Jump to content

Requests for technical support from the VASP team should be posted in the VASP Forum.

Preparing a POTCAR

From VASP Wiki
Revision as of 07:58, 11 June 2024 by Huebsch (talk | contribs)

The POTCAR is an input file that holds the pseudopotential for each element in the structure. The templates for each element can be downloaded from the VASP Portal. Copy the template to one file in the execution directory in the same order as the elements are specified in the POSCAR, e.g., by entering

 cat ~/potpaw_PBE.64/C/POTCAR ~/potpaw_PBE.64/O_h/POTCAR > POTCAR

As explained in detail below, there are sometimes multiple templates for one element with subtle differences.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Select a POTCAR for a certain family of exchange-correlation (XC) functionals and version.

All potentials are constructed based on solving the scalar relativistic Schrödinger equation for a reference system with a certain XC functional. One set is available for the LDA, and one for the GGA. The transferability to other XC functionals is seamless by specifying the XC tag in the INCAR. We recommend using the latest available potentials. Older versions are available to ensure reproducibility.

Step 2: Choose a POTCAR with a different atomic configuration, hard or GW variant.

The suffix may correspond to a harder potential necessary to describe short bond lengths or a different number of valence electrons, e.g., required to describe magnetism, as well as higher accuracy for unoccupied states required for optical response and many-body perturbation theory. See choosing pseudopotentials.

Step 3: Combine the potentials.

VASP expects a single POTCAR file in the working directory containing all species present in the structure. The POTCAR files must be concatenated. The order of files must correspond to the order of the species in the POSCAR file. If species names are given in the POSCAR, and they do not match the order in the POTCAR, a warning is printed, but VASP will still run. The order given in the POTCAR will take precedence over the order in POSCAR! You can copy the POTCAR to the working directory if you have only one element in your structure.

Recommendations and advice

Example for preparing a POTCAR for the Heusler alloy TiCo2Si

In this example, we want to prepare a POTCAR for a PBE calculation of ferromagnetic TiCo2Si. We are interested in the size of the magnetic moments.

The structure is defined by the following POSCAR:

TiCo2Si
 1.0
 -2.8580789844367893   -2.8580789844367889    0.0000000000000000
 -2.8580789844367889    0.0000000000000000   -2.8580789844367889
 -0.0000000000000005   -2.8580789844367889   -2.8580789844367889
Co Si Ti
 2  1  1
direct
  0.7500000000000000    0.7500000000000000    0.7500000000000000 Co
  0.2500000000000000    0.2500000000000000    0.2500000000000000 Co
  0.0000000000000000    0.0000000000000000    0.0000000000000000 Si
  0.4999999999999999    0.5000000000000000    0.5000000000000000 Ti

We will use the potpaw_PBE.64 potential set, and since we are interested in magnetic properties, we should use potentials with additional semicore-states in the valence. The Co_pv and Ti_sv potentials seem appropriate for the transition metals. We do not expect Si to become magnetic and are not interested in unoccupied states, so the Si potential is a good choice compared to the harder, computationally more demanding Si_GW or even Si_sv_GW.

On a UNIX machine, one can use the cat command to concatenate files together. One can redirect the output from stdout to a file using the > operator. The order in the POSCAR dictates the order in the POTCAR:

cat ~/potpaw_PBE.64/Co_pv/POTCAR ~/potpaw_PBE.64/Ti_sv/POTCAR ~/potpaw_PBE.64/Si/POTCAR > ~/scratch/TiCo2Si/POTCAR

Related tags and sections

Category:Pseudopotentials, POTCAR, Choosing pseudopotentials, Theory:Pseudopotential basics, Projector-augmented-wave formalism, Available pseudopotentials