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1.
J Chem Phys ; 160(12)2024 Mar 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38551311

RESUMO

To address the challenge of performance portability and facilitate the implementation of electronic structure solvers, we developed the basic matrix library (BML) and Parallel, Rapid O(N), and Graph-based Recursive Electronic Structure Solver (PROGRESS) library. The BML implements linear algebra operations necessary for electronic structure kernels using a unified user interface for various matrix formats (dense and sparse) and architectures (CPUs and GPUs). Focusing on density functional theory and tight-binding models, PROGRESS implements several solvers for computing the single-particle density matrix and relies on BML. In this paper, we describe the general strategies used for these implementations on various computer architectures, using OpenMP target functionalities on GPUs, in conjunction with third-party libraries to handle performance critical numerical kernels. We demonstrate the portability of this approach and its performance in benchmark problems.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 159(10)2023 Sep 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37694745

RESUMO

Matrix diagonalization is almost always involved in computing the density matrix needed in quantum chemistry calculations. In the case of modest matrix sizes (≲4000), performance of traditional dense diagonalization algorithms on modern GPUs is underwhelming compared to the peak performance of these devices. This motivates the exploration of alternative algorithms better suited to these types of architectures. We newly derive, and present in detail, an existing Chebyshev expansion algorithm [Liang et al., J. Chem. Phys. 119, 4117-4125 (2003)] whose number of required matrix multiplications scales with the square root of the number of terms in the expansion. Focusing on dense matrices of modest size, our implementation on GPUs results in large speed ups when compared to diagonalization. Additionally, we improve upon this existing method by capitalizing on the inherent task parallelism and concurrency in the algorithm. This improvement is implemented on GPUs by using CUDA and HIP streams via the MAGMA library and leads to a significant speed up over the serial-only approach for smaller (≲1000) matrix sizes. Finally, we apply our technique to a model system with a high density of states around the Fermi level, which typically presents significant challenges.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 158(15)2023 Apr 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37093997

RESUMO

In Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) simulations based on the density functional theory (DFT), the potential energy and the interatomic forces are calculated from an electronic ground state density that is determined by an iterative self-consistent field optimization procedure, which, in practice, never is fully converged. The calculated energies and forces are, therefore, only approximate, which may lead to an unphysical energy drift and instabilities. Here, we discuss an alternative shadow BOMD approach that is based on backward error analysis. Instead of calculating approximate solutions for an underlying exact regular Born-Oppenheimer potential, we do the opposite. Instead, we calculate the exact electron density, energies, and forces, but for an underlying approximate shadow Born-Oppenheimer potential energy surface. In this way, the calculated forces are conservative with respect to the approximate shadow potential and generate accurate molecular trajectories with long-term energy stabilities. We show how such shadow Born-Oppenheimer potentials can be constructed at different levels of accuracy as a function of the integration time step, δt, from the constrained minimization of a sequence of systematically improvable, but approximate, shadow energy density functionals. For each energy functional, there is a corresponding ground state Born-Oppenheimer potential. These pairs of shadow energy functionals and potentials are higher-level generalizations of the original "zeroth-level" shadow energy functionals and potentials used in extended Lagrangian BOMD [Niklasson, Eur. Phys. J. B 94, 164 (2021)]. The proposed shadow energy functionals and potentials are useful only within this extended dynamical framework, where also the electronic degrees of freedom are propagated as dynamical field variables together with the atomic positions and velocities. The theory is quite general and can be applied to MD simulations using approximate DFT, Hartree-Fock, or semi-empirical methods, as well as to coarse-grained flexible charge models.

4.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 35(22)2023 Mar 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36889001

RESUMO

We propose a systematic method to construct crystal-based molecular structures often needed as input for computational chemistry studies. These structures include crystal 'slabs' with periodic boundary conditions (PBCs) and non-periodic solids such as Wulff structures. We also introduce a method to build crystal slabs with orthogonal PBC vectors. These methods are integrated into our code,Los Alamos Crystal Cut(LCC), which is open source and thus fully available to the community. Examples showing the use of these methods are given throughout the manuscript.

5.
J Chem Phys ; 158(7): 074108, 2023 Feb 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36813723

RESUMO

Graph-based linear scaling electronic structure theory for quantum-mechanical molecular dynamics simulations [A. M. N. Niklasson et al., J. Chem. Phys. 144, 234101 (2016)] is adapted to the most recent shadow potential formulations of extended Lagrangian Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics, including fractional molecular-orbital occupation numbers [A. M. N. Niklasson, J. Chem. Phys. 152, 104103 (2020) and A. M. N. Niklasson, Eur. Phys. J. B 94, 164 (2021)], which enables stable simulations of sensitive complex chemical systems with unsteady charge solutions. The proposed formulation includes a preconditioned Krylov subspace approximation for the integration of the extended electronic degrees of freedom, which requires quantum response calculations for electronic states with fractional occupation numbers. For the response calculations, we introduce a graph-based canonical quantum perturbation theory that can be performed with the same natural parallelism and linear scaling complexity as the graph-based electronic structure calculations for the unperturbed ground state. The proposed techniques are particularly well-suited for semi-empirical electronic structure theory, and the methods are demonstrated using self-consistent charge density-functional tight-binding theory both for the acceleration of self-consistent field calculations and for quantum-mechanical molecular dynamics simulations. Graph-based techniques combined with the semi-empirical theory enable stable simulations of large, complex chemical systems, including tens-of-thousands of atoms.

6.
PLoS One ; 17(7): e0271292, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35834495

RESUMO

The efficient calculation of the centrality or "hierarchy" of nodes in a network has gained great relevance in recent years due to the generation of large amounts of data. The eigenvector centrality (aka eigencentrality) is quickly becoming a good metric for centrality due to both its simplicity and fidelity. In this work we lay the foundations for solving the eigencentrality problem of ranking the importance of the nodes of a network with scores from the eigenvector of the network, using quantum computational paradigms such as quantum annealing and gate-based quantum computing. The problem is reformulated as a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) that can be solved on both quantum architectures. The results focus on correctly identifying a given number of the most important nodes in numerous networks given by the sparse vector solution of our QUBO formulation of the problem of identifying the top-τ highest eigencentrality nodes in a network on both the D-Wave and IBM quantum computers.


Assuntos
Metodologias Computacionais , Teoria Quântica , Algoritmos
7.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 18(7): 4177-4185, 2022 Jul 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35658437

RESUMO

Density matrix electronic structure theory is used in many quantum chemistry methods to "alleviate" the computational cost that arises from directly using wave functions. Although density matrix based methods are computationally more efficient than wave function based methods, significant computational effort is involved. Because the Schrödinger equation needs to be solved as an eigenvalue problem, the time-to-solution scales cubically with the system size in mean-field type approaches such as Hartree-Fock and density functional theory and is solved as many times in order to reach charge or field self-consistency. We hereby propose and study a method to compute the density matrix by using a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) solver. This method could be useful to solve the problem with quantum computers and, more specifically, quantum annealers. Our proposed approach is based on a direct construction of the density matrix using a QUBO eigensolver. We explore the main parameters of the algorithm focusing on precision and efficiency. We show that, while direct construction of the density matrix using a QUBO formulation is possible, the efficiency and precision have room for improvement. Moreover, calculations performed with quantum annealing on D-Wave's new Advantage quantum computer are compared with results obtained with classical simulated annealing, further highlighting some problems of the proposed method. We also suggest alternative methods that could lead to a more efficient QUBO-based density matrix construction.

8.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 18(7): 4255-4268, 2022 Jul 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35670603

RESUMO

Time-independent quantum response calculations are performed using Tensor cores. This is achieved by mapping density matrix perturbation theory onto the computational structure of a deep neural network. The main computational cost of each deep layer is dominated by tensor contractions, i.e., dense matrix-matrix multiplications, in mixed-precision arithmetics, which achieves close to peak performance. Quantum response calculations are demonstrated and analyzed using self-consistent charge density-functional tight-binding theory as well as coupled-perturbed Hartree-Fock theory. For linear response calculations, a novel parameter-free convergence criterion is presented that is well-suited for numerically noisy low-precision floating point operations and we demonstrate a peak performance of almost 200 Tflops using the Tensor cores of two Nvidia A100 GPUs.


Assuntos
Redes Neurais de Computação , Teoria Quântica , Computadores
9.
PLoS One ; 17(5): e0267954, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35533179

RESUMO

We describe an algorithm to compute the extremal eigenvalues and corresponding eigenvectors of a symmetric matrix which is based on solving a sequence of Quadratic Binary Optimization problems. This algorithm is robust across many different classes of symmetric matrices; It can compute the eigenvector/eigenvalue pair to essentially any arbitrary precision, and with minor modifications, can also solve the generalized eigenvalue problem. Performance is analyzed on small random matrices and selected larger matrices from practical applications.


Assuntos
Algoritmos
10.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 17(10): 6180-6192, 2021 Oct 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34595916

RESUMO

Tensor cores, along with tensor processing units, represent a new form of hardware acceleration specifically designed for deep neural network calculations in artificial intelligence applications. Tensor cores provide extraordinary computational speed and energy efficiency but with the caveat that they were designed for tensor contractions (matrix-matrix multiplications) using only low-precision floating-point operations. Despite this perceived limitation, we demonstrate how tensor cores can be applied with high efficiency to the challenging and numerically sensitive problem of quantum-based Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics, which requires highly accurate electronic structure optimizations and conservative force evaluations. The interatomic forces are calculated on-the-fly from an electronic structure that is obtained from a generalized deep neural network, where the computational structure naturally takes advantage of the exceptional processing power of the tensor cores and allows for high performance in excess of 100 Tflops on a single Nvidia A100 GPU. Stable molecular dynamics trajectories are generated using the framework of extended Lagrangian Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics, which combines computational efficiency with long-term stability, even when using approximate charge relaxations and force evaluations that are limited in accuracy by the numerically noisy conditions caused by the low-precision tensor core floating-point operations. A canonical ensemble simulation scheme is also presented, where the additional numerical noise in the calculated forces is absorbed into a Langevin-like dynamics.

11.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 18796, 2021 Sep 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34552136

RESUMO

The possibility of using quantum computers for electronic structure calculations has opened up a promising avenue for computational chemistry. Towards this direction, numerous algorithmic advances have been made in the last five years. The potential of quantum annealers, which are the prototypes of adiabatic quantum computers, is yet to be fully explored. In this work, we demonstrate the use of a D-Wave quantum annealer for the calculation of excited electronic states of molecular systems. These simulations play an important role in a number of areas, such as photovoltaics, semiconductor technology and nanoscience. The excited states are treated using two methods, time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) and time-dependent density-functional theory (TDDFT), both within a commonly used Tamm-Dancoff approximation (TDA). The resulting TDA eigenvalue equations are solved on a D-Wave quantum annealer using the Quantum Annealer Eigensolver (QAE), developed previously. The method is shown to reproduce a typical basis set convergence on the example [Formula: see text] molecule and is also applied to several other molecular species. Characteristic properties such as transition dipole moments and oscillator strengths are computed as well. Three potential energy profiles for excited states are computed for [Formula: see text] as a function of the molecular geometry. Similar to previous studies, the accuracy of the method is dependent on the accuracy of the intermediate meta-heuristic software called qbsolv.

12.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 17(4): 2256-2265, 2021 Apr 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33797253

RESUMO

We present a second-order recursive Fermi-operator expansion scheme using mixed precision floating point operations to perform electronic structure calculations using tensor core units. A performance of over 100 teraFLOPs is achieved for half-precision floating point operations on Nvidia's A100 tensor core units. The second-order recursive Fermi-operator scheme is formulated in terms of a generalized, differentiable deep neural network structure, which solves the quantum mechanical electronic structure problem. We demonstrate how this network can be accelerated by optimizing the weight and bias values to substantially reduce the number of layers required for convergence. We also show how this machine learning approach can be used to optimize the coefficients of the recursive Fermi-operator expansion to accurately represent the fractional occupation numbers of the electronic states at finite temperatures.

13.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 4099, 2021 Feb 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33602988

RESUMO

Quantum chemistry is interested in calculating ground and excited states of molecular systems by solving the electronic Schrödinger equation. The exact numerical solution of this equation, frequently represented as an eigenvalue problem, remains unfeasible for most molecules and requires approximate methods. In this paper we introduce the use of Quantum Community Detection performed using the D-Wave quantum annealer to reduce the molecular Hamiltonian matrix in Slater determinant basis without chemical knowledge. Given a molecule represented by a matrix of Slater determinants, the connectivity between Slater determinants (as off-diagonal elements) is viewed as a graph adjacency matrix for determining multiple communities based on modularity maximization. A gauge metric based on perturbation theory is used to determine the lowest energy cluster. This cluster or sub-matrix of Slater determinants is used to calculate approximate ground state and excited state energies within chemical accuracy. The details of this method are described along with demonstrating its performance across multiple molecules of interest and bond dissociation cases. These examples provide proof-of-principle results for approximate solution of the electronic structure problem using quantum computing. This approach is general and shows potential to reduce the computational complexity of post-Hartree-Fock methods as future advances in quantum hardware become available.

14.
PLoS One ; 15(2): e0227538, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32053622

RESUMO

A very important problem in combinatorial optimization is the partitioning of a network into communities of densely connected nodes; where the connectivity between nodes inside a particular community is large compared to the connectivity between nodes belonging to different ones. This problem is known as community detection, and has become very important in various fields of science including chemistry, biology and social sciences. The problem of community detection is a twofold problem that consists of determining the number of communities and, at the same time, finding those communities. This drastically increases the solution space for heuristics to work on, compared to traditional graph partitioning problems. In many of the scientific domains in which graphs are used, there is the need to have the ability to partition a graph into communities with the "highest quality" possible since the presence of even small isolated communities can become crucial to explain a particular phenomenon. We have explored community detection using the power of quantum annealers, and in particular the D-Wave 2X and 2000Q machines. It turns out that the problem of detecting at most two communities naturally fits into the architecture of a quantum annealer with almost no need of reformulation. This paper addresses a systematic study of detecting two or more communities in a network using a quantum annealer.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Teoria Quântica , Artes Marciais , Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/química
15.
PLoS One ; 15(1): e0226787, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31940317

RESUMO

Isomer search or molecule enumeration refers to the problem of finding all the isomers for a given molecule. Many classical search methods have been developed in order to tackle this problem. However, the availability of quantum computing architectures has given us the opportunity to address this problem with new (quantum) techniques. This paper describes a quantum isomer search procedure for determining all the structural isomers of alkanes. We first formulate the structural isomer search problem as a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) problem. The QUBO formulation is for general use on either annealing or gate-based quantum computers. We use the D-Wave quantum annealer to enumerate all structural isomers of all alkanes with fewer carbon atoms (n < 10) than Decane (C10H22). The number of isomer solutions increases with the number of carbon atoms. We find that the sampling time needed to identify all solutions scales linearly with the number of carbon atoms in the alkane. We probe the problem further by employing reverse annealing as well as a perturbed QUBO Hamiltonian and find that the combination of these two methods significantly reduces the number of samples required to find all isomers.


Assuntos
Isomerismo , Teoria Quântica , Carbono/química , Linguagens de Programação
16.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 15(1): 190-200, 2019 Jan 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30452247

RESUMO

Recursive Fermi-operator expansion methods for the calculation of the idempotent density matrix are valid only at zero electronic temperature with integer occupation numbers. We show how such methods can be modified to include fractional occupation numbers of an approximate or pseudo Fermi-Dirac distribution and how the corresponding entropy term of the free energy is calculated. The proposed methodology is demonstrated and evaluated for different electronic structure methods, including density functional tight-binding theory, Kohn-Sham density functional theory using numerical orbitals, and quantum chemistry Hartree-Fock theory using Gaussian basis functions.

17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(52): E12201-E12208, 2018 12 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30530700

RESUMO

Determining the principal energy-transfer pathways responsible for allosteric communication in biomolecules remains challenging, partially due to the intrinsic complexity of the systems and the lack of effective characterization methods. In this work, we introduce the eigenvector centrality metric based on mutual information to elucidate allosteric mechanisms that regulate enzymatic activity. Moreover, we propose a strategy to characterize the range of correlations that underlie the allosteric processes. We use the V-type allosteric enzyme imidazole glycerol phosphate synthase (IGPS) to test the proposed methodology. The eigenvector centrality method identifies key amino acid residues of IGPS with high susceptibility to effector binding. The findings are validated by solution NMR measurements yielding important biological insights, including direct experimental evidence for interdomain motion, the central role played by helix h[Formula: see text], and the short-range nature of correlations responsible for the allosteric mechanism. Beyond insights on IGPS allosteric pathways and the nature of residues that could be targeted by therapeutic drugs or site-directed mutagenesis, the reported findings demonstrate the eigenvector centrality analysis as a general cost-effective methodology to gain fundamental understanding of allosteric mechanisms at the molecular level.


Assuntos
Regulação Alostérica , Aminoidrolases/química , Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Sítio Alostérico , Modelos Moleculares , Modelos Teóricos , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica
18.
Phys Rev E ; 96(1-1): 013310, 2017 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29347210

RESUMO

Solving flow and transport through complex geometries such as porous media is computationally difficult. Such calculations usually involve the solution of a system of discretized differential equations, which could lead to extreme computational cost depending on the size of the domain and the accuracy of the model. Geometric simplifications like pore networks, where the pores are represented by nodes and the pore throats by edges connecting pores, have been proposed. These models, despite their ability to preserve the connectivity of the medium, have difficulties capturing preferential paths (high velocity) and stagnation zones (low velocity), as they do not consider the specific relations between nodes. Nonetheless, network theory approaches, where a complex network is a graph, can help to simplify and better understand fluid dynamics and transport in porous media. Here we present an alternative method to address these issues based on eigenvector centrality, which has been corrected to overcome the centralization problem and modified to introduce a bias in the centrality distribution along a particular direction to address the flow and transport anisotropy in porous media. We compare the model predictions with millifluidic transport experiments, which shows that, albeit simple, this technique is computationally efficient and has potential for predicting preferential paths and stagnation zones for flow and transport in porous media. We propose to use the eigenvector centrality probability distribution to compute the entropy as an indicator of the "mixing capacity" of the system.

19.
Nanoscale ; 8(36): 16357-16362, 2016 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27722662

RESUMO

The development of molecular components functioning as switches, rectifiers or amplifiers is a great challenge in molecular electronics. A desirable property of such components is functional robustness, meaning that the intrinsic functionality of components must be preserved regardless of the strategy used to integrate them into the final assemblies. Here, this issue is investigated for molecular diodes based on N-phenylbenzamide (NPBA) backbones. The transport properties of molecular junctions derived from NPBA are characterized while varying the nature of the functional groups interfacing the backbone and the gold electrodes required for break-junction measurements. Combining experimental and theoretical methods, it is shown that at low bias (<0.85 V) transport is determined by the same frontier molecular orbital originating from the NPBA core, regardless of the anchoring group employed. The magnitude of rectification, however, is strongly dependent on the strength of the electronic coupling at the gold-NPBA interface and on the spatial distribution of the local density of states of the dominant transport channel of the molecular junction.

20.
J Chem Phys ; 144(23): 234101, 2016 Jun 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27334148

RESUMO

We show how graph theory can be combined with quantum theory to calculate the electronic structure of large complex systems. The graph formalism is general and applicable to a broad range of electronic structure methods and materials, including challenging systems such as biomolecules. The methodology combines well-controlled accuracy, low computational cost, and natural low-communication parallelism. This combination addresses substantial shortcomings of linear scaling electronic structure theory, in particular with respect to quantum-based molecular dynamics simulations.

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