Posted by Jesus Gonzalez Vazquez on September 04, 2014 at 16:53:38:
In Reply to: Re: THRESHOLD in SEWARD posted by Roland Lindh on September 04, 2014 at 16:13:10:
Hi,
Thank you very much for your answer, I checked it with a diatomic molecule (but a big basis set). The input:
&SEWARD
Basis set
H.aug-cc-pV5Z...
H -1. 0. 0.
End of Basis
Basis set
Cl.aug-cc-pV5Z...
Cl +1. 0. 0.
End of Basis
THRESHOLD=...
End of Input
In case of 1e-14 (default), the output is saving:
Integrals are written in MOLCAS2 format
Number of integrals written on Disk = 500237956
Number of nonzero integrals = 134879021
Packing accuracy = 0.1000E-13
Highest disk address written 2230852
Diagonal and subdiagonal, symmetry allowed 2-el integral blocks are stored on Disk
The size of the OrdInt: 1115432KB
If one uses 100:
Integrals are written in MOLCAS2 format
Number of integrals written on Disk = 500237956
Number of nonzero integrals = 0
Packing accuracy = 0.1000E-13
Highest disk address written 1955396
Diagonal and subdiagonal, symmetry allowed 2-el integral blocks are stored on Disk
The size of OrdInt: 977704KB
There is a very tiny reduction of the file... so I cannot understand how it works, how big are the blocks?
Thank you again,
Jesus
: Hi,
: this is a poor example since it is atomic. The integrals are written to the disk in blocks. In this atomic case the number of integrals does not exceed a singel block and reducing the number of nonzero integrals will not reduce the number of blocks in the disk. Try a larger molecular system to see the effect.