Issues with the order of correlated and uncorrelated orbitals in Wannier90+CTQMC calculations #242
Gurshidali
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Hi @Gurshidali,
Let me know if that helps or you have further questions. Best, |
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Hi,
I have a few inquiries regarding the DFTTools feature within the TRIQS software, particularly in relation to simulating materials such as SrVO3 and Fe-bcc. I would greatly appreciate your assistance in clarifying these questions:
I encountered an issue while running CTQMC on a converted h5 file from a general LDA-based tight-binding Hamiltonian in k-space. Successful CTQMC runs were achieved for the SrVO3 system, but failures occurred when attempting CTQMC for the Fe-bcc system with 9 orbitals (4 uncorrelated orbitals followed by 5 correlated orbitals with t2g and eg splitting obtained from wannier90). The issue may be related to the order of the shells in the input file for the Hkconverter. As an alternative, I tried using the interface to wannier90, but CTQMC only ran for a few iterations before stopping, and it was found that only 4 subspaces (possibly s-orbitals) were identified instead of the expected 1024 subspaces (3d correlated orbitals in Fe-bcc). Currently, I provide the shell description in the order of the orbitals as generated by the wannier90 Hamiltonian. However, CTQMC incorrectly assumes the first shells are correlated orbitals. Is there a way to define the correlated shells in the seedname.inp file according to our specific requirements?
Is it necessary to use the same high Monte Carlo parameter values (n_warmup_cycles, n_cycles, length_cycle) for sequential finite temperature calculations (different beta values)? Are there any conditions or relationships between beta and the MC parameters that allow for a more systematic increase in MC values to obtain noiseless data and faster convergence?
In the context of simulations for real materials, what would be the minimum threshold value to consider for the average sign?
P.S.: Wannier90 always gives the Hamiltonian matrix in the following order: s,p,d (in the case of Fe-bcc) irrespective of however I have mentioned the projections, while wannier90_converter treats the first shell as correlated and the subsequent shells as uncorrelated and which is causing the problem. I'm uncertain about the INP file, particularly in the General H(k) section, where the third line requests the total number of atomic shells, whereas the seedname.inp file asks for the total number of atoms.
Thank you very much for your time and expertise. I look forward to your response.
With regards,
Gurshid
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