Generalized Bloch condition
Spin spirals may be conveniently modeled using a generalization of the Bloch condition (set LNONCOLLINEAR=.TRUE. and LSPIRAL=.TRUE.):
![{\displaystyle
\left[ \begin{array}{c} \Psi^{\uparrow}_{\bf k}(\bf r) \\
\Psi^{\downarrow}_{\bf k}(\bf r) \end{array} \right] = \left(
\begin{array}{cc}
e^{-i\bf q \cdot \bf R / 2} & 0\\
0 & e^{+i\bf q \cdot \bf R / 2} \end{array}\right) \left[
\begin{array}{c} \Psi^{\uparrow}_{\bf k}(\bf r-R) \\
\Psi^{\downarrow}_{\bf k}(\bf r-R) \end{array} \right],
}](/wiki/index.php?title=Special:MathShowImage&hash=d87ea979867db8fcc85d3f002be8e039&mode=mathml)
i.e., from one unit cell to the next the up- and down-spinors pick up an additional phase factor of
and
, respectively,
where R is a lattice vector of the crystalline lattice, and q is the so-called spin-spiral propagation vector.
The spin-spiral propagation vector is commonly chosen to lie within the first Brillouin zone of the reciprocal space lattice, and has to be specified by means of the QSPIRAL-tag.
The generalized Bloch condition above gives rise to the following behavior of the magnetization density:

This is schematically depicted in the figure at the top of this page:
the components of the magnization in the xy-plane rotate about the spin-spiral propagation vector q.
Basis set considerations
redefining the Bloch functions


the Hamiltonian changes only minimally

where in
and
the kinetic energy of a plane wave component changes to:

