Specialized computational chemistry packages have permanently reshaped the landscape of chemical and materials science by providing tools to support and guide experimental efforts and for the prediction of atomistic and electronic properties. In this regard, electronic structure packages have played a special role by using first-principle-driven methodologies to model complex chemical and materials processes. Over the past few decades, the rapid development of computing technologies and the tremendous increase in computational power have offered a unique chance to study complex transformations using sophisticated and predictive many-body techniques that describe correlated behavior of electrons in molecular and condensed phase systems at different levels of theory. In enabling these simulations, novel parallel algorithms have been able to take advantage of computational resources to address the polynomial scaling of electronic structure methods. In this paper, we briefly review the NWChem computational chemistry suite, including its history, design principles, parallel tools, current capabilities, outreach, and outlook.
NWChem: Past, present, and future
Current address: Schrödinger, Inc., New York, NY 10036, USA.
Current address: Max Planck Institute für Kohlenforschung, 45470 Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany.
Current address: Gaussian, Inc., Wallingford, CT 06492, USA.
Note: This article is part of the JCP Special Topic on Electronic Structure Software.
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