Hello everyone,
I plan to use phonon frequency calculations to confirm whether a relaxed/optimized structure is truly stable by observing whether there are any imaginary/soft-mode frequencies (f/i); currently I conducted a test run on the cubic unit cell of SrTiO3 as shown here:https://next-gen.materialsproject.org/m ... -O#summary
Here are the steps I have followed for the calculation (and I have attached the input and output files below; POTCAR files used: Sr_sv, Ti_sv, O):
1) I have used a stricter criteria for the unit cell electronic and ionic convergences (EDIFF = 1e-8, EDIFFG = -0.005)
2) Next, I expanded the relaxed unit cell into a 2x2x2 supercell, and conducted the phonon frequency calculation (currently using DFPT)
I suppose I have two questions
1) Is confirming the (non)existence of large soft-mode frequencies indeed an appropriate way to confirm the stability of a structure?
2) I have tried using a stricter criteria for convergence, but the calculation still shows imaginary frequencies. Does the material having an energy above hull of 0.01 eV/atom a valid reason for this?
I understand that to conclusively answer these questions, we require other criteria, but I ask these questions nonetheless as a starting point because I want to ensure that the methodology is valid. I am still not too familiar with these concepts, hence why I might still lack the intuition of what is right or wrong!
Thank you for your attention!