Gaussian 16 Revision C.01 -

To put Revision C.01 in context, it is helpful to understand its place in the Gaussian 16 release timeline:

Months later, at a small conference where the lights were too bright and the coffee was predictably bad, Mira presented the work. She felt the old nerves, the same ones that had made her fingers hesitate as she typed in keywords. But when she spoke of the bridge-state and the role of correlation in stabilizing the rearrangement, the room leaned forward. A veteran computational chemist nodded in a way that felt like recognition, and a graduate student scribbled formulas with the desperate joy of comprehension. gaussian 16 revision c.01

Performance optimization was a central focus of Revision C.01, with improvements spanning both CPU and GPU architectures. To put Revision C

functions) during post-HF (MP2, CCSD) and TD-DFT calculations. This allows heavy jobs to run to completion without unexpected mid-calculation crashes. Multi-Layer ONIOM Fixes A veteran computational chemist nodded in a way

While Revision C.01 brings specific fixes, it maintains the core capabilities that make Gaussian 16 the industry standard:

For network parallel use, this revision requires an update to Linda 9.2 , as earlier versions of Linda are incompatible. Core Capabilities of Gaussian 16

Faster methods for calculating excited states of larger systems.

About Blake Drumm

My name is Blake Drumm, I am working on the Azure Monitoring Enterprise Team with Microsoft. Currently working to update public documentation for System Center products and write troubleshooting guides to assist with fixing issues that may arise while using the products. I like to blog on Operations Manager and Azure Automation products, keep checking back for new posts. My goal is to post atleast once a month if possible.

Follow @blakedrumm
Useful Links