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DOI: 10.1063/5.0006002
¤ OpenAccess: Hybrid
This work has “Hybrid” OA status. This means it is free under an open license in a toll-access journal.

P<scp>SI4</scp> 1.4: Open-source software for high-throughput quantum chemistry

Daniel G. A. Smith,Lori A. Burns,Andrew C. Simmonett,Robert M. Parrish,Matthew Cole Schieber,Raimondas Galvelis,Peter Kraus,Holger Kruse,Roberto Di Remigio,Asem Alenaizan,Andrew M. James,Susi Lehtola,Jonathon P. Misiewicz,Maximilian Scheurer,Robert A. Shaw,Jeffrey B. Schriber,Yi Min Xie,Zachary Glick,Dominic A. Sirianni,Joseph Senan O’Brien,Jonathan M. Waldrop,Ashutosh Kumar,Edward G. Hohenstein,Benjamin Pritchard,Bernard R. Brooks,Henry F. Schaefer,Alexander Yu. Sokolov,Konrad Patkowski,A. Eugene DePrince,Uğur Bozkaya,Rollin A. King,Francesco A. Evangelista,Justin M. Turney,T. Daniel Crawford,C. David Sherrill

Python (programming language)
Computer science
Interoperability
2020
PSI4 is a free and open-source ab initio electronic structure program providing implementations of Hartree-Fock, density functional theory, many-body perturbation theory, configuration interaction, density cumulant theory, symmetry-adapted perturbation theory, and coupled-cluster theory. Most of the methods are quite efficient, thanks to density fitting and multi-core parallelism. The program is a hybrid of C++ and Python, and calculations may be run with very simple text files or using the Python API, facilitating post-processing and complex workflows; method developers also have access to most of PSI4's core functionalities via Python. Job specification may be passed using The Molecular Sciences Software Institute (MolSSI) QCSCHEMA data format, facilitating interoperability. A rewrite of our top-level computation driver, and concomitant adoption of the MolSSI QCARCHIVE INFRASTRUCTURE project, makes the latest version of PSI4 well suited to distributed computation of large numbers of independent tasks. The project has fostered the development of independent software components that may be reused in other quantum chemistry programs.
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    P<scp>SI4</scp> 1.4: Open-source software for high-throughput quantum chemistry” is a paper by Daniel G. A. Smith Lori A. Burns Andrew C. Simmonett Robert M. Parrish Matthew Cole Schieber Raimondas Galvelis Peter Kraus Holger Kruse Roberto Di Remigio Asem Alenaizan Andrew M. James Susi Lehtola Jonathon P. Misiewicz Maximilian Scheurer Robert A. Shaw Jeffrey B. Schriber Yi Min Xie Zachary Glick Dominic A. Sirianni Joseph Senan O’Brien Jonathan M. Waldrop Ashutosh Kumar Edward G. Hohenstein Benjamin Pritchard Bernard R. Brooks Henry F. Schaefer Alexander Yu. Sokolov Konrad Patkowski A. Eugene DePrince Uğur Bozkaya Rollin A. King Francesco A. Evangelista Justin M. Turney T. Daniel Crawford C. David Sherrill published in 2020. It has an Open Access status of “hybrid”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.