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What is Density Functional Theory (DFT)

Handbook of Research on Computational Science and Engineering: Theory and Practice
This a theory that states that the exact energy of a many electron system depends only on the electron density. The assumptions underlying the theory were proven by Hohenberg and Kohn in 1964 (in 1998 Kohn received the Noble prize for this). In 1965 Kohn and Sham proposed a method for solving the corresponding equations which is almost the same as the Hartree-Fock method but with one term replaced by the so called exchange-correlation functional. Today it is the most commonly used ab-initio method.
Published in Chapter:
Parallel Quantum Chemistry at the Crossroads
Hubertus J. J. van Dam (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61350-116-0.ch011
Abstract
Quantum chemistry was a compute intensive field from the beginning. It was also an early adopter of parallel computing, and hence, has more than twenty years of experience with parallelism. However, recently parallel computing has seen dramatic changes, such as the rise of multi-core architectures, hybrid computing, and the prospect of exa-scale machines requiring 1 billion concurrent threads. It is doubtful that current approaches can address the challenges ahead. As a result, the field finds itself at a crossroads, facing the challenge to successfully identify the way forward. This chapter tells a story in two parts. First, the achievements to date are considered, offering insights learned so far. Second, we look at paradigms based on directed acyclic graphs (DAG). The computer science community is strongly advocating this paradigm, but the quantum chemistry community has no experience with this approach. Therefore recent developments in that area will be discussed and their suitability for future parallel quantum chemistry computing demands considered.
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