msspec_python3/doc/source/faq/hemispherical_cluster/hemispherical_cluster.rst

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.. _hemispherical_cluster_faq:
The hemispherical_cluster function
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A the :py:func:`hemispherical_cluster` takes one mandatory argument and 4 keyword arguments.
The first required argument is an ASE Atoms object. This object will be the base pattern used to create a cluster.
It is usually a primitive cell of a structure. The 4 keywords arguments describe the dimensions of the cluster and
the location of the emitter atom:
- emitter_tag: is an integer which is the tag of the emitter atom
- emitter_plane: is an integer to tell in which plane to put the emitter
- diameter: is the diameter of the hemispherically shaped cluster (in angströms)
- planes: is the total number of planes
Three simple example are shown in the figure 1 below. These are cut view in the (xOz) plane of the clusters. the
clusters were created with those commands:
.. code-block:: python
from msspec.utils import hemispherical_cluster
from ase.build import bulk
iron = bulk('Fe', cubic=True) # The base cell to be repeated to shape a cluster
# The cluster 1a, with an emitter on the surface
cluster1a = hemispherical_cluster(iron, diameter=25, emitter_plane=0)
# The cluster 1c, with an emitter in the second plane
cluster1b = hemispherical_cluster(iron, diameter=25, emitter_plane=1)
# The cluster 1c, with an emitter in the third plane and with just one plane below
# the emitter
cluster1c = hemispherical_cluster(iron, diameter=25, emitter_plane=2, planes=4)
.. figure:: Fe_clusters.png
:align: center
:width: 80%
Figure 1.
The *emitter_tag* keyword is used to specify the emitter in a multielemental structure or if two atoms of the same
kind exist in the primitive cell with different chemical or geometrical environment. For example, the CsCl structure
is also *bcc* like the iron above, but the chlorine atom is at the center of a cube with 4 Caesium atoms on the apex.
To get a Cl emitter in the desired plane, we should first tag it in the cell:
.. code-block:: python
from msspec.utils import hemispherical_cluster
from ase.spacegroup import crystal
# Definition of this cubic cell
a0 = 2.05
a = b = c = a0
alpha = beta = gamma = 90
cellpar = [a, b, c, alpha, beta, gamma]
# Create the CsCl structure with the crystal function
CsCl = crystal(['Cs', 'Cl'], basis=[(0,0,0),(0.5,0.5,0.5)], spacegroup=221, cellpar=cellpar)
# by default, all atoms tags are 0
# set the Cl tag to 1
CsCl[1].tag = 1
# Create a cluster with the Cl emitter
cluster = hemispherical_cluster(CsCl, emitter_tag=1, emitter_plane=3, diameter=25)
The resulting cluster is shown in the figure 2 below
.. figure:: CsCl_cluster.png
:align: center
:width: 80%
Figure 2. A cut view in the (xOz) plane of a CsCl cluster with a Cl emitter atom in the third plane