๐ Effmass now has a command line interface
๐ Effmass now supports FHI-Aims, Castep, ASE, and Octopus
Data
class was renamed DataVasp
in effmass
versions 2.0.0+. You may need to update your scripts!
effmass
is a peer-reviewed Python (3.6+) package for calculating various definitions of effective mass from the electronic bandstructure of a semiconducting material. It consists of a core Segment
class that calculates the effective mass and other associated properties of selected bandstructure segments. The programme also contains functions for locating bandstructure extrema, constructing segments and plotting approximations to the dispersion. There is a command line interface for calculating parabolic effective mass values, and an API for the more complex, non-parabolic definitions of effective mass.
If you use effmass
for your published research please cite accordingly.
๐ effmass
now interfaces with more codes:
- it can read in Castep output data (in addition to Vasp and FHI-aims)
- it can work with ASE bandstructure objects
- it can work with Octopus output files
๐ effmass
now includes a command line interface
As a result of these changes, and with view to supporting more DFT codes in the future, the Data
class has been renamed to DataVasp
effmass
can:
Read in a bandstructure:
It is assumed you have used a DFT calculator to walk through a 1D slice of the Brillouin Zone, capturing the maxima and minima of interest. effmass
uses the Python package vasppy for parsing VASP
output.
Locate extrema: These correspond to the valence band maxima and conduction band minima. Maxima and minima within a certain energy range can also be located.
Calculate curvature, transport and optical effective masses: The curvature (aka inertial) and transport masses are calculated using the derivatives of a fitted polynomial function. The optical effective mass can also be calculated assuming a Kane dispersion.
Assess the extent of non-parabolicity: Parameters of the Kane quasi-linear dispersion are calculated to quantify the extent of non-parabolicity over a given energy range.
Calculate the quasi-fermi level for a given carrier concentration:
Using density-of-states data and assuming no thermal smearing, effmass
can calculate the energy to which states are occupied. This is a useful approximation to the quasi-Fermi level. Note: this is only supported for VASP and requires the output file DOSCAR
.
Plot fits to the dispersion: Selected bandstructure segments and approximations to the dispersion (assuming a Kane, quadratic, or higher order fit) can be visualised.
Depending on the functionality and level of approximation you are looking for, it may be that one of the packages listed here will suit your needs better.
effmass
currently supports VASP
, FHI-Aims
, Castep
, ASE
, and Octopus
. In the near future we hope to play nicely with other codes that interface with the ASE bandstructure class, and pymatgen. We especially welcome contributions that will help make effmass
available to more researchers.
There are other codes that can calculate effective mass. The best effective mass code depends on your use case.
- You may find Sumo bandstats easier to use if you are looking for a basic parabolic fit.
- Amset can be used to calculate the effective mass across the whole Brillouin Zone (useful if your CBM/VBM is not at a high symmetry point, for example). Further details can be found on MatSci discussion forum here
You may find that someone else has already calculated the effective mass you need - there are 10,000's DFT-calculated effective mass values on MPContribs here.
effmass
can be installed using the Python package manager pip
:
pip install effmass
If you use conda/anaconda, the safest thing to do is to create a new environment and then install effmass:
conda create -n effmass python
conda activate effmass
pip install effmass
If you wish, you can install the very latest version of effmass
from GitHub with the commands below. Note: The latest GitHub version may include more features and data format support that the latest release, but it is not a stable release, so may have more issues than usual. If you are unsure, use one of the above install methods instead.
git clone https://github.com/lucydot/effmass.git
cd effmass
pip install .
The command line interface provides basic functionality for calculating parabolic effective masses. For those who have a basic familiarity with Python there is an API which provides access to all features, including non-parabolic effective mass definitions.
To start the command line interface simply type
effmass
and follow the prompts. You are asked if you would like to print a plot of the segments found - we recommend that you do this, to check that the segments are "sensible". You are also asked if you would like to print a summary file - again, we recommend that you do this, so that you have a record of the CLI options chosen.
- An overview of the features of effmass, along with example code for Vasp and FHI-aims output data, is contained in a Jupyter notebook here.
- Additional Jupyter notebook examples for the Castep and ASE interfaces are here.
- The API documentation is here.
- Further details about the various effective mass definitions implemented in
effmass
can be found in Phys. Rev. B 99 (8), 085207, which is also available on arXiv. - The source code is available as a git repository at https://github.com/lucydot/effmass.
If you want to run the jupyter notebook examples/tutorials you will also need to install notebook
:
pip install notebook
To run the notebook, run the following command at the Terminal (Mac/Linux) or Command Prompt (Windows):
jupyter notebook
This will open a web browser tab, which you can use to navigate to the notebook examples.
A number of publications have used effmass
.
effmass
was initially developed for a project that has been published as Impact of nonparabolic electronic band structure on the optical and transport properties of photovoltaic materials Phys. Rev. B 99 (8), 085207. This paper is also avaiable on arXiv. The paper directory contains the Vasp input data (POSCAR), Vasp output data (OUTCAR/PROCAR) and band structures generated for this study.
Please use the Github issue tracker for any questions, feature requests or bug reports. Please do not contact the developers via email unless there is a specific reason you do not want the conversation to be public.
If you would like to contribute please do so via a pull request. All contributors must read and respect the code of conduct. In particular, we welcome contributions which would extend effmass
so that it is able to parse output from other electronic structure codes.
Automated testing of the latest commit happens here.
You can also run tests locally:
pip install effmass[tests]
cd effmass
python -m pytest
If you use this code in your research, please cite the following paper:
Whalley, Lucy D. (2018). effmass - an effective mass package. The Journal of Open Source Software, 3(28) 797. Link to paper here.
@misc{Whalley_JOSS2018,
author = {Lucy D. Whalley},
title = {effmass: An effective mass package},
volume = {3},
issue = {28},
pages = {797},
month = {Aug},
year = {2018},
doi = {10.21105/joss.00797},
url = {http://joss.theoj.org/papers/10.21105/joss.00797}
}
Lead developer: Lucy Whalley, a.k.a lucydot
Contributors:
William Taylor (auto-versioning and build system requirements), a.k.a musicmrman99 //
Austin Fatt (support for Ocotpus), a.k.a afatt //
Matthias Goloumb (Support for FHI-Aims), a.k.a MatthiasGolomb //
Katarina Brlec (Support for vasprun files) a.k.a brlec //
Sean Kavanagh (Documentation), a.k.a kavanase //
Benjamin Morgan (Vasppy compatability), a.k.a bjmorgan //