For the water research I've been doing, it is useful to get the velocity autocorrelation function, which gives the density of states of the system. Here is how I ended up doing it:
compute 1 all property/atom vx vy vz
compute s_v_x all reduce sum vx
variable vel_x equal c_s_v_x
fix print_vel_x all print 1 "$(step) ${vel_x}" file "vel_x.txt" screen no
compute s_v_y all reduce sum vy
variable vel_y equal c_s_v_y
fix print_vel_y all print 1 "$(step) ${vel_y}" file "vel_y.tyt" screen no
compute s_v_z all reduce sum vz
variable vel_z equal c_s_v_z
fix print_vel_z all print 1 "$(step) ${vel_z}" file "vel_z.tzt" screen no
One of the things that always trips me up in LAMMPS is the difference between using variables created by the user (e.g. vel_x
above) and using variables LAMMPS provides (e.g. step
.) When using them in, for example, a fix print
, user-created variables must be wrapped in curly brackets, while the LAMMPS-provided variables must be wrapped in parens.