Wenhao Sun, Gerbrand Ceder
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Department of Materials Science & Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Abstract
The supercell slab is the structural model used in first-principles simulations to determine thermodynamic,
kinetic, and electronic properties of surfaces and interfaces. We present a general algorithm to reorient
bulk unit cells using basis and covariant transformations — the first step for constructing surface slabs of
any Miller index from bulk unit cells of any Bravais lattice. We further review and discuss subtleties of surface
slab creation relevant for performing efficient and accurate calculations of surface properties. We also demonstrate
that the nonconvergence of surface energy with respect to slab thickness can be mitigated if the bulk
reference energy is calculated from a surface-oriented bulk unit cell, which eliminates Brillouin zone integration
errors between the slab and the bulk. Using Pt(111) and Si(111) surfaces as examples, this technique
converges the surface energy with respect to slab thickness requiring only one bulk and one relatively thin
slab calculation, with moderate k-point densities. This process is about an order of magnitude more efficient
than popular surface energy convergence techniques involving multiple slab calculations.
© 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/36c3/1238717bc1f94102bcdd359b7fbcf4f4fdcc.pdf
http://web.mit.edu/ceder/publications/2013_Wenhao_Sun_Surface_Slabs.pdf
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