Abstract. The density functional theory (DFT) in electronic structure calculations can be formulated as either a nonlinear eigenvalue or direct minimization problem. The most widely used approach for solving the former is the so-called self-consistent field (SCF) iteration. A common observation is that the convergence of SCF is not clear theoretically while approaches with convergence guarantee for solving the latter are often not competitive to SCF numerically. In this paper, we study gradient type methods for solving the direct minimization problem by constructing new iterations along the gradient on the Stiefel manifold. Global convergence (i.e., convergence to a stationary point from any initial solution) as well as local convergence rate follows from the standard theory for optimization on manifold directly. A major computational advantage is that the computation of linear eigenvalue problems is no longer needed. The main costs of our approaches arise from the assembling of the total energy functional and its gradient and the projection onto the manifold. These tasks are cheaper than eigenvalue computation and they are often more suitable for parallelization as long as the evaluation of the total energy functional and its gradient is efficient. Numerical results show that they can outperform SCF consistently on many practically large systems.
In this paper, we propose a smoothing inexact Newton method for solving variational inequalities with nonlinear constraints. Based on the smoothed Fischer-Burmeister function, the variational inequality problem is reformulated as a system of parameterized smooth equations. The corresponding linear system of each iteration is solved approximately. Under some mild conditions, we establish the global and local quadratic convergence. Some numerical results show that the method is effective.
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