The FHI-aims software package is an all-electron, full-potential
electronic structure code utilizing numeric atom-centered
basis functions for its electronic structure calculations. The localized basis set enables the accurate treatment of all electrons on the same footing in
periodic and non-periodic systems without relying on the approximation for the
core states, such as
pseudopotentials. Importantly, the basis sets enable high numerical accuracy on par with the best available all-electron reference methods while remaining scalable to system sizes up to several thousands of atoms. In order to achieve this for bulk solids, surfaces or other low-dimensional systems and molecules, the choice of basis functions is crucial. The workload of the simulations is efficiently distributable for
parallel computing using the
MPI communication protocol. The code is routinely used on platforms ranging from laptops to distributed-parallel supercomputers with ten thousand CPUs, and the scalability of the code has been tested up to 100,000's of CPUs. The primary production methods of FHI-aims are
density functional theory as well as many-body methods and higher-level quantum chemistry approaches. For the
exchange-
correlation treatment, local (
LDA), semi-local (e.g., PBE, PBEsol), meta-GGA, and
hybrid (e.g., HSE06, B3LYP) functionals have been implemented. The resulting orbitals can be used within the framework of many-body perturbation theory, such as
Møller-Plesset perturbation theory or the
GW approximation. Moreover, thermodynamic properties of the molecules and solids are accessible via Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics and
path integral molecular dynamics methods. The first step is to expand the
Kohn-Sham orbitals packages \psi_i(r) into a set of basis functions \{\phi_j(r)\} \psi_i(r) = \sum_j C_{ij} \phi_j(r). Since FHI-aims is an all-electron full-potential code that is computationally efficient without compromising accuracy, the choice of
basis function is crucial in order to achieve the said accuracy. Therefore, FHI-aims is based on numerically tabulated atom-centered
orbitals (NAOs) of the form: \phi_j(r) = \frac{\mu_j(r)}{r} Y_{lm}(\Omega). As the name implies, the radial shape \mu_j(r) is numerically tabulated and, therefore, fully flexible. This allows the creation of optimized element-dependent
basis sets that are as compact as possible while retaining a high and transferable accuracy in production calculations up to meV-level total energy convergence. To obtain real-valued \phi_j(r), Y_{lm}(\Omega) here denotes the real parts (m=0,\ldots,l) and imaginary parts (m=-l,\ldots,-1) of complex spherical harmonics, with l an implicit function of the radial function index j. == History ==