J. Chem. Phys. Abstract
Abstract
In this paper (paper II), the isokinetic dynamics scheme described
in paper I is combined with the plane-wave based
Car-Parrinello {\it ab initio} molecular dynamics method
[R. Car and M. Parrinello, Phys. Rev. Lett. 55, 2471 (1985)]
to enable the efficient study of chemical reactions and metallic systems.
The Car-Parrinello approach employs ``on the fly'' electronic structure
calculations as a means of generating accurate internuclear forces
for use in a molecular dynamics simulation. This is accomplished by the
introduction of an extended Lagrangian that contains
the electronic orbitals as fictitious dynamical variables (often expressed
directly in terms of the expansion coefficients of the orbitals in a particular
basis set). Thus, rather than
quench the expansion coefficients to obtain the ground state energy
and nuclear forces at every time step, the orbitals
are ``propagated'' under conditions that
allow them to fluctuate rapidly around their global minimum and, hence,
generate an accurate approximation to the nuclear forces as the simulation proceeds.
Indeed, the CP technique requires
the dynamics of the orbitals to be both fast compared to the nuclear
degrees of freedom while keeping the fictitious kinetic energy that allows
them to be propagated dynamically as small as possible.
While these conditions can be easy to achieve in many types of systems,
in metals and highly exothermic chemical reactions difficulties arise
(Note, the CP dynamics of metals is incorrect because
the nuclear motion does not occur on the ground state electronic surface but
it can, nonetheless, provide useful information.)
In order to alleviate these difficulties the isokinetic methods of Paper I
are applied to derive isokinetic CP equations of motion.
The efficacy of the new isokinetic CPMD method is demonstrated on model
and realistic systems. The latter include, metallic systems,
liquid aluminum, a small silicon sample, the
2x1 reconstruction of the silicon 100 surface, and the
Diels-Alder addition of 1,3-butadiene to the reconstructed silicon 100
surface.