NEMO 3-D was originally developed at the NASA / JPL High Performance Computing Group from 1998-2003. At JPL NEMO 3-D was funded by the NASA HPCC program, JPL, CISM, ONR, and ARDA. NEMO 3-D continues to be developed at Purdue within the Network for Computational Nanotechnology (NCN). Funding and support for the development at Purdue stems form Klimeck's start-up funds, ARO, SRC, CRI, and RCAC.
nanoHUB.org utilizes NEMO 3-D as a simulation to the educational "Quantum Dot Lab". Within that application users can run simulations in a simple effective mass model (single s orbital) within seconds. 3-D rendered wavefunctions, absorption spectra, and energy spectra can be explored interactively.
Early on the NASA HPCC program demanded the release of all developed code to the public. In October 2003 the source was released for the first time as an alpha version on http://www.openchannelsoftware.com/projects/NEMO_3D under a GNU Lesser Public License. A variety of problems with the distribution on openchannelsoftware have occurred and the source has not been available at the site sporadically. The code that is at that site has not been updated since its first release in 2003. The lastes source code is released on nanoHUB.org.
NEMO 3-D has gone through continual developments since Dec. 2003 at Purdue University and the source is now available through the nanoHUB.org NEMO 3-D group.
We request that persons interested in NEMO 3-D first review the material on the NEMO 3-D web page to gage if indeed NEMO 3-D can handle their scientific problem. We recommend that the users review the following three papers carefully before they request the source code:NEMO 3-D cannot simulate:
Given all the caveats above we decided to restrict the distribution of NEMO 3-D through this Private Group on nanoHUB.org. In order to access this group, you must be approved by Prof. Gerhard Klimeck at Purdue University. As you request access to the group, please indicate your scientific problem interest to possibly engage into a discussion as to whether NEMO 3-D can help your scientific inquiry. Please identify yourself with your name, institution, and nanoHUB login so we can verify that you are authorized to access the code.
The release of NEMO 1-D is a completely different matter and discussed elsewhere.
This page has been accessed at least times since Nov 2, 1999. Significant page update dealing with software release on nanoHUB.org on Jan 18 2009.