Difference between revisions of "Main Page"

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To download the software you will need an account on this site. I'm afraid due to the site being hacked you will have to [mailto:matt.tucker@stfc.ac.uk email me] to set one up, until I get the new system running. I'm afraid it will not be possible to support users who are working with versions of the software that are not the current version.
 
To download the software you will need an account on this site. I'm afraid due to the site being hacked you will have to [mailto:matt.tucker@stfc.ac.uk email me] to set one up, until I get the new system running. I'm afraid it will not be possible to support users who are working with versions of the software that are not the current version.
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''' [[Jobs | Open position: scientist for X-PDF I15-1 beamline at Diamond Light Source ]]
  
 
(Please note this account is distinct from your RMC Forum [http://www.rmc-forum.org] account; should you have one you will still need to set up a separate RMCProfile account.)
 
(Please note this account is distinct from your RMC Forum [http://www.rmc-forum.org] account; should you have one you will still need to set up a separate RMCProfile account.)
  
 
If you have problems accessing the site please email [mailto:matt.tucker@stfc.ac.uk Matt Tucker].
 
If you have problems accessing the site please email [mailto:matt.tucker@stfc.ac.uk Matt Tucker].

Revision as of 14:30, 11 December 2012

RMCProfile : Reverse Monte Carlo for crystalline and disordered materials

Welcome to the home of RMCProfile, here you can download the RMCProfile software, documentation and examples.

This version of RMC was built from the original RMCA code of McGreevy & Pusztai to determine the local structure of crystalline materials while still being capable of analyzing disordered systems. The current version of RMCProfile results from a collaboration between scientists at ISIS, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford & NIST[1]. It is now possible to fit many data types simultaneously (Neutron & X-ray total scattering & the Bragg profile, EXAFS, single crystal diffuse scattering) and use a range of constraints to produce atomic models that are consistent with all the available data. In this way we are progressing the effort to develop a 'complex modelling' approach to elucidate structural details of materials that are the key to their exploitable functional properties.


Complexmodelling rmc.jpg

ISIS logo.png Cam logo.gif
Oxford logo.jpg NIST Logo.gif


To download the software you will need an account on this site. I'm afraid due to the site being hacked you will have to email me to set one up, until I get the new system running. I'm afraid it will not be possible to support users who are working with versions of the software that are not the current version.

Open position: scientist for X-PDF I15-1 beamline at Diamond Light Source

(Please note this account is distinct from your RMC Forum [2] account; should you have one you will still need to set up a separate RMCProfile account.)

If you have problems accessing the site please email Matt Tucker.