Ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids

Computational approaches play an important role in today's materials science owing to the remarkable advances in modern supercomputing architecture and algorithms. Ab initio simulations solely based on a quantum description of matter are now very able to tackle materials problems in which the s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kim, Minjung, active 21st century
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/25099
id ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-25099
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-250992015-09-20T17:24:14ZAb initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquidsKim, Minjung, active 21st centuryDensity functional theoryElectronic structure calculationsReal-space pseudopotentialsAb initio molecular dynamics simulationsOxide nanocrystals and nanoclustersNon-contact Atomic Force Microscopy simulationsComputational approaches play an important role in today's materials science owing to the remarkable advances in modern supercomputing architecture and algorithms. Ab initio simulations solely based on a quantum description of matter are now very able to tackle materials problems in which the system contains up to a few thousands atoms. This dissertation aims to address the modern electronic structure calculation methods applied to a range of various materials such as liquid and amorphous phase materials, nanostructures, and small organic molecules. Our simulations were performed within the density functional theory framework, emphasizing the use of real-space ab initio pseudopotentials. On the first part of our study, we performed liquid and amorphous phase simulations by employing a molecular dynamics technique accelerated by a Chebyshev-subspace filtering algorithm. We applied this technique to find l- and a- SiO₂ structural properties that were in a good agreement with experiments. On the second part, we studied nanostructured semiconducting oxide materials, i.e., SnO₂ and TiO₂, focusing on the electronic structures and optical properties. Lastly, we developed an efficient simulation method for non-contact atomic force microscopy. This fast and simple method was found to be a very powerful tool for predicting AFM images for many surface and molecular systems.text2014-07-10T14:39:01Z2014-052014-05-09May 20142014-07-10T14:39:01ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/25099
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Density functional theory
Electronic structure calculations
Real-space pseudopotentials
Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations
Oxide nanocrystals and nanoclusters
Non-contact Atomic Force Microscopy simulations
spellingShingle Density functional theory
Electronic structure calculations
Real-space pseudopotentials
Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations
Oxide nanocrystals and nanoclusters
Non-contact Atomic Force Microscopy simulations
Kim, Minjung, active 21st century
Ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids
description Computational approaches play an important role in today's materials science owing to the remarkable advances in modern supercomputing architecture and algorithms. Ab initio simulations solely based on a quantum description of matter are now very able to tackle materials problems in which the system contains up to a few thousands atoms. This dissertation aims to address the modern electronic structure calculation methods applied to a range of various materials such as liquid and amorphous phase materials, nanostructures, and small organic molecules. Our simulations were performed within the density functional theory framework, emphasizing the use of real-space ab initio pseudopotentials. On the first part of our study, we performed liquid and amorphous phase simulations by employing a molecular dynamics technique accelerated by a Chebyshev-subspace filtering algorithm. We applied this technique to find l- and a- SiO₂ structural properties that were in a good agreement with experiments. On the second part, we studied nanostructured semiconducting oxide materials, i.e., SnO₂ and TiO₂, focusing on the electronic structures and optical properties. Lastly, we developed an efficient simulation method for non-contact atomic force microscopy. This fast and simple method was found to be a very powerful tool for predicting AFM images for many surface and molecular systems. === text
author Kim, Minjung, active 21st century
author_facet Kim, Minjung, active 21st century
author_sort Kim, Minjung, active 21st century
title Ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids
title_short Ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids
title_full Ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids
title_fullStr Ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids
title_full_unstemmed Ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids
title_sort ab initio simulation methods for the electronic and structural properties of materials applied to molecules, clusters, nanocrystals, and liquids
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/25099
work_keys_str_mv AT kimminjungactive21stcentury abinitiosimulationmethodsfortheelectronicandstructuralpropertiesofmaterialsappliedtomoleculesclustersnanocrystalsandliquids
_version_ 1716823848574255104