Mercurial > repos > muon-spectroscopy-computational-project > pm_symmetry
diff pm_symmetry.xml @ 2:620ab6826b9b draft
planemo upload for repository https://github.com/muon-spectroscopy-computational-project/muon-galaxy-tools/main/pm_symmetry commit 4f06b404d8b7fb83995f3052faa7e2ec7811f507
author | muon-spectroscopy-computational-project |
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date | Fri, 03 Feb 2023 15:40:00 +0000 |
parents | d8146a73b011 |
children | c062cefbb20f |
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--- a/pm_symmetry.xml Thu Sep 15 10:25:23 2022 +0000 +++ b/pm_symmetry.xml Fri Feb 03 15:40:00 2023 +0000 @@ -1,22 +1,22 @@ -<tool id="pm_symmetry" name="PyMuonSuite Symmetry" version="@TOOL_VERSION@+galaxy@WRAPPER_VERSION@" python_template_version="3.5" profile="22.01"> +<tool id="pm_symmetry" name="PyMuonSuite Symmetry" version="@TOOL_VERSION@+galaxy@WRAPPER_VERSION@" python_template_version="3.5" profile="22.05" license="MIT"> <description>generate Wyckoff points symmetry report</description> <macros> <!-- version of underlying tool (PEP 440) --> - <token name="@TOOL_VERSION@">0.2.1</token> + <token name="@TOOL_VERSION@">0.2.3</token> <!-- version of this tool wrapper (integer) --> - <token name="@WRAPPER_VERSION@">1</token> + <token name="@WRAPPER_VERSION@">0</token> <!-- citation should be updated with every underlying tool version --> <!-- typical fields to update are version, month, year, and doi --> <token name="@TOOL_CITATION@"> - @software{pymuon-suite, - author = {Sturniolo, Simone and Liborio, Leandro and Chadwick, Eli and Murgatroyd, Laura and Laverack, Adam and {Muon Spectroscopy Computational Project}}, + @software{Sturniolo_pymuon-suite_2022, + author = {Sturniolo, Simone and Liborio, Leandro and Chadwick, Eli and Murgatroyd, Laura and Laverack, Adam and Mudaraddi, Anish and {Muon Spectroscopy Computational Project}}, license = {GPL-3.0}, + month = {8}, title = {{pymuon-suite}}, url = {https://github.com/muon-spectroscopy-computational-project/pymuon-suite}, - version = {v0.2.1}, - month = {2}, - year = {2022}, - doi = {} + version = {v0.2.3}, + doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7025644}, + year = {2022} } </token> </macros> @@ -29,8 +29,8 @@ <requirement type="package" version="@TOOL_VERSION@">pymuonsuite</requirement> </requirements> <command detect_errors="exit_code"><![CDATA[ - structure_name_internal=\$(sed 's/ /\_/g' <<< "$structure.name") && - ln -s $structure \$structure_name_internal && + structure_name_internal=\$(sed 's/ /\_/g' <<< '$structure.name') && + ln -s '$structure' \$structure_name_internal && pm-symmetry \$structure_name_internal > out.txt ]]></command> <inputs> @@ -63,29 +63,13 @@ usage: pm-symmetry structure Given an input structure, generates a Wyckoff points symmetry report for that structure. + + PyMuonSuite is distributed under the GPLv3 license. This tool wrapper is distributed under the MIT license. ]]></help> <citations> <citation type="bibtex"> @TOOL_CITATION@ </citation> - <citation type="bibtex"> - @article{doi:10.1063/5.0012381, - author = {Sturniolo,Simone and Liborio,Leandro }, - title = {Computational prediction of muon stopping sites: A novel take on the unperturbed electrostatic potential method}, - journal = {The Journal of Chemical Physics}, - volume = {153}, - number = {4}, - pages = {044111}, - year = {2020}, - doi = {10.1063/5.0012381}, - URL = { - https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0012381 - }, - eprint = { - https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0012381 - }, - abstract = { Finding the stopping site of the muon in a muon-spin relaxation experiment is one of the main problems of muon spectroscopy, and computational techniques that make use of quantum chemistry simulations can be of great help when looking for this stopping site. The most thorough approach would require the use of simulations, such as Density Functional Theory (DFT), to test and optimise multiple possible sites, accounting for the effect that the added muon has on its surroundings. However, this can be computationally expensive and sometimes unnecessary. Hence, in this work, we present a software implementation of the Unperturbed Electrostatic Potential (UEP) Method: an approach used for finding the muon stopping site in crystalline materials. The UEP method requires only one DFT calculation, necessary to compute the electronic density. This, in turn, is used to calculate the minima of the crystalline material’s electrostatic potential and the estimates of the muon stopping site, relying on the approximation that the muon’s presence does not significantly affect its surroundings. One of the main UEP’s assumptions is that the muon stopping site will be one of the crystalline material’s electrostatic potential minima. In this regard, we also propose some symmetry-based considerations about the properties of this crystalline material’s electrostatic potential, in particular, which sites are more likely to be its minima and why the unperturbed approximation may be sufficiently robust for them. We introduce the Python software package pymuon-suite and the various utilities it provides to facilitate these calculations, and finally, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the method with some chosen example systems. } - } - </citation> + <citation type="doi">10.1063/5.0012381</citation> </citations> </tool>