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EAM_Dynamo_BonnyTerentyevPasianot_2011_FeNiCr__MO_677715648236_000

Interatomic potential for Chromium (Cr), Iron (Fe), Nickel (Ni).
Use this Potential

Title
A single sentence description.
EAM potential (LAMMPS cubic hermite tabulation) for the Fe-Ni-Cr system developed by Bonny et al. (2011) v000
Description
A short description of the Model describing its key features including for example: type of model (pair potential, 3-body potential, EAM, etc.), modeled species (Ac, Ag, ..., Zr), intended purpose, origin, and so on.
This is an embedded atom method type interatomic potential for the ternary FeNiCr system developed to model movement of dislocations and their interaction with radiation defects. Special attention has been drawn to the Fe-10Ni-20Cr alloy, whose properties were ensured to be close to those of 316L austenitic stainless steel. In particular, the stacking fault energy and elastic constants are well reproduced.
Species
The supported atomic species.
Cr, Fe, Ni
Disclaimer
A statement of applicability provided by the contributor, informing users of the intended use of this KIM Item.
None
Content Origin https://www.ctcms.nist.gov/potentials/entry/2011--Bonny-G-Terentyev-D-Pasianot-R-C-et-al--Fe-Ni-Cr/
Contributor I Nikiforov
Maintainer I Nikiforov
Developer Giovanni Bonny
D. Terentyev
Roberto C Pasianot
Samuel Poncé
A. Bakaev
Published on KIM 2022
How to Cite

This Model originally published in [1] is archived in OpenKIM [2-5].

[1] Bonny G, Terentyev D, Pasianot RC, Poncé S, Bakaev A. Interatomic potential to study plasticity in stainless steels: the FeNiCr model alloy. Modelling and Simulation in Materials Science and Engineering [Internet]. 2011Nov;19(8):085008. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1088/0965-0393/19/8/085008 doi:10.1088/0965-0393/19/8/085008 — (Primary Source) A primary source is a reference directly related to the item documenting its development, as opposed to other sources that are provided as background information.

[2] Bonny G, Terentyev D, Pasianot RC, Poncé S, Bakaev A. EAM potential (LAMMPS cubic hermite tabulation) for the Fe-Ni-Cr system developed by Bonny et al. (2011) v000. OpenKIM; 2022. doi:10.25950/9ebbd935

[3] Foiles SM, Baskes MI, Daw MS, Plimpton SJ. EAM Model Driver for tabulated potentials with cubic Hermite spline interpolation as used in LAMMPS v005. OpenKIM; 2018. doi:10.25950/68defa36

[4] Tadmor EB, Elliott RS, Sethna JP, Miller RE, Becker CA. The potential of atomistic simulations and the Knowledgebase of Interatomic Models. JOM. 2011;63(7):17. doi:10.1007/s11837-011-0102-6

[5] Elliott RS, Tadmor EB. Knowledgebase of Interatomic Models (KIM) Application Programming Interface (API). OpenKIM; 2011. doi:10.25950/ff8f563a

Click here to download the above citation in BibTeX format.
Citations

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This panel provides information on past usage of this interatomic potential (IP) powered by the OpenKIM Deep Citation framework. The word cloud indicates typical applications of the potential. The bar chart shows citations per year of this IP (bars are divided into articles that used the IP (green) and those that did not (blue)). The complete list of articles that cited this IP is provided below along with the Deep Citation determination on usage. See the Deep Citation documentation for more information.

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Funding Award Number: 232612
Funder: European Commission

Award Number: VS.004.10N
Funder: Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación Productiva

Award Number: VS.004.10N
Funder: Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Short KIM ID
The unique KIM identifier code.
MO_677715648236_000
Extended KIM ID
The long form of the KIM ID including a human readable prefix (100 characters max), two underscores, and the Short KIM ID. Extended KIM IDs can only contain alpha-numeric characters (letters and digits) and underscores and must begin with a letter.
EAM_Dynamo_BonnyTerentyevPasianot_2011_FeNiCr__MO_677715648236_000
DOI 10.25950/9ebbd935
https://doi.org/10.25950/9ebbd935
https://commons.datacite.org/doi.org/10.25950/9ebbd935
KIM Item Type
Specifies whether this is a Portable Model (software implementation of an interatomic model); Portable Model with parameter file (parameter file to be read in by a Model Driver); Model Driver (software implementation of an interatomic model that reads in parameters).
Portable Model using Model Driver EAM_Dynamo__MD_120291908751_005
DriverEAM_Dynamo__MD_120291908751_005
KIM API Version2.2
Potential Type eam

(Click here to learn more about Verification Checks)

Grade Name Category Brief Description Full Results Aux File(s)
P vc-species-supported-as-stated mandatory
The model supports all species it claims to support; see full description.
Results Files
P vc-periodicity-support mandatory
Periodic boundary conditions are handled correctly; see full description.
Results Files
P vc-permutation-symmetry mandatory
Total energy and forces are unchanged when swapping atoms of the same species; see full description.
Results Files
B vc-forces-numerical-derivative consistency
Forces computed by the model agree with numerical derivatives of the energy; see full description.
Results Files
F vc-dimer-continuity-c1 informational
The energy versus separation relation of a pair of atoms is C1 continuous (i.e. the function and its first derivative are continuous); see full description.
Results Files
P vc-objectivity informational
Total energy is unchanged and forces transform correctly under rigid-body translation and rotation; see full description.
Results Files
P vc-inversion-symmetry informational
Total energy is unchanged and forces change sign when inverting a configuration through the origin; see full description.
Results Files
P vc-memory-leak informational
The model code does not have memory leaks (i.e. it releases all allocated memory at the end); see full description.
Results Files
P vc-thread-safe mandatory
The model returns the same energy and forces when computed in serial and when using parallel threads for a set of configurations. Note that this is not a guarantee of thread safety; see full description.
Results Files
P vc-unit-conversion mandatory
The model is able to correctly convert its energy and/or forces to different unit sets; see full description.
Results Files


BCC Lattice Constant

This bar chart plot shows the mono-atomic body-centered cubic (bcc) lattice constant predicted by the current model (shown in the unique color) compared with the predictions for all other models in the OpenKIM Repository that support the species. The vertical bars show the average and standard deviation (one sigma) bounds for all model predictions. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

Species: Cr
Species: Ni
Species: Fe


Cohesive Energy Graph

This graph shows the cohesive energy versus volume-per-atom for the current mode for four mono-atomic cubic phases (body-centered cubic (bcc), face-centered cubic (fcc), simple cubic (sc), and diamond). The curve with the lowest minimum is the ground state of the crystal if stable. (The crystal structure is enforced in these calculations, so the phase may not be stable.) Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

Species: Cr
Species: Ni
Species: Fe


Diamond Lattice Constant

This bar chart plot shows the mono-atomic face-centered diamond lattice constant predicted by the current model (shown in the unique color) compared with the predictions for all other models in the OpenKIM Repository that support the species. The vertical bars show the average and standard deviation (one sigma) bounds for all model predictions. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

Species: Ni
Species: Cr
Species: Fe


Dislocation Core Energies

This graph shows the dislocation core energy of a cubic crystal at zero temperature and pressure for a specific set of dislocation core cutoff radii. After obtaining the total energy of the system from conjugate gradient minimizations, non-singular, isotropic and anisotropic elasticity are applied to obtain the dislocation core energy for each of these supercells with different dipole distances. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

(No matching species)

FCC Elastic Constants

This bar chart plot shows the mono-atomic face-centered cubic (fcc) elastic constants predicted by the current model (shown in blue) compared with the predictions for all other models in the OpenKIM Repository that support the species. The vertical bars show the average and standard deviation (one sigma) bounds for all model predictions. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

Species: Cr
Species: Fe
Species: Ni


FCC Lattice Constant

This bar chart plot shows the mono-atomic face-centered cubic (fcc) lattice constant predicted by the current model (shown in red) compared with the predictions for all other models in the OpenKIM Repository that support the species. The vertical bars show the average and standard deviation (one sigma) bounds for all model predictions. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

Species: Ni
Species: Cr
Species: Fe


FCC Stacking Fault Energies

This bar chart plot shows the intrinsic and extrinsic stacking fault energies as well as the unstable stacking and unstable twinning energies for face-centered cubic (fcc) predicted by the current model (shown in blue) compared with the predictions for all other models in the OpenKIM Repository that support the species. The vertical bars show the average and standard deviation (one sigma) bounds for all model predictions. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

(No matching species)

FCC Surface Energies

This bar chart plot shows the mono-atomic face-centered cubic (fcc) relaxed surface energies predicted by the current model (shown in blue) compared with the predictions for all other models in the OpenKIM Repository that support the species. The vertical bars show the average and standard deviation (one sigma) bounds for all model predictions. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

Species: Ni


SC Lattice Constant

This bar chart plot shows the mono-atomic simple cubic (sc) lattice constant predicted by the current model (shown in the unique color) compared with the predictions for all other models in the OpenKIM Repository that support the species. The vertical bars show the average and standard deviation (one sigma) bounds for all model predictions. Graphs are generated for each species supported by the model.

Species: Ni
Species: Cr
Species: Fe


Cubic Crystal Basic Properties Table

Species: Cr

Species: Fe

Species: Ni





Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for monoatomic cubic lattices v003

Creators:
Contributor: karls
Publication Year: 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/64cb38c5

This Test Driver uses LAMMPS to compute the cohesive energy of a given monoatomic cubic lattice (fcc, bcc, sc, or diamond) at a variety of lattice spacings. The lattice spacings range from a_min (=a_min_frac*a_0) to a_max (=a_max_frac*a_0) where a_0, a_min_frac, and a_max_frac are read from stdin (a_0 is typically approximately equal to the equilibrium lattice constant). The precise scaling and number of lattice spacings sampled between a_min and a_0 (a_0 and a_max) is specified by two additional parameters passed from stdin: N_lower and samplespacing_lower (N_upper and samplespacing_upper). Please see README.txt for further details.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for bcc Cr v004 view 11293
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for bcc Fe v004 view 9608
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for bcc Ni v004 view 15505
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for diamond Cr v004 view 9538
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for diamond Fe v004 view 16027
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for diamond Ni v004 view 9966
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for fcc Cr v004 view 10160
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for fcc Fe v004 view 9389
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for fcc Ni v004 view 9329
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for sc Cr v004 view 10675
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for sc Fe v004 view 9140
Cohesive energy versus lattice constant curve for sc Ni v004 view 13045


Elastic constants for arbitrary crystals at zero temperature and pressure v000

Creators:
Contributor: ilia
Publication Year: 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/888f9943

Computes the elastic constants for an arbitrary crystal. A robust computational protocol is used, attempting multiple methods and step sizes to achieve an acceptably low error in numerical differentiation and deviation from material symmetry. The crystal structure is specified using the AFLOW prototype designation as part of the Crystal Genome testing framework. In addition, the distance from the obtained elasticity tensor to the nearest isotropic tensor is computed.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Elastic constants for CrFe in AFLOW crystal prototype A2B_cF24_227_c_b at zero temperature and pressure v000 view 164763
Elastic constants for CrNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A2B_cF24_227_c_b at zero temperature and pressure v000 view 110219
Elastic constants for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A2B_cF24_227_c_b at zero temperature and pressure v000 view 298210


Elastic constants for cubic crystals at zero temperature and pressure v006

Creators: Junhao Li and Ellad Tadmor
Contributor: tadmor
Publication Year: 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/5853fb8f

Computes the cubic elastic constants for some common crystal types (fcc, bcc, sc, diamond) by calculating the hessian of the energy density with respect to strain. An estimate of the error associated with the numerical differentiation performed is reported.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Elastic constants for bcc Cr at zero temperature v006 view 10138
Elastic constants for bcc Ni at zero temperature v006 view 17077
Elastic constants for diamond Fe at zero temperature v001 view 24562
Elastic constants for fcc Cr at zero temperature v006 view 17585
Elastic constants for fcc Fe at zero temperature v006 view 9616
Elastic constants for fcc Ni at zero temperature v006 view 9504
Elastic constants for sc Cr at zero temperature v006 view 8871
Elastic constants for sc Fe at zero temperature v006 view 8423
Elastic constants for sc Ni at zero temperature v006 view 8945


Equilibrium structure and energy for a crystal structure at zero temperature and pressure v002

Creators:
Contributor: ilia
Publication Year: 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/2f2c4ad3

Computes the equilibrium crystal structure and energy for an arbitrary crystal at zero temperature and applied stress by performing symmetry-constrained relaxation. The crystal structure is specified using the AFLOW prototype designation. Multiple sets of free parameters corresponding to the crystal prototype may be specified as initial guesses for structure optimization. No guarantee is made regarding the stability of computed equilibria, nor that any are the ground state.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrFe in AFLOW crystal prototype A2B_cF24_227_c_b v002 view 322090
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A2B_cF24_227_c_b v002 view 264298
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A2B_cF24_227_c_b v002 view 225966
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A3B_cF16_225_ac_b v002 view 110340
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A3B_cF16_225_ac_b v002 view 105176
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrFe in AFLOW crystal prototype A3B_cP4_221_c_a v002 view 80993
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A3B_cP4_221_c_a v002 view 81297
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A3B_cP4_221_c_a v002 view 71636
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrFe in AFLOW crystal prototype A3B_tI8_139_ad_b v002 view 90185
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype A3B_tI8_139_ad_b v002 view 89449
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Cr in AFLOW crystal prototype A_cF4_225_a v002 view 57054
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Fe in AFLOW crystal prototype A_cF4_225_a v002 view 94664
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Ni in AFLOW crystal prototype A_cF4_225_a v002 view 53590
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Cr in AFLOW crystal prototype A_cI2_229_a v002 view 83486
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Fe in AFLOW crystal prototype A_cI2_229_a v002 view 69277
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Ni in AFLOW crystal prototype A_cI2_229_a v002 view 56264
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Cr in AFLOW crystal prototype A_cP8_223_ac v002 view 105176
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Cr in AFLOW crystal prototype A_hP2_194_c v002 view 44780
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Fe in AFLOW crystal prototype A_hP2_194_c v002 view 45874
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Ni in AFLOW crystal prototype A_hP2_194_c v002 view 52618
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Cr in AFLOW crystal prototype A_tP28_136_f2ij v002 view 92051
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for Fe in AFLOW crystal prototype A_tP28_136_f2ij v002 view 80872
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrFe in AFLOW crystal prototype AB2_cF24_227_a_d v002 view 237875
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrNi in AFLOW crystal prototype AB2_cF24_227_a_d v002 view 226392
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype AB2_cF24_227_a_d v002 view 235586
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrFe in AFLOW crystal prototype AB3_cF16_225_a_bc v002 view 140762
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrNi in AFLOW crystal prototype AB3_cF16_225_a_bc v002 view 124640
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype AB3_cF16_225_a_bc v002 view 121179
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for CrFe in AFLOW crystal prototype AB3_cP4_221_a_c v002 view 92173
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype AB3_cP4_221_a_c v002 view 93204
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype AB3_tI8_139_a_bd v002 view 46299
Equilibrium crystal structure and energy for FeNi in AFLOW crystal prototype AB_tP2_123_a_d v002 view 47636


Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a symmetric tilt grain boundary within a cubic crystal v002

Creators: Brandon Runnels
Contributor: brunnels
Publication Year: 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/4723cee7

Computes grain boundary energy for a range of tilt angles given a crystal structure, tilt axis, and material.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 100 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v000 view 23377259
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 110 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v000 view 25755963
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 111 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v000 view 12778521
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 112 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v000 view 92785401
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 100 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v000 view 7114145
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 100 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v000 view 9567834
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 110 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v000 view 25955065
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 110 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v000 view 22376208
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 111 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v000 view 15051254
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 111 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v000 view 8032807
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 112 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v000 view 37101494
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 112 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v000 view 52553222


Equilibrium lattice constant and cohesive energy of a cubic lattice at zero temperature and pressure v007

Creators: Daniel S. Karls and Junhao Li
Contributor: karls
Publication Year: 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/2765e3bf

Equilibrium lattice constant and cohesive energy of a cubic lattice at zero temperature and pressure.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for bcc Cr v007 view 11706
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for bcc Fe v007 view 14551
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for bcc Ni v007 view 7603
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for diamond Cr v007 view 11796
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for diamond Fe v007 view 11517
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for diamond Ni v007 view 12005
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for fcc Cr v007 view 12094
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for fcc Fe v007 view 11293
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for fcc Ni v007 view 11806
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for sc Cr v007 view 11030
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for sc Fe v007 view 13828
Equilibrium zero-temperature lattice constant for sc Ni v007 view 8759


Equilibrium lattice constants for hexagonal bulk structures at zero temperature and pressure v005

Creators: Daniel S. Karls and Junhao Li
Contributor: karls
Publication Year: 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/c339ca32

Calculates lattice constant of hexagonal bulk structures at zero temperature and pressure by using simplex minimization to minimize the potential energy.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Equilibrium lattice constants for hcp Cr v005 view 160791
Equilibrium lattice constants for hcp Fe v005 view 161313
Equilibrium lattice constants for hcp Ni v005 view 121693


Linear thermal expansion coefficient of cubic crystal structures v002

Creators:
Contributor: mjwen
Publication Year: 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/9d9822ec

This Test Driver uses LAMMPS to compute the linear thermal expansion coefficient at a finite temperature under a given pressure for a cubic lattice (fcc, bcc, sc, diamond) of a single given species.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Linear thermal expansion coefficient of bcc Cr at 293.15 K under a pressure of 0 MPa v002 view 482730
Linear thermal expansion coefficient of bcc Fe at 293.15 K under a pressure of 0 MPa v002 view 502313
Linear thermal expansion coefficient of fcc Ni at 293.15 K under a pressure of 0 MPa v002 view 778275


Phonon dispersion relations for an fcc lattice v004

Creators: Matt Bierbaum
Contributor: mattbierbaum
Publication Year: 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/64f4999b

Calculates the phonon dispersion relations for fcc lattices and records the results as curves.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Phonon dispersion relations for fcc Ni v004 view 95211


High-symmetry surface energies in cubic lattices and broken bond model v004

Creators: Matt Bierbaum
Contributor: mattbierbaum
Publication Year: 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/6c43a4e6

Calculates the surface energy of several high symmetry surfaces and produces a broken-bond model fit. In latex form, the fit equations are given by:

E_{FCC} (\vec{n}) = p_1 (4 \left( |x+y| + |x-y| + |x+z| + |x-z| + |z+y| +|z-y|\right)) + p_2 (8 \left( |x| + |y| + |z|\right)) + p_3 (2 ( |x+ 2y + z| + |x+2y-z| + |x-2y + z| + |x-2y-z| + |2x+y+z| + |2x+y-z| +|2x-y+z| +|2x-y-z| +|x+y+2z| +|x+y-2z| +|x-y+2z| +|x-y-2z| ) + c

E_{BCC} (\vec{n}) = p_1 (6 \left( | x+y+z| + |x+y-z| + |-x+y-z| + |x-y+z| \right)) + p_2 (8 \left( |x| + |y| + |z|\right)) + p_3 (4 \left( |x+y| + |x-y| + |x+z| + |x-z| + |z+y| +|z-y|\right)) +c.

In Python, these two fits take the following form:

def BrokenBondFCC(params, index):

import numpy
x, y, z = index
x = x / numpy.sqrt(x**2.+y**2.+z**2.)
y = y / numpy.sqrt(x**2.+y**2.+z**2.)
z = z / numpy.sqrt(x**2.+y**2.+z**2.)

return params[0]*4* (abs(x+y) + abs(x-y) + abs(x+z) + abs(x-z) + abs(z+y) + abs(z-y)) + params[1]*8*(abs(x) + abs(y) + abs(z)) + params[2]*(abs(x+2*y+z) + abs(x+2*y-z) +abs(x-2*y+z) +abs(x-2*y-z) + abs(2*x+y+z) +abs(2*x+y-z) +abs(2*x-y+z) +abs(2*x-y-z) + abs(x+y+2*z) +abs(x+y-2*z) +abs(x-y+2*z) +abs(x-y-2*z))+params[3]

def BrokenBondBCC(params, x, y, z):


import numpy
x, y, z = index
x = x / numpy.sqrt(x**2.+y**2.+z**2.)
y = y / numpy.sqrt(x**2.+y**2.+z**2.)
z = z / numpy.sqrt(x**2.+y**2.+z**2.)

return params[0]*6*(abs(x+y+z) + abs(x-y-z) + abs(x-y+z) + abs(x+y-z)) + params[1]*8*(abs(x) + abs(y) + abs(z)) + params[2]*4* (abs(x+y) + abs(x-y) + abs(x+z) + abs(x-z) + abs(z+y) + abs(z-y)) + params[3]
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Broken-bond fit of high-symmetry surface energies in bcc Cr v004 view 229196
Broken-bond fit of high-symmetry surface energies in bcc Fe v004 view 172235
Broken-bond fit of high-symmetry surface energies in fcc Ni v004 view 112748


Monovacancy formation energy and relaxation volume for cubic and hcp monoatomic crystals v001

Creators:
Contributor: efuem
Publication Year: 2023
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/fca89cea

Computes the monovacancy formation energy and relaxation volume for cubic and hcp monoatomic crystals.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Monovacancy formation energy and relaxation volume for bcc Cr view 559369
Monovacancy formation energy and relaxation volume for fcc Ni view 341599


Vacancy formation and migration energies for cubic and hcp monoatomic crystals v001

Creators:
Contributor: efuem
Publication Year: 2023
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25950/c27ba3cd

Computes the monovacancy formation and migration energies for cubic and hcp monoatomic crystals.
Test Test Results Link to Test Results page Benchmark time
Usertime multiplied by the Whetstone Benchmark. This number can be used (approximately) to compare the performance of different models independently of the architecture on which the test was run.

Measured in Millions of Whetstone Instructions (MWI)
Vacancy formation and migration energy for bcc Fe view 4347732
Vacancy formation and migration energy for fcc Ni view 1722646


ElasticConstantsCubic__TD_011862047401_006

ElasticConstantsHexagonal__TD_612503193866_004

EquilibriumCrystalStructure__TD_457028483760_000

EquilibriumCrystalStructure__TD_457028483760_002

GrainBoundaryCubicCrystalSymmetricTiltRelaxedEnergyVsAngle__TD_410381120771_003
Test Error Categories Link to Error page
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 100 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 110 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 111 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 112 symmetric tilt grain boundary in bcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 100 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 100 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 110 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 110 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 111 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 111 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 112 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Fe v001 other view
Relaxed energy as a function of tilt angle for a 112 symmetric tilt grain boundary in fcc Ni v001 other view

PhononDispersionCurve__TD_530195868545_004
Test Error Categories Link to Error page
Phonon dispersion relations for fcc Ni v004 other view

StackingFaultFccCrystal__TD_228501831190_002
Test Error Categories Link to Error page
Stacking and twinning fault energies for fcc Ni v002 other view

SurfaceEnergyCubicCrystalBrokenBondFit__TD_955413365818_004

VacancyFormationEnergyRelaxationVolume__TD_647413317626_001
Test Error Categories Link to Error page
Monovacancy formation energy and relaxation volume for bcc Fe other view

VacancyFormationMigration__TD_554849987965_001
Test Error Categories Link to Error page
Vacancy formation and migration energy for bcc Cr other view

No Driver
Verification Check Error Categories Link to Error page
MemoryLeak__VC_561022993723_004 other view
PeriodicitySupport__VC_895061507745_004 other view




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EAM_Dynamo__MD_120291908751_005.txz Tar+XZ Linux and OS X archive
EAM_Dynamo__MD_120291908751_005.zip Zip Windows archive
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