Thank you for the reply!
I have read about this tutorial case study. The use of bulk dynamical matrix and bulk Hamiltonian derivatives does help for reducing the calculation time. But it only valid for a homogenous device configuration as I understand.
The device that I am studying have defects in the scattering region, i.e. it is not homogenous along the c direction. Therefore I will need to calculate the dynamical matrix and Hamiltonian derivatives for the whole device instead of its bulk configuration, in order for calculating the inelasticTransmissionSpectrum.
Therefore my question is, if I want to calculate the inelasticTransmissionSpectrum at different gate voltages (suppose I have a transistor device), do I need to calculate the dynamical matrix and Hamiltonian derivatives at these gate voltages as prior for the corresponding inelasticTransmissionSpectrum calculation? Or calculating them at one gate voltage is enough and can be used for all other gate voltages?
i.e. Are dynamical matrix and Hamiltonian derivatives independent of gate voltage?
Based on my understanding of them from the ATK manual, I feel like they are. And I did some toy case study which confirmed my guess.
Can you provide some opinion about this?
Thanks!