Towards Routine Orbital-free Large-Scale Quantum-Mechanical Modelling of Materials (24w5171)
Organizers
Sergei Manzhos (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
Paul Ayers (McMaster University)
Shubin Liu (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Yanming Ma (Jilin University)
Jinlan Wang (School of Physics/Southeast University)
Houlong Zhuang (Arizona State University)
Description
The Institute for Advanced Study in Mathematics will host the “Towards Routine Orbital-free Large-Scale Quantum-Mechanical Modelling of Materials” workshop in Hangzhou, China from September 8 - 13, 2024.
This symposium brings together mathematicians, computer scientists, chemists and physicist to address a truly multidisciplinary issue of enabling large-scale atomistically-resolved, ab initio materials modeling. Such modeling capabilities are required for understanding and rational design of materials ranging from alloys to solid electrolytes for fuel cells. There is a substantial gap in theory and computing techniques which on one hand would be able to model phenomena intrinsically requiring models with millions of atoms and on the other hand provide accuracy and insight which is today routinely achievable only for unrealistically small model systems .
This is a gap between a model and a reality. To bridge it, this symposium makes brains from different research fields pull in one direction. Progress that this symposium will help accelerate will mean better computational support for the development of functional materials, with more of the development moved from time-, manpower-, and $-costly lab experimentation to in-silico design.
The Institute for Advanced Study in Mathematics (IASM) in Hangzhou, China, and the Banff International Research Station for Mathematical Innovation and Discovery (BIRS) in Banff, are collaborative Canada-US-Mexico ventures that provide an environment for creative interaction as well as the exchange of ideas, knowledge, and methods within the Mathematical Sciences, with related disciplines and with industry. The research station in Banff is supported by Canada’s Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), Alberta’s Advanced Education and Technology, and Mexico’s Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT).