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298 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
298 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
"LAMMPS WWW Site"_lws - "LAMMPS Documentation"_ld - "LAMMPS Commands"_lc :c
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:link(lws,http://lammps.sandia.gov)
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:link(ld,Manual.html)
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:link(lc,Section_commands.html#comm)
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:line
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prd command :h3
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[Syntax:]
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prd N t_event n_dephase t_dephase t_correlate compute-ID seed keyword value ... :pre
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N = # of timesteps to run (not including dephasing/quenching) :ulb,l
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t_event = timestep interval between event checks :l
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n_dephase = number of velocity randomizations to perform in each dephase run :l
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t_dephase = number of timesteps to run dynamics after each velocity randomization during dephase :l
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t_correlate = number of timesteps within which 2 consecutive events are considered to be correlated :l
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compute-ID = ID of the compute used for event detection :l
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random_seed = random # seed (positive integer) :l
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zero or more keyword/value pairs may be appended :l
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keyword = {min} or {temp} or {vel} :l
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{min} values = etol ftol maxiter maxeval
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etol = stopping tolerance for energy, used in quenching
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ftol = stopping tolerance for force, used in quenching
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maxiter = max iterations of minimize, used in quenching
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maxeval = max number of force/energy evaluations, used in quenching
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{temp} value = Tdephase
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Tdephase = target temperature for velocity randomization, used in dephasing
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{vel} values = loop dist
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loop = {all} or {local} or {geom}, used in dephasing
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dist = {uniform} or {gaussian}, used in dephasing :pre
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:ule
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[Examples:]
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prd 5000 100 10 10 100 1 54982
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prd 5000 100 10 10 100 1 54982 min 0.1 0.1 100 200 :pre
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[Description:]
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Run a parallel replica dynamics (PRD) simulation using multiple
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replicas of a system. One or more replicas can be used.
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PRD is described in "this paper"_#Voter by Art Voter. It is a method
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for performing accelerated dynamics that is suitable for
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infrequent-event systems that obey first-order kinetics. A good
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overview of accelerated dynamics methods for such systems in given in
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"this review paper"_#Voter2 from the same group. To quote from the
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paper: "The dynamical evolution is characterized by vibrational
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excursions within a potential basin, punctuated by occasional
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transitions between basins." The transition probability is
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characterized by p(t) = k*exp(-kt) where k is the rate constant.
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Running multiple replicas gives an effective enhancement in the
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timescale spanned by the multiple simulations, while waiting for an
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event to occur.
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Each replica runs on a partition of one or more processors. Processor
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partitions are defined at run-time using the -partition command-line
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switch; see "Section_start 6"_Section_start.html#start_7 of the
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manual. Note that if you have MPI installed, you can run a
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multi-replica simulation with more replicas (partitions) than you have
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physical processors, e.g you can run a 10-replica simulation on one or
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two processors. For PRD, this makes little sense, since this offers
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no effective parallel speed-up in searching for infrequent events. See
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"Section_howto 5"_Section_howto.html#howto_5 of the manual for further
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discussion.
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When a PRD simulation is performed, it is assumed that each replica is
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running the same model, though LAMMPS does not check for this.
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I.e. the simulation domain, the number of atoms, the interaction
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potentials, etc should be the same for every replica.
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A PRD run has several stages, which are repeated each time an "event"
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occurs in one of the replicas, as defined below. The logic for a PRD
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run is as follows:
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while (time remains):
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dephase for n_dephase*t_dephase steps
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until (event occurs on some replica):
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run dynamics for t_event steps
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quench
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check for uncorrelated event on any replica
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until (no correlated event occurs):
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run dynamics for t_correlate steps
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quench
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check for correlated event on this replica
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event replica shares state with all replicas :pre
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Before this loop begins, the state of the system on replica 0 is
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shared with all replicas, so that all replicas begin from the same
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initial state. The first potential energy basin is identified by
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quenching (an energy minimization, see below) the initial state and
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storing the resulting coordinates for reference.
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In the first stage, dephasing is performed by each replica
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independently to eliminate correlations between replicas. This is
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done by choosing a random set of velocities, based on the
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{random_seed} that is specified, and running {t_dephase} timesteps of
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dynamics. This is repeated {n_dephase} times. If the {temp} keyword
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is not specified, the target temperature for velocity randomization
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for each replica is the current temperature of that replica.
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Otherwise, it is the specified {Tdephase} temperature. The style of
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velocity randomization is controlled using the keyword {vel} with
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arguments that have the same meaning as their counterparts in the
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"velocity"_velocity.html command.
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In the second stage, each replica runs dynamics continuously, stopping
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every {t_event} steps to check if a transition event has occurred.
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This check is performed by quenching the system and comparing the
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resulting atom coordinates to the coordinates from the previous basin.
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The first time through the PRD loop, the "previous basin" is the set
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of quenched coordinates from the initial state of the system.
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A quench is an energy minimization and is performed by whichever
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algorithm has been defined by the "min_style"_min_style.html command.
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Minimization parameters may be set via the
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"min_modify"_min_modify.html command and by the {min} keyword of the
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PRD command. The latter are the settings that would be used with the
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"minimize"_minimize.html command. Note that typically, you do not
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need to perform a highly-converged minimization to detect a transition
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event.
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The event check is performed by a compute with the specified
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{compute-ID}. Currently there is only one compute that works with the
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PRD commmand, which is the "compute
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event/displace"_compute_event_displace.html command. Other
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event-checking computes may be added. "Compute
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event/displace"_compute_event_displace.html checks whether any atom in
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the compute group has moved further than a specified threshold
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distance. If so, an "event" has occurred.
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In the third stage, the replica on which the event occurred (event
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replica) continues to run dynamics to search for correlated events.
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This is done by running dynamics for {t_correlate} steps, quenching
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every {t_event} steps, and checking if another event has occurred.
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The first time no correlated event occurs, the final state of the
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event replica is shared with all replicas, the new basin reference
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coordinates are updated with the quenched state, and the outer loop
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begins again. While the replica event is searching for correlated
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events, all the other replicas also run dynamics and event checking
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with the same schedule, but the final states are always overwritten by
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the state of the event replica.
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:line
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Four kinds of output can be generated during a PRD run: event
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statistics, thermodynamic output by each replica, dump files, and
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restart files.
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When running with multiple partitions (each of which is a replica in
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this case), the print-out to the screen and master log.lammps file is
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limited to event statistics. Note that if a PRD run is performed on
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only a single replica then the event statistics will be intermixed
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with the usual thermodynamic output discussed below.
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The quantities printed each time an event occurs are the timestep,
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CPU time, clock, event number, a correlation flag,
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the number of coincident events, and the replica number of the chosen event.
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The timestep is the usual LAMMPS timestep, except that time does not
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advance during dephasing or quenches, but only during dynamics. Note
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that are two kinds of dynamics in the PRD loop listed above. The
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first is when all replicas are performing independent dynamics. The
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second is when correlated events are being searched for and only one
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replica is running dynamics.
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The CPU time is the total processor time since the start of the PRD
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run.
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The clock is the same as the timestep except that it advances by M
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steps every timestep during the first kind of dynamics when the M
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replicas are running independently. The clock represents the real
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time that effectively elapses during a PRD simulation of {N} steps on
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M replicas. If most of the PRD run is spent in the second stage of
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the loop above, searching for infrequent events, then the clock will
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advance nearly N*M steps. Note the clock time between events will be
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drawn from p(t).
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The event number is a counter that increments with each event, whether
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it is uncorrelated or correlated.
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The correlation flag will be 0 when an uncorrelated event occurs
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during the second stage of the loop listed above, i.e. when all
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replicas are running independently. The correlation flag will be 1
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when a correlated event occurs during the third stage of the loop
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listed above, i.e. when only one replica is running dynamics.
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When more than one replica detects an event at the end of the second
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stage, then one of them is chosen at random. The number of coincident
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events is the number of replicas that detected an event. Normally, we
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expect this value to be 1. If it is often greater than 1, then either
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the number of replicas is too large, or {t_event} is too large.
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The replica number is the ID of the replica (from 0 to M-1) that
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found the event.
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:line
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When running on multiple partitions, LAMMPS produces additional log
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files for each partition, e.g. log.lammps.0, log.lammps.1, etc. For
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the PRD command, these contain the thermodynamic output for each
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replica. You will see short runs and minimizations corresponding to
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the dynamics and quench operations of the loop listed above. The
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timestep will be reset aprpopriately depending on whether the
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operation advances time or not.
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After the PRD command completes, timing statistics for the PRD run are
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printed in each replica's log file, giving a breakdown of how much CPU
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time was spent in each stage (dephasing, dynamics, quenching, etc).
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:line
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Any "dump files"_dump.html defined in the input script, will be
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written to during a PRD run at timesteps corresponding to both
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uncorrelated and correlated events. This means the the requested dump
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frequency in the "dump"_dump.html command is ignored. There will be
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one dump file (per dump command) created for all partitions.
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The atom coordinates of the dump snapshot are those of the minimum
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energy configuration resulting from quenching following a transition
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event. The timesteps written into the dump files correspond to the
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timestep at which the event occurred and NOT the clock. A dump
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snapshot corresponding to the initial minimum state used for event
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detection is written to the dump file at the beginning of each PRD
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run.
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:line
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If the "restart"_restart.html command is used, a single restart file
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for all the partitions is generated, which allows a PRD run to be
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continued by a new input script in the usual manner.
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The restart file is generated at the end of the loop listed above. If
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no correlated events are found, this means it contains a snapshot of
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the system at time T + {t_correlate}, where T is the time at which the
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uncorrelated event occurred. If correlated events were found, then it
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contains a snapshot of the system at time T + {t_correlate}, where T
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is the time of the last correlated event.
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The restart frequency specified in the "restart"_restart.html command
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is interpreted differently when performing a PRD run. It does not
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mean the timestep interval between restart files. Instead it means an
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event interval for uncorrelated events. Thus a frequency of 1 means
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write a restart file every time an uncorrelated event occurs. A
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frequency of 10 means write a restart file every 10th uncorrelated
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event.
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When an input script reads a restart file from a previous PRD run, the
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new script can be run on a different number of replicas or processors.
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However, it is assumed that {t_correlate} in the new PRD command is
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the same as it was previously. If not, the calculation of the "clock"
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value for the first event in the new run will be slightly off.
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:line
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[Restrictions:]
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This command can only be used if LAMMPS was built with the REPLICA
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package. See the "Making LAMMPS"_Section_start.html#start_3 section
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for more info on packages.
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{N} and {t_correlate} settings must be integer multiples of
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{t_event}.
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Runs restarted from restart file written during a PRD run will not
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produce identical results due to changes in the random numbers used
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for dephasing.
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This command cannot be used when any fixes are defined that keep track
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of elapsed time to perform time-dependent operations. Examples
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include the "ave" fixes such as "fix
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ave/spatial"_fix_ave_spatial.html. Also "fix
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dt/reset"_fix_dt_reset.html and "fix deposit"_fix_deposit.html.
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[Related commands:]
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"compute event/displace"_compute_event_displace.html,
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"min_modify"_min_modify.html, "min_style"_min_style.html,
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"run_style"_run_style.html, "minimize"_minimize.html,
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"velocity"_velocity.html, "temper"_temper.html, "neb"_neb.html,
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"tad"_tad.html
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[Default:]
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The option defaults are {min} = 0.1 0.1 40 50, no {temp} setting, and
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{vel} = {geom} {gaussian}.
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:line
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:link(Voter)
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[(Voter)] Voter, Phys Rev B, 57, 13985 (1998).
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:link(Voter2)
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[(Voter2)] Voter, Montalenti, Germann, Annual Review of Materials
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Research 32, 321 (2002).
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