MedeA VASP 5 Access the World’s Leading First-Principles DFT Code
At-a-Glance
MedeA ® VASP 5 provides industrial strength, efficient,
cutting edge access to VASP, the world’s leading
first-principles DFT code. Integrated in the MedeA
atomistic simulation environment, with comprehensive
structural databases, model building tools, and fully
automated property modules, MedeA VASP 5 has
an easy to use graphical user interface, access to
automation and large-scale high-throughput capabilities,
efficient property calculation, and interactive analysis.
Key Benefits
- High accuracy, high performance first-principles methods and properties
- Access to the latest DFT methods and developments (and beyond)
- Efficient selection of parameters, thorough validation, and testing
- Efficient management of all calculation parameters and data
- Licensing model maximizes exploitation of computational resources
VASP 5 is the world’s leading first-principles solid state
electronic structure program for solids, surfaces, and interfaces .
Possessing a comprehensive array of advanced features, including
hybrid functionals , the ability to incorporate dispersion interactions,
and comprehensive and validated self-consistent PAW potentials,
MedeA VASP 5 provides access to state of the art first-principles
simulation methods in a comprehensive and easy to use package.
Advanced features include linear response calculations for properties
such as Born effective charges, dielectric and piezoelectric tensors and
NMR chemical shifts.
MedeA VASP 5 is fully integrated in the
MedeA Environment with graphical user interface driven model
construction, efficient calculation execution, and analysis capabilities.
VASP is by far the most widely used ab-initio code applicable to solids and surfaces. This can easily be verified by an internet search.
Properties from MedeA VASP 5
MedeA VASP 5 enables the efficient computation of the following properties:
- Total electronic energy of any 3D periodic arrangement of atoms
- Forces on atoms, pressure, and stress tensors
- Collinear and non-collinear magnetic moments
- Equilibrium lattice parameters and atomic positions as obtained from energy,
force, and stress minimization
- Ab-initio molecular dynamics: nVE, nVT, npT ensembles, simulated annealing, averages, uncertainties, and trajectories
- Energy band structure: accurate band gaps, dopant levels, and band offsets
based on hybrid functionals, and GW methods
- Total and partial (atom and orbital momentum projected) electronic density of states
- Electronic charge and spin density, electrostatic potential, and Bader charge analysis
- Work functions
- Response functions including dielectric and piezoelectric tensors
- Born effective charges and \(\Gamma\)-point phonon modes
- Optical spectra: dielectric function and conductivity, reflectivity, refractive index, and optical absorption as a function of frequency
- Hyperfine splitting
- Electric field gradients and quadrupolar coupling constants
- NMR chemical shifts
- Solvation effects for surfaces and molecules
Computational Characteristics
- Plane-wave based electronic structure method for periodic structures
- All-electron method with projector augmented wave (PAW) potentials for all elements from H to Cm, including a set for highly accurate excited states
- Scalar- and fully-relativistic, spin-orbit coupling
- Density functional theory (DFT) with local (LDA) and gradient- corrected (GGA) semi-local functionals: AM05, PBEsol, PBE, rPBE, BLYP, etc.
- Hybrid functionals: HSE06, PBE0, B3LYP, in addition screened exchange and Hartree-Fock
- Meta-GGA functionals: revTPSS, TPSS, SCAN, MS2, MS1, MS0, M06-L, modified Becke-Johnson LDA
- A variety of Van-der-Waals functionals, including BEEF-vdW and SCAN + rVV10
- DFT-D2/D3 (Grimme), DFT-dDsC, and Tkatchenko-Scheffler force-field based correction for van-der-Waals and dispersion forces and energies
- Optical response functions from DFT, hybrid functionals or GW
- Electron-hole interactions (excitonic effects) from time-dependent hybrid functionals or solving the Bethe-Salpeter equation on top of GW
- Accurate total energy from adiabatic connection fluctuation dissipation theorem and the random phase approximation (ACFDT-RPA)
- Density functional perturbation theory, linear response
Required Modules
- MedeA Environment
- MedeA VASP 5
- MedeA JobServer and TaskServer
Tightly Integrated Modules
- MedeA Phonon
- MedeA Electronics (Fermi surface and transport)
- MedeA MT (mechanical and thermal properties)
- MedeA Transition State Search
- MedeA UNCLE (UNiversal CLuster Expansion)
- MedeA Forcefield Optimizer
To accelerate calculations, MedeA VASP 5 uses intermediate
results to improve the efficiency of subsequent steps. The
MedeA JobServer/TaskServer architecture provides efficient
storage and deployment for temporary files, and lets you
focus on the science while computational bookkeeping and
data storage is handled by the MedeA infrastructure.
MedeA manages computational details, such as matching k-meshes
and setting reasonable VASP parameters, automatically.
Tested, Validated, and Optimized for High-throughput
Materials Design supports a wide array of hardware
configurations with optimized and validated VASP executables.
Windows and Linux versions allow you to mix and match architectures,
so you can run more calculations, and with larger models, on
Linux clusters. You can be confident that the results will be
consistent with calculations executed on your laptop or
desktop machines. The MedeA Environment enables both
investigative and high-throughput calculations, and the
Materials Design licensing model allows you to maximize
parallel execution. You can exploit the growing availability of
high performance compute resources, and rapidly obtain state of the
art research results. VASP executables supporting GPUs are available.
Find Out More
Watch the Webinar: VASP in MedeA - a fast way from models to reliable results
- Learn how MedeA VASP 5 can be employed by visiting the Materials Design Application Notes page of our website.
Examples of MedeA VASP 5 are in the following application notes:
- Adsorption and Dissociation of Iodine Molecules on a Zr Surface
- Acidity of Amorphous Silica-Alumina Catalysts
- Stability of Alkaline-Earth Hydrides
- Graphite Electrode Elastic Properties upon Li Intercalation
- Atomic Structure of Hydrodesulfurization (HDS) Catalysts
- Embrittlement of Cu Micro-Structures
- Diffusion of Hydrogen in Nickel
- Energy of Dissociative Chemisorption of SiH4 on Si (001) Surface
- Structure of an iron oxide (Fe2O3) surface, as function of temperature and O2 pressure
- Low-Strain Cathode Materials for Solid-State Li-Ion Batteries
- Surface Magnetism of Fe(001)
- Prediction of Schottky Barrier in Electronic Devices
- Catalysts activity computational screening
- Thermoelectric Properties of Bi2Te3 as calculated using MedeA-Electronics
- Accurate Band Gaps of Correlated Transition-Metal Oxides from Hybrid-Functional Calculations
- Temperature-Dependent Phase Transitions of ZrO2
Watch the online video tutorial: How to Calculate Elastic Constants with MedeA VASP 5