forked from lijiext/lammps
595 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
595 lines
29 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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fix deform command :h3
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fix deform/kk command :h3
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[Syntax:]
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fix ID group-ID deform N parameter args ... keyword value ... :pre
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ID, group-ID are documented in "fix"_fix.html command :ulb,l
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deform = style name of this fix command :l
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N = perform box deformation every this many timesteps :l
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one or more parameter/arg pairs may be appended :l
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parameter = {x} or {y} or {z} or {xy} or {xz} or {yz}
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{x}, {y}, {z} args = style value(s)
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style = {final} or {delta} or {scale} or {vel} or {erate} or {trate} or {volume} or {wiggle} or {variable}
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{final} values = lo hi
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lo hi = box boundaries at end of run (distance units)
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{delta} values = dlo dhi
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dlo dhi = change in box boundaries at end of run (distance units)
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{scale} values = factor
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factor = multiplicative factor for change in box length at end of run
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{vel} value = V
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V = change box length at this velocity (distance/time units),
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effectively an engineering strain rate
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{erate} value = R
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R = engineering strain rate (1/time units)
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{trate} value = R
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R = true strain rate (1/time units)
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{volume} value = none = adjust this dim to preserve volume of system
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{wiggle} values = A Tp
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A = amplitude of oscillation (distance units)
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Tp = period of oscillation (time units)
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{variable} values = v_name1 v_name2
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v_name1 = variable with name1 for box length change as function of time
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v_name2 = variable with name2 for change rate as function of time
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{xy}, {xz}, {yz} args = style value
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style = {final} or {delta} or {vel} or {erate} or {trate} or {wiggle}
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{final} value = tilt
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tilt = tilt factor at end of run (distance units)
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{delta} value = dtilt
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dtilt = change in tilt factor at end of run (distance units)
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{vel} value = V
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V = change tilt factor at this velocity (distance/time units),
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effectively an engineering shear strain rate
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{erate} value = R
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R = engineering shear strain rate (1/time units)
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{trate} value = R
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R = true shear strain rate (1/time units)
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{wiggle} values = A Tp
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A = amplitude of oscillation (distance units)
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Tp = period of oscillation (time units)
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{variable} values = v_name1 v_name2
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v_name1 = variable with name1 for tilt change as function of time
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v_name2 = variable with name2 for change rate as function of time :pre
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zero or more keyword/value pairs may be appended :l
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keyword = {remap} or {flip} or {units} :l
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{remap} value = {x} or {v} or {none}
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x = remap coords of atoms in group into deforming box
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v = remap velocities of all atoms when they cross periodic boundaries
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none = no remapping of x or v
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{flip} value = {yes} or {no}
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allow or disallow box flips when it becomes highly skewed
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{units} value = {lattice} or {box}
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lattice = distances are defined in lattice units
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box = distances are defined in simulation box units :pre
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:ule
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[Examples:]
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fix 1 all deform 1 x final 0.0 9.0 z final 0.0 5.0 units box
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fix 1 all deform 1 x trate 0.1 y volume z volume
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fix 1 all deform 1 xy erate 0.001 remap v
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fix 1 all deform 10 y delta -0.5 0.5 xz vel 1.0 :pre
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[Description:]
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Change the volume and/or shape of the simulation box during a dynamics
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run. Orthogonal simulation boxes have 3 adjustable parameters
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(x,y,z). Triclinic (non-orthogonal) simulation boxes have 6
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adjustable parameters (x,y,z,xy,xz,yz). Any or all of them can be
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adjusted independently and simultaneously by this command. This fix
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can be used to perform non-equilibrium MD (NEMD) simulations of a
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continuously strained system. See the "fix
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nvt/sllod"_fix_nvt_sllod.html and "compute
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temp/deform"_compute_temp_deform.html commands for more details.
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For the {x}, {y}, {z} parameters, the associated dimension cannot be
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shrink-wrapped. For the {xy}, {yz}, {xz} parameters, the associated
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2nd dimension cannot be shrink-wrapped. Dimensions not varied by this
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command can be periodic or non-periodic. Dimensions corresponding to
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unspecified parameters can also be controlled by a "fix
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npt"_fix_nh.html or "fix nph"_fix_nh.html command.
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The size and shape of the simulation box at the beginning of the
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simulation run were either specified by the
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"create_box"_create_box.html or "read_data"_read_data.html or
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"read_restart"_read_restart.html command used to setup the simulation
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initially if it is the first run, or they are the values from the end
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of the previous run. The "create_box"_create_box.html, "read
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data"_read_data.html, and "read_restart"_read_restart.html commands
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specify whether the simulation box is orthogonal or non-orthogonal
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(triclinic) and explain the meaning of the xy,xz,yz tilt factors. If
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fix deform changes the xy,xz,yz tilt factors, then the simulation box
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must be triclinic, even if its initial tilt factors are 0.0.
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As described below, the desired simulation box size and shape at the
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end of the run are determined by the parameters of the fix deform
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command. Every Nth timestep during the run, the simulation box is
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expanded, contracted, or tilted to ramped values between the initial
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and final values.
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:line
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For the {x}, {y}, and {z} parameters, this is the meaning of their
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styles and values.
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The {final}, {delta}, {scale}, {vel}, and {erate} styles all change
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the specified dimension of the box via "constant displacement" which
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is effectively a "constant engineering strain rate". This means the
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box dimension changes linearly with time from its initial to final
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value.
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For style {final}, the final lo and hi box boundaries of a dimension
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are specified. The values can be in lattice or box distance units.
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See the discussion of the units keyword below.
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For style {delta}, plus or minus changes in the lo/hi box boundaries
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of a dimension are specified. The values can be in lattice or box
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distance units. See the discussion of the units keyword below.
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For style {scale}, a multiplicative factor to apply to the box length
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of a dimension is specified. For example, if the initial box length
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is 10, and the factor is 1.1, then the final box length will be 11. A
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factor less than 1.0 means compression.
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For style {vel}, a velocity at which the box length changes is
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specified in units of distance/time. This is effectively a "constant
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engineering strain rate", where rate = V/L0 and L0 is the initial box
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length. The distance can be in lattice or box distance units. See
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the discussion of the units keyword below. For example, if the
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initial box length is 100 Angstroms, and V is 10 Angstroms/psec, then
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after 10 psec, the box length will have doubled. After 20 psec, it
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will have tripled.
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The {erate} style changes a dimension of the the box at a "constant
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engineering strain rate". The units of the specified strain rate are
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1/time. See the "units"_units.html command for the time units
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associated with different choices of simulation units,
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e.g. picoseconds for "metal" units). Tensile strain is unitless and
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is defined as delta/L0, where L0 is the original box length and delta
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is the change relative to the original length. The box length L as a
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function of time will change as
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L(t) = L0 (1 + erate*dt) :pre
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where dt is the elapsed time (in time units). Thus if {erate} R is
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specified as 0.1 and time units are picoseconds, this means the box
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length will increase by 10% of its original length every picosecond.
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I.e. strain after 1 psec = 0.1, strain after 2 psec = 0.2, etc. R =
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-0.01 means the box length will shrink by 1% of its original length
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every picosecond. Note that for an "engineering" rate the change is
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based on the original box length, so running with R = 1 for 10
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picoseconds expands the box length by a factor of 11 (strain of 10),
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which is different that what the {trate} style would induce.
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The {trate} style changes a dimension of the box at a "constant true
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strain rate". Note that this is not an "engineering strain rate", as
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the other styles are. Rather, for a "true" rate, the rate of change
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is constant, which means the box dimension changes non-linearly with
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time from its initial to final value. The units of the specified
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strain rate are 1/time. See the "units"_units.html command for the
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time units associated with different choices of simulation units,
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e.g. picoseconds for "metal" units). Tensile strain is unitless and
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is defined as delta/L0, where L0 is the original box length and delta
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is the change relative to the original length.
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The box length L as a function of time will change as
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L(t) = L0 exp(trate*dt) :pre
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where dt is the elapsed time (in time units). Thus if {trate} R is
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specified as ln(1.1) and time units are picoseconds, this means the
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box length will increase by 10% of its current (not original) length
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every picosecond. I.e. strain after 1 psec = 0.1, strain after 2 psec
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= 0.21, etc. R = ln(2) or ln(3) means the box length will double or
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triple every picosecond. R = ln(0.99) means the box length will
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shrink by 1% of its current length every picosecond. Note that for a
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"true" rate the change is continuous and based on the current length,
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so running with R = ln(2) for 10 picoseconds does not expand the box
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length by a factor of 11 as it would with {erate}, but by a factor of
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1024 since the box length will double every picosecond.
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Note that to change the volume (or cross-sectional area) of the
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simulation box at a constant rate, you can change multiple dimensions
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via {erate} or {trate}. E.g. to double the box volume in a picosecond
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picosecond, you could set "x erate M", "y erate M", "z erate M", with
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M = pow(2,1/3) - 1 = 0.26, since if each box dimension grows by 26%,
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the box volume doubles. Or you could set "x trate M", "y trate M", "z
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trate M", with M = ln(1.26) = 0.231, and the box volume would double
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every picosecond.
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The {volume} style changes the specified dimension in such a way that
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the box volume remains constant while other box dimensions are changed
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explicitly via the styles discussed above. For example, "x scale 1.1
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y scale 1.1 z volume" will shrink the z box length as the x,y box
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lengths increase, to keep the volume constant (product of x,y,z
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lengths). If "x scale 1.1 z volume" is specified and parameter {y} is
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unspecified, then the z box length will shrink as x increases to keep
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the product of x,z lengths constant. If "x scale 1.1 y volume z
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volume" is specified, then both the y,z box lengths will shrink as x
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increases to keep the volume constant (product of x,y,z lengths). In
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this case, the y,z box lengths shrink so as to keep their relative
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aspect ratio constant.
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For solids or liquids, note that when one dimension of the box is
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expanded via fix deform (i.e. tensile strain), it may be physically
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undesirable to hold the other 2 box lengths constant (unspecified by
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fix deform) since that implies a density change. Using the {volume}
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style for those 2 dimensions to keep the box volume constant may make
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more physical sense, but may also not be correct for materials and
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potentials whose Poisson ratio is not 0.5. An alternative is to use
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"fix npt aniso"_fix_nh.html with zero applied pressure on those 2
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dimensions, so that they respond to the tensile strain dynamically.
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The {wiggle} style oscillates the specified box length dimension
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sinusoidally with the specified amplitude and period. I.e. the box
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length L as a function of time is given by
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L(t) = L0 + A sin(2*pi t/Tp) :pre
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where L0 is its initial length. If the amplitude A is a positive
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number the box initially expands, then contracts, etc. If A is
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negative then the box initially contracts, then expands, etc. The
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amplitude can be in lattice or box distance units. See the discussion
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of the units keyword below.
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The {variable} style changes the specified box length dimension by
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evaluating a variable, which presumably is a function of time. The
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variable with {name1} must be an "equal-style variable"_variable.html
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and should calculate a change in box length in units of distance.
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Note that this distance is in box units, not lattice units; see the
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discussion of the {units} keyword below. The formula associated with
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variable {name1} can reference the current timestep. Note that it
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should return the "change" in box length, not the absolute box length.
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This means it should evaluate to 0.0 when invoked on the initial
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timestep of the run following the definition of fix deform. It should
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evaluate to a value > 0.0 to dilate the box at future times, or a
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value < 0.0 to compress the box.
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The variable {name2} must also be an "equal-style
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variable"_variable.html and should calculate the rate of box length
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change, in units of distance/time, i.e. the time-derivative of the
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{name1} variable. This quantity is used internally by LAMMPS to reset
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atom velocities when they cross periodic boundaries. It is computed
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internally for the other styles, but you must provide it when using an
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arbitrary variable.
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Here is an example of using the {variable} style to perform the same
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box deformation as the {wiggle} style formula listed above, where we
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assume that the current timestep = 0.
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variable A equal 5.0
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variable Tp equal 10.0
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variable displace equal "v_A * sin(2*PI * step*dt/v_Tp)"
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variable rate equal "2*PI*v_A/v_Tp * cos(2*PI * step*dt/v_Tp)"
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fix 2 all deform 1 x variable v_displace v_rate remap v :pre
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For the {scale}, {vel}, {erate}, {trate}, {volume}, {wiggle}, and
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{variable} styles, the box length is expanded or compressed around its
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mid point.
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:line
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For the {xy}, {xz}, and {yz} parameters, this is the meaning of their
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styles and values. Note that changing the tilt factors of a triclinic
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box does not change its volume.
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The {final}, {delta}, {vel}, and {erate} styles all change the shear
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strain at a "constant engineering shear strain rate". This means the
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tilt factor changes linearly with time from its initial to final
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value.
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For style {final}, the final tilt factor is specified. The value
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can be in lattice or box distance units. See the discussion of the
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units keyword below.
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For style {delta}, a plus or minus change in the tilt factor is
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specified. The value can be in lattice or box distance units. See
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the discussion of the units keyword below.
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For style {vel}, a velocity at which the tilt factor changes is
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specified in units of distance/time. This is effectively an
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"engineering shear strain rate", where rate = V/L0 and L0 is the
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initial box length perpendicular to the direction of shear. The
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distance can be in lattice or box distance units. See the discussion
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of the units keyword below. For example, if the initial tilt factor
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is 5 Angstroms, and the V is 10 Angstroms/psec, then after 1 psec, the
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tilt factor will be 15 Angstroms. After 2 psec, it will be 25
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Angstroms.
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The {erate} style changes a tilt factor at a "constant engineering
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shear strain rate". The units of the specified shear strain rate are
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1/time. See the "units"_units.html command for the time units
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associated with different choices of simulation units,
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e.g. picoseconds for "metal" units). Shear strain is unitless and is
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defined as offset/length, where length is the box length perpendicular
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to the shear direction (e.g. y box length for xy deformation) and
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offset is the displacement distance in the shear direction (e.g. x
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direction for xy deformation) from the unstrained orientation.
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The tilt factor T as a function of time will change as
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T(t) = T0 + L0*erate*dt :pre
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where T0 is the initial tilt factor, L0 is the original length of the
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box perpendicular to the shear direction (e.g. y box length for xy
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deformation), and dt is the elapsed time (in time units). Thus if
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{erate} R is specified as 0.1 and time units are picoseconds, this
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means the shear strain will increase by 0.1 every picosecond. I.e. if
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the xy shear strain was initially 0.0, then strain after 1 psec = 0.1,
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strain after 2 psec = 0.2, etc. Thus the tilt factor would be 0.0 at
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time 0, 0.1*ybox at 1 psec, 0.2*ybox at 2 psec, etc, where ybox is the
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original y box length. R = 1 or 2 means the tilt factor will increase
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by 1 or 2 every picosecond. R = -0.01 means a decrease in shear
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strain by 0.01 every picosecond.
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The {trate} style changes a tilt factor at a "constant true shear
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strain rate". Note that this is not an "engineering shear strain
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rate", as the other styles are. Rather, for a "true" rate, the rate
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of change is constant, which means the tilt factor changes
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non-linearly with time from its initial to final value. The units of
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the specified shear strain rate are 1/time. See the
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"units"_units.html command for the time units associated with
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different choices of simulation units, e.g. picoseconds for "metal"
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units). Shear strain is unitless and is defined as offset/length,
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where length is the box length perpendicular to the shear direction
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(e.g. y box length for xy deformation) and offset is the displacement
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distance in the shear direction (e.g. x direction for xy deformation)
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from the unstrained orientation.
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The tilt factor T as a function of time will change as
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T(t) = T0 exp(trate*dt) :pre
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where T0 is the initial tilt factor and dt is the elapsed time (in
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time units). Thus if {trate} R is specified as ln(1.1) and time units
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are picoseconds, this means the shear strain or tilt factor will
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increase by 10% every picosecond. I.e. if the xy shear strain was
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initially 0.1, then strain after 1 psec = 0.11, strain after 2 psec =
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0.121, etc. R = ln(2) or ln(3) means the tilt factor will double or
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triple every picosecond. R = ln(0.99) means the tilt factor will
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shrink by 1% every picosecond. Note that the change is continuous, so
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running with R = ln(2) for 10 picoseconds does not change the tilt
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factor by a factor of 10, but by a factor of 1024 since it doubles
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every picosecond. Note that the initial tilt factor must be non-zero
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to use the {trate} option.
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Note that shear strain is defined as the tilt factor divided by the
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perpendicular box length. The {erate} and {trate} styles control the
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tilt factor, but assume the perpendicular box length remains constant.
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If this is not the case (e.g. it changes due to another fix deform
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parameter), then this effect on the shear strain is ignored.
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The {wiggle} style oscillates the specified tilt factor sinusoidally
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with the specified amplitude and period. I.e. the tilt factor T as a
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function of time is given by
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T(t) = T0 + A sin(2*pi t/Tp) :pre
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where T0 is its initial value. If the amplitude A is a positive
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number the tilt factor initially becomes more positive, then more
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negative, etc. If A is negative then the tilt factor initially
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becomes more negative, then more positive, etc. The amplitude can be
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in lattice or box distance units. See the discussion of the units
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keyword below.
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The {variable} style changes the specified tilt factor by evaluating a
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variable, which presumably is a function of time. The variable with
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{name1} must be an "equal-style variable"_variable.html and should
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calculate a change in tilt in units of distance. Note that this
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distance is in box units, not lattice units; see the discussion of the
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{units} keyword below. The formula associated with variable {name1}
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can reference the current timestep. Note that it should return the
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"change" in tilt factor, not the absolute tilt factor. This means it
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should evaluate to 0.0 when invoked on the initial timestep of the run
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following the definition of fix deform.
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The variable {name2} must also be an "equal-style
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variable"_variable.html and should calculate the rate of tilt change,
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in units of distance/time, i.e. the time-derivative of the {name1}
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variable. This quantity is used internally by LAMMPS to reset atom
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velocities when they cross periodic boundaries. It is computed
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internally for the other styles, but you must provide it when using an
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arbitrary variable.
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Here is an example of using the {variable} style to perform the same
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box deformation as the {wiggle} style formula listed above, where we
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assume that the current timestep = 0.
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variable A equal 5.0
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variable Tp equal 10.0
|
|
variable displace equal "v_A * sin(2*PI * step*dt/v_Tp)"
|
|
variable rate equal "2*PI*v_A/v_Tp * cos(2*PI * step*dt/v_Tp)"
|
|
fix 2 all deform 1 xy variable v_displace v_rate remap v :pre
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
All of the tilt styles change the xy, xz, yz tilt factors during a
|
|
simulation. In LAMMPS, tilt factors (xy,xz,yz) for triclinic boxes
|
|
are normally bounded by half the distance of the parallel box length.
|
|
See the discussion of the {flip} keyword below, to allow this bound to
|
|
be exceeded, if desired.
|
|
|
|
For example, if xlo = 2 and xhi = 12, then the x box length is 10 and
|
|
the xy tilt factor must be between -5 and 5. Similarly, both xz and
|
|
yz must be between -(xhi-xlo)/2 and +(yhi-ylo)/2. Note that this is
|
|
not a limitation, since if the maximum tilt factor is 5 (as in this
|
|
example), then configurations with tilt = ..., -15, -5, 5, 15, 25,
|
|
... are all equivalent.
|
|
|
|
To obey this constraint and allow for large shear deformations to be
|
|
applied via the {xy}, {xz}, or {yz} parameters, the following
|
|
algorithm is used. If {prd} is the associated parallel box length (10
|
|
in the example above), then if the tilt factor exceeds the accepted
|
|
range of -5 to 5 during the simulation, then the box is flipped to the
|
|
other limit (an equivalent box) and the simulation continues. Thus
|
|
for this example, if the initial xy tilt factor was 0.0 and "xy final
|
|
100.0" was specified, then during the simulation the xy tilt factor
|
|
would increase from 0.0 to 5.0, the box would be flipped so that the
|
|
tilt factor becomes -5.0, the tilt factor would increase from -5.0 to
|
|
5.0, the box would be flipped again, etc. The flip occurs 10 times
|
|
and the final tilt factor at the end of the simulation would be 0.0.
|
|
During each flip event, atoms are remapped into the new box in the
|
|
appropriate manner.
|
|
|
|
The one exception to this rule is if the 1st dimension in the tilt
|
|
factor (x for xy) is non-periodic. In that case, the limits on the
|
|
tilt factor are not enforced, since flipping the box in that dimension
|
|
does not change the atom positions due to non-periodicity. In this
|
|
mode, if you tilt the system to extreme angles, the simulation will
|
|
simply become inefficient due to the highly skewed simulation box.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
Each time the box size or shape is changed, the {remap} keyword
|
|
determines whether atom positions are remapped to the new box. If
|
|
{remap} is set to {x} (the default), atoms in the fix group are
|
|
remapped; otherwise they are not. Note that their velocities are not
|
|
changed, just their positions are altered. If {remap} is set to {v},
|
|
then any atom in the fix group that crosses a periodic boundary will
|
|
have a delta added to its velocity equal to the difference in
|
|
velocities between the lo and hi boundaries. Note that this velocity
|
|
difference can include tilt components, e.g. a delta in the x velocity
|
|
when an atom crosses the y periodic boundary. If {remap} is set to
|
|
{none}, then neither of these remappings take place.
|
|
|
|
Conceptually, setting {remap} to {x} forces the atoms to deform via an
|
|
affine transformation that exactly matches the box deformation. This
|
|
setting is typically appropriate for solids. Note that though the
|
|
atoms are effectively "moving" with the box over time, it is not due
|
|
to their having a velocity that tracks the box change, but only due to
|
|
the remapping. By contrast, setting {remap} to {v} is typically
|
|
appropriate for fluids, where you want the atoms to respond to the
|
|
change in box size/shape on their own and acquire a velocity that
|
|
matches the box change, so that their motion will naturally track the
|
|
box without explicit remapping of their coordinates.
|
|
|
|
IMPORTANT NOTE: When non-equilibrium MD (NEMD) simulations are
|
|
performed using this fix, the option "remap v" should normally be
|
|
used. This is because "fix nvt/sllod"_fix_nvt_sllod.html adjusts the
|
|
atom positions and velocities to induce a velocity profile that
|
|
matches the changing box size/shape. Thus atom coordinates should NOT
|
|
be remapped by fix deform, but velocities SHOULD be when atoms cross
|
|
periodic boundaries, since that is consistent with maintaining the
|
|
velocity profile already created by fix nvt/sllod. LAMMPS will warn
|
|
you if the {remap} setting is not consistent with fix nvt/sllod.
|
|
|
|
IMPORTANT NOTE: For non-equilibrium MD (NEMD) simulations using "remap
|
|
v" it is usually desirable that the fluid (or flowing material,
|
|
e.g. granular particles) stream with a velocity profile consistent
|
|
with the deforming box. As mentioned above, using a thermostat such
|
|
as "fix nvt/sllod"_fix_nvt_sllod.html or "fix
|
|
lavgevin"_doc/fix_langevin.html (with a bias provided by "compute
|
|
temp/deform"_compute_temp_deform.html), will typically accomplish
|
|
that. If you do not use a thermostat, then there is no driving force
|
|
pushing the atoms to flow in a manner consistent with the deforming
|
|
box. E.g. for a shearing system the box deformation velocity may vary
|
|
from 0 at the bottom to 10 at the top of the box. But the stream
|
|
velocity profile of the atoms may vary from -5 at the bottom to +5 at
|
|
the top. You can monitor these effects using the "fix
|
|
ave/spatial"_fix_ave_spatial.html, "compute
|
|
temp/deform"_compute_temp_deform.html, and "compute
|
|
temp/profile"_compute_temp_profile.html commands. One way to induce
|
|
atoms to stream consistent with the box deformation is to give them an
|
|
initial velocity profile, via the "velocity ramp"_velocity.html
|
|
command, that matches the box deformation rate. This also typically
|
|
helps the system come to equilibrium more quickly, even if a
|
|
thermostat is used.
|
|
|
|
IMPORTANT NOTE: If a "fix rigid"_fix_rigid.html is defined for rigid
|
|
bodies, and {remap} is set to {x}, then the center-of-mass coordinates
|
|
of rigid bodies will be remapped to the changing simulation box. This
|
|
will be done regardless of whether atoms in the rigid bodies are in
|
|
the fix deform group or not. The velocity of the centers of mass are
|
|
not remapped even if {remap} is set to {v}, since "fix
|
|
nvt/sllod"_fix_nvt_sllod.html does not currently do anything special
|
|
for rigid particles. If you wish to perform a NEMD simulation of
|
|
rigid particles, you can either thermostat them independently or
|
|
include a background fluid and thermostat the fluid via "fix
|
|
nvt/sllod"_fix_nvt_sllod.html.
|
|
|
|
The {flip} keyword allows the tilt factors for a triclinic box to
|
|
exceed half the distance of the parallel box length, as discussed
|
|
above. If the {flip} value is set to {yes}, the bound is enforced by
|
|
flipping the box when it is exceeded. If the {flip} value is set to
|
|
{no}, the tilt will continue to change without flipping. Note that if
|
|
you apply large deformations, this means the box shape can tilt
|
|
dramatically LAMMPS will run less efficiently, due to the large volume
|
|
of communication needed to acquire ghost atoms around a processor's
|
|
irregular-shaped sub-domain. For extreme values of tilt, LAMMPS may
|
|
also lose atoms and generate an error.
|
|
|
|
The {units} keyword determines the meaning of the distance units used
|
|
to define various arguments. A {box} value selects standard distance
|
|
units as defined by the "units"_units.html command, e.g. Angstroms for
|
|
units = real or metal. A {lattice} value means the distance units are
|
|
in lattice spacings. The "lattice"_lattice.html command must have
|
|
been previously used to define the lattice spacing. Note that the
|
|
units choice also affects the {vel} style parameters since it is
|
|
defined in terms of distance/time. Also note that the units keyword
|
|
does not affect the {variable} style. You should use the {xlat},
|
|
{ylat}, {zlat} keywords of the "thermo_style"_thermo_style.html
|
|
command if you want to include lattice spacings in a variable formula.
|
|
|
|
:line
|
|
|
|
Styles with a {cuda}, {gpu}, {intel}, {kk}, {omp}, or {opt} suffix are
|
|
functionally the same as the corresponding style without the suffix.
|
|
They have been optimized to run faster, depending on your available
|
|
hardware, as discussed in "Section_accelerate"_Section_accelerate.html
|
|
of the manual. The accelerated styles take the same arguments and
|
|
should produce the same results, except for round-off and precision
|
|
issues.
|
|
|
|
These accelerated styles are part of the USER-CUDA, GPU, USER-INTEL,
|
|
KOKKOS, USER-OMP and OPT packages, respectively. They are only
|
|
enabled if LAMMPS was built with those packages. See the "Making
|
|
LAMMPS"_Section_start.html#start_3 section for more info.
|
|
|
|
You can specify the accelerated styles explicitly in your input script
|
|
by including their suffix, or you can use the "-suffix command-line
|
|
switch"_Section_start.html#start_7 when you invoke LAMMPS, or you can
|
|
use the "suffix"_suffix.html command in your input script.
|
|
|
|
See "Section_accelerate"_Section_accelerate.html of the manual for
|
|
more instructions on how to use the accelerated styles effectively.
|
|
|
|
[Restart, fix_modify, output, run start/stop, minimize info:]
|
|
|
|
No information about this fix is written to "binary restart
|
|
files"_restart.html. None of the "fix_modify"_fix_modify.html options
|
|
are relevant to this fix. No global or per-atom quantities are stored
|
|
by this fix for access by various "output
|
|
commands"_Section_howto.html#howto_15.
|
|
|
|
This fix can perform deformation over multiple runs, using the {start}
|
|
and {stop} keywords of the "run"_run.html command. See the
|
|
"run"_run.html command for details of how to do this.
|
|
|
|
This fix is not invoked during "energy minimization"_minimize.html.
|
|
|
|
[Restrictions:]
|
|
|
|
You cannot apply x, y, or z deformations to a dimension that is
|
|
shrink-wrapped via the "boundary"_boundary.html comamnd.
|
|
|
|
You cannot apply xy, yz, or xz deformations to a 2nd dimension (y in
|
|
xy) that is shrink-wrapped via the "boundary"_boundary.html comamnd.
|
|
|
|
[Related commands:]
|
|
|
|
"change_box"_change_box.html
|
|
|
|
[Default:]
|
|
|
|
The option defaults are remap = x, flip = yes, and units = lattice.
|