Dear Anders,
Thanks for your reply. It greatly helps.
However, I have yet a question on the new setup in new versions of ATK (2010.8 and later).
As seen in Fig1 and Fig2 the old and new setups of the two probe configuration. The webpage given illustrates the changes between old and new setups in terms of periodic systems in XY directions, and the left and right electrode are the same material and surface direction.
The problem is that if the two electrodes are made of two different materials or although the same material but with different surface directions, e.g. (111) and (100), there should be same vacumm space in the leftmost or rightmost of the interaction region to aviod a direction interaction of the left electrode copy and the right electrode copy in the equivalent bulk calculation. This would give a better initial guess for the density matrix to the NEGF calculation from an equivalent bulk calculation. To be much better, some buffer layers may be used outside the electrode copy to simulate the electrodes to give faster convergence in the subsequent NEGF self-consistent. And the enssential different between old and new setups are whether the electrodes (or electrode copies) in the interaction region enter the self-consistent: (1) the system in the NEGF self-consistent cycles are both interaction regions (i.e., the same atom numbers); (2) the left and right electrodes in the interaction region for old setup in Fig1 do not update their quantities while the left and right electrode copies in the interaction region for new setup in Fig2 update, indeed we can consider this as a different boundary positions where the electrochemical potentials match with the bulk like electrode. If more screening layers used in the old setup in Fig 1, it will give the exactly result with that of the new setup, while bring an obviously increased compuational burden compared with the extra compuation in new setup in Fig2.
Therefore, back to the question, how to add a vacumm at the leftmost or rightmost in the interaction region, or even more, buffer layers in case of two different electrodes?
For the first attempt, is it enough to enlarge the z component of vector_c for central_region_lattice? If so, is there problem for the matching between the interaction region and the electrodes?
With best regards,
Guangping Zhang