SIESTA: recent developments and applications
Alberto Garc\'ia, Nick Papior, Arsalan Akhtar, Emilio Artacho, Volker, Blum, Emanuele Bosoni, Pedro Brandimarte, Mads Brandbyge, J. I. Cerd\'a,, Fabiano Corsetti, Ram\'on Cuadrado, Vladimir Dikan, Jaime Ferrer, Julian, Gale, Pablo Garc\'ia-Fern\'andez, V. M. Garc\'ia-Su\'arez

TL;DR
SIESTA is a widely used, open-source electronic structure code that has recently been enhanced with new features like spin-orbit interaction, advanced transport calculations, and improved interoperability, enabling diverse materials simulations.
Contribution
This paper reviews recent developments and applications of the SIESTA program, highlighting new functionalities, interoperability improvements, and its role in the electronic structure community.
Findings
Added support for spin-orbit interaction and transport calculations
Implemented advanced DFT functionals and time-dependent DFT
Enhanced interoperability and workflow automation tools
Abstract
A review of the present status, recent enhancements, and applicability of the SIESTA program is presented. Since its debut in the mid-nineties, SIESTA's flexibility, efficiency and free distribution has given advanced materials simulation capabilities to many groups worldwide. The core methodological scheme of SIESTA combines finite-support pseudo-atomic orbitals as basis sets, norm-conserving pseudopotentials, and a real-space grid for the representation of charge density and potentials and the computation of their associated matrix elements. Here we describe the more recent implementations on top of that core scheme, which include: full spin-orbit interaction, non-repeated and multiple-contact ballistic electron transport, DFT+U and hybrid functionals, time-dependent DFT, novel reduced-scaling solvers, density-functional perturbation theory, efficient Van der Waals non-local density…
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