Difference between revisions of "ORCA 2016"
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== How to work with ORCA == | == How to work with ORCA == | ||
You have to prepare a jobscript and an inputfile for your ORCA job. | |||
An example ORCA-job could look like this: | |||
#SBATCH --time=1-00:00:00 | |||
#SBATCH --mem=2G | |||
#SBATCH --job-name ORCA-TEST | |||
#SBATCH --output=slurm-%j.out | |||
#SBATCH --error=slurm-%j.err | |||
module load ORCA | module load ORCA | ||
MODEL=TiF3 | |||
ORCAEXE=`which orca` | |||
$ORCAEXE ${MODEL}.inp > ${MODEL}.out |
Revision as of 16:06, 12 December 2016
Introduction
The program ORCA is a modern electronic structure program package written by F. Neese, with contributions from many current and former coworkers and several collaborating groups. The binaries of ORCA are available free of charge for academic users for a variety of platforms. ORCA is a flexible, efficient and easy-to-use general purpose tool for quantum chemistry with specific emphasis on spectroscopic properties of open-shell molecules. It features a wide variety of standard quantum chemical methods ranging from semiempirical methods to DFT to single- and multireference correlated ab initio methods. It can also treat environmental and relativistic effects. Due to the user-friendly style, ORCA is considered to be a helpful tool not only for computational chemists, but also for chemists, physicists and biologists that are interested in developing the full information content of their experimental data with help of calculations. ORCA is able to carry out geometry optimizations and to predict a large number of spectroscopic parameters at different levels of theory. Besides the use of Hartee Fock theory, density functional theory (DFT) and semiempirical methods, high level ab initio quantum chemical methods, based on the configuration interaction and coupled cluster methods, are included into ORCA to an increasing degree.
At the moment, ORCA is installed in version 3.0.3.
How to work with ORCA
You have to prepare a jobscript and an inputfile for your ORCA job. An example ORCA-job could look like this:
#SBATCH --time=1-00:00:00 #SBATCH --mem=2G #SBATCH --job-name ORCA-TEST #SBATCH --output=slurm-%j.out #SBATCH --error=slurm-%j.err
module load ORCA
MODEL=TiF3 ORCAEXE=`which orca`
$ORCAEXE ${MODEL}.inp > ${MODEL}.out