STM workflow

Description

The SiestaSTMWorkchain workflow consists in 3 steps:

  • Performing of a siesta calculation on an input structure (including relaxation if needed) through the SiestaBaseWorkChain.
  • Performing of a further siesta calculation aimed to produce a .LDOS file.
  • A call to the plstm code to post process the .LDOS file and create simulated STM images. The call is made via the STMCalculation plugin, which is also included in the aiida_siesta distribution.

The .LDOS file contains informations on the local density of states (LDOS) in an energy window. The LDOS can be seen as a “partial charge density” to which only those wavefunctions with eigenvalues in a given energy interval contribute. In the Tersoff-Hamann approximation, the LDOS can be used as a proxy for the simulation of STM experiments. The 3D LDOS file is then processed by the specialized program plstm to produce a 2D section in “constant-height” or “constant-current” mode, optionally projected on spin components (see the header/manual for plstm, and note that non-collinear and spin-orbit modes are supported). The “constant-height” mode corresponds to the creation of a plot of the LDOS in a 2D section at a given height in the unit cell (simulating the height of a STM tip). The “constant-current” mode simulates the topography map by recording the z coordinates with a given value of the LDOS.

The inputs to the STM workchain include all the inputs of the SiestaBaseWorkChain to give full flexibility on the choice of the siesta calculation parameters. The energy window for the LDOS is specified respect to the Fermi energy. In fact, a range of energies around the Fermi Level (or regions near to the HOMO and/or LUMO) are the meaninful energies for the STM images production. The tip height (“constant-height” mode) or the LDOS iso-value (“constant-current” mode) must be specified by the user in input. The workchain returns an AiiDA ArrayData object whose contents can be displayed by standard tools within AiiDA and the wider Python ecosystem.

Supported Siesta versions

At least 4.0.1 of the 4.0 series, 4.1-b3 of the 4.1 series and the MaX-1.0 release, which can be found in the development platform (https://gitlab.com/siesta-project/siesta). For more up to date info on compatibility, please check the wiki.

Inputs

  • All the inputs of the SiestaBaseWorkChain, as explained here.
  • stm_code, class Code, Mandatory

    A code associated to the STM (plstm) plugin (siesta.stm). See plugin documantation for more details.

  • stm_mode, class Str, Mandatory

    Allowed values are constant-height or constant-current, corresponding to the two operation modes of the STM that are supported by the plstm code.

  • stm_value, class Float, Mandatory

    The value of height or current at which the user wants to simulate the STM. This value represents the tip height in “constant-height” mode or the LDOS iso-value in “constant-current” mode. The height must be expressed in Angstrom, the current in e/bohr**3.

  • emin, class Float, Mandatory

    The lower limit of the energy window for which the LDOS is to be computed (in eV and respect to the Fermi level).

  • emax, class Float, Mandatory

    The upper limit of the energy window for which the LDOS is to be computed (in eV and respect to the Fermi level).

  • stm_spin, class Str, Mandatory

    Allowed values are none, collinear or non-collinear. Please note that this keyword only influences the STM post process! It does not change the parameters of the siesta calculation, that must be specified in the parameters input port. In fact, this keyword will be automatically reset if a stm_spin option incompatible with the parent siesta spin option is chosen. A warning will be issued in case this happens. This keyword also influences the structure of the output port stm_array. If fact, if the non-collinear value is chosen, the workflow automatically performs the STM analysis in the three spin components and for the total charge option, resulting in a richer stm_array (see description in the Outputs section).

  • stm_options, class Dict, Optional

    This dictionary can be used to specify the computational resources to be used for the STM calculation (the plstm code). It is optional because, if not specified, the same resources of the siesta calculations are used, except that the parallel options are stripped off. In other words, by default, the plstm code runs on a single processor.

Outputs

  • stm_array ArrayData

    In case the stm_spin is none or collinear this output port is a collection of three 2D arrays (grid_X, grid_Y, STM) holding the section or topography information. Exactly like the output of the STM plugin. In case the stm_spin is non-collinear, this output port is a collection of six 2D arrays (grid_X, grid_Y, STM_q, STM_sx, STM_sy, STM_sz) holding the section or topography information for the total charge STM analysis and the three spin components. Both cases follow the meshgrid convention in Numpy. A contour plot can be generated with the get_stm_image.py script in the repository of examples. The get_stm_image.py script automatically detects how many arrays are in stm_array, therefore it is completely general.

  • output_structure StructureData

    Present only if the siesta calculation is moving the ions. Cell and ionic positions refer to the last configuration, on which the STM analysis is performed.

Protocol system

The protocol system is available for this WorkChain. The SiestaSTMWorkchain.inputs_generator() makes available all the methods explained in the protocols documentation, but get_filled_builder now requires in inputs also the stm_mode (a python str <str>, accepted values are “constant-height” and “constant-current”) and stm_value (a python float <float> indicating the value of height in Ang or current in e/bohr**3). Moreover in the calc_engines dictionary, also indications on the resources for the stm calculation must specified, following the syntax of this example:

calc_engines = {
  'siesta': {
      'code': codename,
      'options': {'resources': {'num_machines': 1, "num_mpiprocs_per_machine": 1}, "max_wallclock_seconds": 3600 }
      },
  'stm': {
      'code': stmcodename,
      'options': {'resources': {'num_machines': 1, "num_mpiprocs_per_machine": 1}, "max_wallclock_seconds": 1360 }
      }
  }

The STM spin mode is chosen accordingly to the spin input passed to get_filled_builder, setting “collinear” stm_spin in case of polarized calculation, “non-collinear” in case of “spin-orbit” or “non-collinear” calculations and no spin in case of an unpolarized calculation. Therefore, if, for instance, the user wants to post-process a spin calculation with “no-spin” STM mode, he/she needs to manually modify the builder before submission. Also the emin and emax inputs of SiestaSTMWorkchain are internally chosen by the inputs generator: they select an energy window of 6 eV below the Fermi energy. If the choice doesn’t suit the purpose, the user can manually modify the builder before submission.