Hi,
Yes, quantumatk mobility analysis can be done for 3d-materials.
We have published examples for
Systems of different dimensions (see fig. 8, incl. Silicon):
https://arxiv.org/abs/1701.02883A selection of bulk metals:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1905.02794 and
https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.02216Calculations for 3D systems are more heavy than 2D and 1D systems.
For large disordered systems, such as amorphous structures, you could consider the special thermal displacement method instead:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.09290However, the mobility object offers more analysis options (contributions from individual modes for instance).
The precision of the simulations are equivalent to that of DFT. If the material of interest is accurately described by DFT (correct phonons and band structures) then you can expect the mobility to compare well to experiments probing the phonon-limited mobility.
If the experimental value extracted is limited by other processes (impurities or similar) you would need to perform a model for that scattering rate.
The mobility object allows you to include a user-given scattering rate on top of the electron-phonon coupling rate calculated by QuantumATK.