Author Topic: Why k-point density is given in angstroms?  (Read 3950 times)

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Offline qweasel

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Why k-point density is given in angstroms?
« on: February 8, 2017, 17:34 »
The unit for "Density" of k-point sampling in density of states calculation is given in angstroms (default value=2).
  • What does it mean? Is it N*a/2pi? Why not just unitless N?
  • So larger value means higher k resolution (dk=2pi/Na)?

Offline Petr Khomyakov

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Re: Why k-point density is given in angstroms?
« Reply #1 on: February 8, 2017, 18:36 »
1. You have an alternative option of choosing the k-point grid with 'Sampling' instead of 'Density' to set the number of k-points (N_A, N_B, N_C) in the Brillouin zone along the A, B, C reciprocal lattice vectors. 

2. Higher k-point grid density means that more k-points is used to sample the Brillouin zone.

Offline Daniele Stradi

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Re: Why k-point density is given in angstroms?
« Reply #2 on: February 9, 2017, 13:53 »
The density is in Angstrom because it is a density in reciprocal space.

In real space, a density for 1-D system would have units of Angstrom**-1. However, in reciprocal space, this quantity becomes (Angstrom**-1)**-1 = Angstrom.