="Ecut=5", xlabel="lattice parameter a (bohr)",
         ylabel="Ground state energy (Ha)", color=1)
plot!(p, a_list, E0_ref, label="Ecut=100", color=2)
Example block output

The problem of non-smoothness of the approximated energy is typically avoided by taking a large enough Ecut, at the cost of a high computation time. Another method consist in introducing a modified kinetic term defined through the data of a blow-up function, a method which is also referred to as "energy cutoff smearing". DFTK features energy cutoff smearing using the CHV blow-up function introduced in [CHV2022] that is mathematically ensured to provide $C^2$ regularity of the energy bands.

Éric Cancès, Muhammad Hassan and Laurent Vidal Modified-operator method for the calculation of band diagrams of crystalline materials, 2022. arXiv preprint.

Let us launch the computation again with the modified kinetic term.

E0_modified = compute_ground_state_energy.(a_list; kinetic_blowup=BlowupCHV(), Ecut, kgrid);
Abinit energy cutoff smearing option

For the sake of completeness, DFTK also provides the blow-up function BlowupAbinit proposed in the Abinit quantum chemistry code. This function depends on a parameter Ecutsm fixed by the user (see Abinit user guide). For the right choice of Ecutsm, BlowupAbinit corresponds to the BlowupCHV approach with coefficients ensuring $C^1$ regularity. To choose BlowupAbinit, pass kinetic_blowup=BlowupAbinit(Ecutsm) to the model constructors.

We can know compare the approximation of the energy as well as the estimated lattice constant for each strategy.

estimate_a0(E0_values) = a_list[findmin(E0_values)[2]]
a0_naive, a0_ref, a0_modified = estimate_a0.([E0_naive, E0_ref, E0_modified])

shift = mean(abs.(E0_modified .- E0_ref))  # Shift for legibility of the plot
plot!(p, a_list, E0_modified .- shift, label="Ecut=5 + BlowupCHV", color=3)
vline!(p, [a0], label="experimental a0", linestyle=:dash, linecolor=:black)
vline!(p, [a0_naive], label="a0 Ecut=5", linestyle=:dash, color=1)
vline!(p, [a0_ref], label="a0 Ecut=100", linestyle=:dash, color=2)
vline!(p, [a0_modified], label="a0 Ecut=5 + BlowupCHV", linestyle=:dash, color=3)
Example block output

The smoothed curve obtained with the modified kinetic term allow to clearly designate a minimal value of the energy with respect to the lattice parameter $a$, even with the low Ecut=5 Ha.

println("Error of approximation of the reference a0 with modified kinetic term:"*
        " $(round((a0_modified - a0_ref)*100/a0_ref, digits=5))%")
Error of approximation of the reference a0 with modified kinetic term: 0.50393%