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Raymond Atta-Fynn

Researcher at University of Texas at Arlington

Publications -  67
Citations -  1649

Raymond Atta-Fynn is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Arlington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Density functional theory & Amorphous silicon. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 66 publications receiving 1173 citations. Previous affiliations of Raymond Atta-Fynn include Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory & Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Papers
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NWChem: Past, present, and future

Edoardo Aprà, +113 more
TL;DR: The NWChem computational chemistry suite is reviewed, including its history, design principles, parallel tools, current capabilities, outreach, and outlook.
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NWChem: Past, Present, and Future

Edoardo Aprà, +113 more
TL;DR: The NWChem computational chemistry suite as discussed by the authors provides tools to support and guide experimental efforts and for the prediction of atomistic and electronic properties by using first-principledriven methodologies to model complex chemical and materials processes.
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Density functional study of the actinide nitrides

TL;DR: In this article, the structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of actinide compounds were investigated using the full-potential all-electron linearized augmented plane wave plus local orbital method, as implemented in the suite of the software WIEN2K.
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Reverse Monte Carlo modeling of amorphous silicon

TL;DR: In this paper, an implementation of the Reverse Monte Carlo algorithm for the study of amorphous tetrahedral semiconductors is presented, taking into account a number of constraints.
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Electron–phonon coupling is large for localized states

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that localized states stemming from defects or topological disorder exhibit an anomalously large electron-phonon coupling and a strong correlation between a static property of the network (localization, as gauged by inverse participation ratio (IPR)) and a dynamical property (the amplitude of thermal fluctuations of electron energy eigenvalues) for localized electron states.