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Text Content

LAMMPS MOLECULAR DYNAMICS SIMULATOR

lamp: a device that generates light, heat, or therapeutic radiation; something
that illumines the mind or soul -- www.dictionary.com

hover to animate -- input script physical analog

There is a new LAMMPS overview paper which you can cite in your publications.
See citation details here and cool images here.







Big PictureCodeDocumentationResultsRelated SoftwareContextUser Support Features
Download Manual Publications Pre/Post processing Authors MatSci forum
Non-features GitHub Programmer guide Pictures External packages & tools History
Slack channel Packages SourceForge Tutorials Movies Pizza.py Toolkit Funding IRC
channel FAQ Latest features & bug fixes MD to LAMMPS glossary Benchmarks
Visualization Open source Workshops Wish list Report bugs & request features
Commands Citing LAMMPS Other MD codes Contribute to LAMMPS Books about MD



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LAMMPS is a classical molecular dynamics code with a focus on materials
modeling. It's an acronym for Large-scale Atomic/Molecular Massively Parallel
Simulator.

LAMMPS has potentials for solid-state materials (metals, semiconductors) and
soft matter (biomolecules, polymers) and coarse-grained or mesoscopic systems.
It can be used to model atoms or, more generically, as a parallel particle
simulator at the atomic, meso, or continuum scale.

LAMMPS runs on single processors or in parallel using message-passing techniques
and a spatial-decomposition of the simulation domain. Many of its models have
versions that provide accelerated performance on CPUs, GPUs, and Intel Xeon
Phis. The code is designed to be easy to modify or extend with new
functionality.

LAMMPS is distributed as an open source code under the terms of the GPLv2. The
current version can be downloaded here. Links are also included to older
versions. All LAMMPS development is done via GitHub, so all versions can also be
accessed there.

The main authors of LAMMPS can be contacted via email to "developers at
lammps.org" and are listed individually on this page along with contact info and
other contributors. Funding for LAMMPS development has come primarily from the
US Deparment of Energy (OASCR, OBER, ASCI, LDRD, Genomes-to-Life) and is
acknowledged here.

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RECENT LAMMPS NEWS

 * (3/23) New fix mdi/qm and mdi/qmmm commands to make it easier to couple
   LAMMPS with quantum codes via the MDI code coupling library. Examples for
   PySCF, LATTE, and NWChem are included in examples/QUANTUM.
 * (12/22) New distributed grid 3d/2d classes and associated commands to make it
   easier to develop new hybrid particle/grid models. See details here and here
 * (8/22) New AMOEBA package with implementations of the AMOEBA and HIPPO
   polarized force fields from the Tinker MD code. See details here
 * (6/22) New stable release, 23Jun22 version. See details here
 * (9/21) New stable release, 29Sep21 version. See details here
 * (5/21) Support for the MolSSI Driver Interface (MDI) code-coupling library to
   enable LAMMPS to act as an MD engine in a client/server manner. See details
   here
 * (5/21) New and improved multi length-scale neighboring algorithm. See details
   here
 * (10/20) New stable release, 29Oct20 version. See details here
 * (10/20) New Progammers Guide section of the manual with info on the library
   API in several languages and use of Python with LAMMPS.
 * (8/20) Support for tiled (load-balanced) decompositions with long-range
   Coulombics (PPPM), triclinic simulation boxes, and multi-style neighboring.
   See details here
 * (6/20) New MLIAP package (machine learned interatomic potentials) to enable
   ML desciptors and modeled to be developed independently and mixed and
   matched. See details here
 * (4/20) Support for AMD GPUs and its ROCm interface via the GPU package. See
   details here
 * (3/20) New stable release, 3Mar20 version. See details here
 * (2/20) Improved version of the FIRE minimizer. See details here
 * Old news

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LAMMPS HIGHLIGHT

(see the Pictures and Movies pages for more examples of LAMMPS calculations)

BLOOD FLOW IN CAPILLARIES

This is work by Kirill Lykov (kirill.lykov at usi.ch), Xuejin Li et al at the
USI, Switzerland and Brown University, USA to develop new Open Boundary
Condition (OBC) methods for particle-based methods suitable to simulate flow of
deformable bodies in complex computational domains with several inlets and
outlets.

The image (left) and movie (right) show the application of the OBCs to red blood
cell flow in a straight pipe, bifurcation, and a part of a capillary network.
The program Blender was used for the rendering.

This paper has further details.

Inflow/Outflow Boundary Conditions for Particle-Based Blood Flow Simulations:
Application to Arterial Bifurcations and Trees, K. Lykov, X. Li, H. Lei, I. V.
Pivkin, G. E. Karniadakis, PLoS Computational Biology 11(8): e1004410 (2015).
(doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004410) (abstract)