\(\renewcommand{\AA}{\text{Å}}\)

min_style cg command

Accelerator Variant: cg/kk

min_style hftn command

min_style sd command

min_style quickmin command

min_style fire command

min_style spin command

min_style spin/cg command

min_style spin/lbfgs command

Syntax

min_style style
  • style = cg or hftn or sd or quickmin or fire or spin or spin/cg or spin/lbfgs

    spin is discussed briefly here and fully on min_style spin doc page
    spin/cg is discussed briefly here and fully on min_style spin doc page
    spin/lbfgs is discussed briefly here and fully on min_style spin doc page

Examples

min_style cg
min_style fire
min_style spin

Description

Choose a minimization algorithm to use when a minimize command is performed.

Style cg is the Polak-Ribiere version of the conjugate gradient (CG) algorithm. At each iteration the force gradient is combined with the previous iteration information to compute a new search direction perpendicular (conjugate) to the previous search direction. The PR variant affects how the direction is chosen and how the CG method is restarted when it ceases to make progress. The PR variant is thought to be the most effective CG choice for most problems.

Style hftn is a Hessian-free truncated Newton algorithm. At each iteration a quadratic model of the energy potential is solved by a conjugate gradient inner iteration. The Hessian (second derivatives) of the energy is not formed directly, but approximated in each conjugate search direction by a finite difference directional derivative. When close to an energy minimum, the algorithm behaves like a Newton method and exhibits a quadratic convergence rate to high accuracy. In most cases the behavior of hftn is similar to cg, but it offers an alternative if cg seems to perform poorly. This style is not affected by the min_modify command.

Style sd is a steepest descent algorithm. At each iteration, the search direction is set to the downhill direction corresponding to the force vector (negative gradient of energy). Typically, steepest descent will not converge as quickly as CG, but may be more robust in some situations.

Style quickmin is a damped dynamics method described in (Sheppard), where the damping parameter is related to the projection of the velocity vector along the current force vector for each atom. The velocity of each atom is initialized to 0.0 by this style, at the beginning of a minimization.

Style fire is a damped dynamics method described in (Bitzek), which is similar to quickmin but adds a variable timestep and alters the projection operation to maintain components of the velocity non-parallel to the current force vector. The velocity of each atom is initialized to 0.0 by this style, at the beginning of a minimization. This style correspond to an optimized version described in (Guenole) that include different time integration schemes and default parameters. The default parameters can be modified with the command min_modify.

Style spin is a damped spin dynamics with an adaptive timestep.

Style spin/cg uses an orthogonal spin optimization (OSO) combined to a conjugate gradient (CG) approach to minimize spin configurations.

Style spin/lbfgs uses an orthogonal spin optimization (OSO) combined to a limited-memory Broyden-Fletcher-Goldfarb-Shanno (LBFGS) approach to minimize spin configurations.

See the min/spin page for more information about the spin, spin/cg and spin/lbfgs styles.

Either the quickmin or the fire styles are useful in the context of nudged elastic band (NEB) calculations via the neb command.

Either the spin, spin/cg, or spin/lbfgs styles are useful in the context of magnetic geodesic nudged elastic band (GNEB) calculations via the neb/spin command.

Note

The damped dynamic minimizers use whatever timestep you have defined via the timestep command. Often they will converge more quickly if you use a timestep about 10x larger than you would normally use for dynamics simulations. For fire, the default timestep is recommended to be equal to the one you would normally use for dynamics simulations.

Note

The quickmin, fire, hftn, and cg/kk styles do not yet support the use of the fix box/relax command or minimizations involving the electron radius in eFF models.


Styles with a 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 on the Accelerator packages page. 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 GPU, INTEL, KOKKOS, OPENMP, and OPT packages, respectively. They are only enabled if LAMMPS was built with those packages. See the Build package page 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 when you invoke LAMMPS, or you can use the suffix command in your input script.

See the Accelerator packages page for more instructions on how to use the accelerated styles effectively.


Restrictions

The spin, spin/cg, and spin/lbfgps styles are part of the SPIN package. They are only enabled if LAMMPS was built with that package. See the Build package page for more info.

Default

min_style cg

(Sheppard) Sheppard, Terrell, Henkelman, J Chem Phys, 128, 134106 (2008). See ref 1 in this paper for original reference to Qmin in Jonsson, Mills, Jacobsen.

(Bitzek) Bitzek, Koskinen, Gahler, Moseler, Gumbsch, Phys Rev Lett, 97, 170201 (2006).

(Guenole) Guenole, Noehring, Vaid, Houlle, Xie, Prakash, Bitzek, Comput Mater Sci, 175, 109584 (2020).