Theoretically the separation of the electronic and ionic degrees of freedom can be
achieved by separating the power spectrum of the orbital classical fields from
the phonon spectrum of the ions (the gap between the lowest electronic
frequency and the highest ionic frequency should be large enough). Since the
electronic frequencies depend on the fictitious electron mass
one can
optimize the value of
and rise the lowest frequency appropriately. This
however might turn out difficult in practice.
The adiabaticity can be observed by running test simulations and looking at the
energy components. In particular the fictitious kinetic energy of the electronic
degrees of freedom (
) might have a tendency to grow. However,
after an initial transfer of a little kinetic energy, the electrons should be
much ``colder'' than the ions, since only then will the electronic structure
remain close to the Born-Oppenheimer surface and thus the wavefunction and
forces derived from it meaningful.
Ensuring adiabaticity of CP dynamics consists of decoupling the two subsystems and thus minimizing the energy transfer from ionic degrees of freedom to electronic ones. In this sense the system during CP dynamics simulation should be kept in a metastable state.
A good practice in running advanced simulations is to start with the simplest case for a given system and then turning on additional features gradually.
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