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title: EPW src_dir: ./src output_dir: ./doc project_website: http://epw.org.uk/ summary: EPW is the short name for "Electron-phonon Wannier". EPW is an open-source F90/MPI code which calculates properties related to the electron-phonon interaction using Density-Functional Perturbation Theory and Maximally Localized Wannier Functions. authors: Samuel Poncé Roxana Margine Carla Verdi Feliciano Giustino author_description: The EPW project is mainly developed at the university of Oxford. github: https://github.com/sponce24 email: samuel.pon@gmail.com predocmark: > media_dir: ./media page_dir: ./Ford docmark_alt: # predocmark_alt: < display: public private source: false graph: true macro: TEST LOGIC=.true. extra_mods: json_module: http://jacobwilliams.github.io/json-fortran/ futility: http://cmacmackin.github.io license: GNU extra_filetypes: sh #
EPW is the short name for "Electron-phonon Wannier". EPW is an open-source F90/MPI code which calculates properties related to the electron-phonon interaction using Density-Functional Perturbation Theory and Maximally Localized Wannier Functions. EPW is developed and maintained by Samuel Poncé, Roxana Margine, Carla Verdi, and Feliciano Giustino.
The reference technical manuscript for the latest pubic release is: EPW: Electron-phonon coupling, transport and superconducting properties using maximally localized Wannier functions by S. Poncé, E. R. Margine, C. Verdi, and F. Giustino.
@Note Since 26 April 2016 EPW is distributed as part of the Quantum ESPRESSO suite.
The code was written by Feliciano Giustino (EPW v1) and Jesse Noffsinger (EPW v2) while at the University of California, Berkeley. Brad Malone (Harvard) and Cheol-Hwan Park (Seoul National University) contributed with tests and benchmarks. Roxana Margine implemented the anisotropic Eliashberg theory while at the University of Oxford (EPW v3). Samuel Poncé (Oxford) made the code compatible with the latest version of Quantum Espresso v5 in the latest release EPW v4. Carla Verdi (Oxford) developed the electron-phonon interpolation for polar materials including Froehlich correction (released within EPW v4).
EPW is based on the method introduced in F. Giustino et al, Phys. Rev. B 76, 165108 (2007). An extended description of the first public release has been published in J. Noffsinger et al, Comput. Phys. Comm. 181, 2140 (2010). The extension of EPW to include the anisotropic Midgal-Eliashberg theory is based on the method described in E. R. Margine et al, Phys. Rev. B 87, 024505 (2013). The latest release of the code is described in S. Poncé et al, arXiv:1604.03525.