Tasks
- Select the "Gallium arsenide" example structure
- Click Confirm to proceed
Tasks
-
Select Structure as is - we skip optimizing the structure for
this example
- Open Step 2.1 for further instructions
Tasks
- Select Wannier functions
- Go to Step 2.2 for further instructions
Tasks
- Select the Fast protocol
- See further instructions in the Wannier functions panel
This section customizes the Wannier function calculation.
"Retrieve Hamiltonian '_tb.dat' file" checkbox allows to save the
tight-binding Hamiltonian file produced by Wannier90.
Other input/output files ('amn', 'mmn', 'eig', 'chk', 'spn') can also be saved
for reuse by ticking the corresponding checkbox.
You can learn more about the "Compute Fermi surface" option in the
corresponding in-app guide.
"Automated Wannierization algorithm" and "Frozen states" dropdowns describe
the algorithm and parameters for the automated Wannierization process.
Tasks
- Tick the Compute real-space Wannier functions checkbox
- Click Confirm to proceed
Tasks
- Keep the default resources (1 node/1 CPU per code)
- (Optional) customize the workflow label and description
- Click Submit to submit the workflow to the AiiDA engine
Tasks
- Switch to the Results panel for further instructions
- Click on the Wannier functions tab
- Click the Load results button once it becomes available
Here we can compare the electronic band structures computed from DFT and
Wannier interpolation. DFT bands are shown in solid black lines, while
Wannier-interpolated bands are shown in dashed red lines.
For Fast protocol, the Wannier-interpolated band structure is not
expected to perfectly match the DFT one, but it should still capture the
main features of the band structure.
The table below summarizes the details of the Wannierization procedure,
including the number of Wannier functions, the spread values and the average
distance between Wannier and DFT bands as defined in J. Qiao et al.
npj. Comput. Mater. 9, 208 (2023).
The list of Wannier functions with their center positions and spreads is shown
in the table below.
Click on a table row to visualize the corresponding Wannier function in real
space (shown below).
In the following section you can download desired files, such as the
tight-binding Hamiltonian file or real-space Wannier function data.