1,528 research outputs found
Structural relaxation due to electronic correlations in the paramagnetic insulator KCuF3
A computational scheme for the investigation of complex materials with
strongly interacting electrons is formulated which is able to treat atomic
displacements, and hence structural relaxation, caused by electronic
correlations. It combines ab initio band structure and dynamical mean-field
theory and is implemented in terms of plane-wave pseudopotentials. The
equilibrium Jahn-Teller distortion and antiferro-orbital order found for
paramagnetic KCuF3 agree well with experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
LDA+DMFT Spectral Functions and Effective Electron Mass Enhancement in Superconductor LaFePO
In this Letter we report the first LDA+DMFT results (method combining Local
Density Approximation with Dynamical Mean-Field Theory) for spectral properties
of superconductor LaFePO. Calculated {\bf k}-resolved spectral functions
reproduce recent angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) data [D. H.
Lu {\it et al}., Nature {\bf 455}, 81 (2008)]. Obtained effective electron mass
enhancement values 1.9 -- 2.2 are in good agreement with
infrared and optical studies [M. M. Qazilbash {\it et al}., Nature Phys. {\bf
5}, 647 (2009)], de Haas--van Alphen, electrical resistivity, and electronic
specific heat measurements results, that unambiguously evidence for moderate
correlations strength in LaFePO. Similar values of were found in the
other Fe-based superconductors with substantially different superconducting
transition temperatures. Thus, the dynamical correlation effects are essential
in the Fe-based superconductors, but the strength of electronic correlations
does not determine the value of superconducting transition temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Realistic modeling of strongly correlated electron systems: An introduction to the LDA+DMFT approach
The LDA+DMFT approach merges conventional band structure theory in the local
density approximation (LDA) with a state-of-the-art many-body technique, the
dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT). This new computational scheme has recently
become a powerful tool for ab initio investigations of real materials with
strong electronic correlations. In this paper an introduction to the basic
ideas and the set-up of the LDA+DMFT approach is given. Results for the
photoemission spectra of the transition metal oxide La_{1-x}Sr_xTiO_3, obtained
by solving the DMFT-equations by quantum Monte-Carlo (QMC) simulations, are
presented and are found to be in very good agreement with experiment. The
numerically exact DMFT(QMC) solution is compared with results obtained by two
approximative solutions, i.e., the iterative perturbation theory and the
non-crossing approximation.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, SCES-Y2K Conference Proceeding
NiO: Correlated Bandstructure of a Charge-Transfer Insulator
The bandstructure of the prototypical charge-transfer insulator NiO is
computed by using a combination of an {\it ab initio} bandstructure method and
the dynamical mean-field theory with a quantum Monte-Carlo impurity solver.
Employing a Hamiltonian which includes both Ni-d and O-p orbitals we find
excellent agreement with the energy bands determined from angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy. This solves a long-standing problem in solid state
theory. Most notably we obtain the low-energy Zhang-Rice bands with strongly
k-dependent orbital character discussed previously in the context of low-energy
model theories.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figur
Combining the Hybrid Functional Method with Dynamical Mean-Field Theory
We present a new method to compute the electronic structure of correlated
materials combining the hybrid functional method with the dynamical mean-field
theory. As a test example of the method we study cerium sesquioxide, a strongly
correlated Mott-band insulator. The hybrid functional part improves the
magnitude of the pd-band gap which is underestimated in the standard
approximations to density functional theory while the dynamical mean-field
theory part splits the 4f-electron spectra into a lower and an upper Hubbard
band.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, replaced with revised version, published in
Europhys. Let
The electronic structure of the heavy fermion metal
The electronic structure of the first reported heavy fermion compound without
f-electrons LiV_2O_4 was studied by an ab-initio calculation method. In the
result of the trigonal splitting and d-d Coulomb interaction one electron of
the configuration of V ion is localized and the rest partially fills
a relatively broad conduction band. The effective Anderson impurity model was
solved by Non-Crossing-Approximation method, leading to an estimation for the
single-site Kondo energy scale T_K. Then, we show how the so-called exhaustion
phenomenon of Nozi\`eres for the Kondo lattice leads to a remarkable decrease
of the heavy-fermion (or coherence) energy scale (D
is the typical bandwidth), comparable to the experimental result.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX; 3 figures in format .eps. submitted to PR
Orbital selective insulator-metal transition in V2O3 under external pressure
We present a detailed account of the physics of Vanadium sesquioxide (), a benchmark system for studying correlation induced metal-insulator
transition(s). Based on a detailed perusal of a wide range of experimental
data, we stress the importance of multi-orbital Coulomb interactions in concert
with first-principles LDA bandstructure for a consistent understanding of the
PI-PM MIT under pressure. Using LDA+DMFT, we show how the MIT is of the orbital
selective type, driven by large changes in dynamical spectral weight in
response to small changes in trigonal field splitting under pressure. Very good
quantitative agreement with () the switch of orbital occupation and ()
S=1 at each site across the MIT, and () carrier effective mass in
the PM phase, is obtained. Finally, using the LDA+DMFT solution, we have
estimated screening induced renormalisation of the local, multi-orbital Coulomb
interactions. Computation of the one-particle spectral function using these
screened values is shown to be in excellent quantitative agreement with very
recent experimental (PES and XAS) results. These findings provide strong
support for an orbital-selective Mott transition in paramagnetic .Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Orbital-dependent metamagnetic response in Sr4Ru3O10
We show that the metamagnetic transition in SrRuO bifurcates
into two transitions as the field is rotated away from the conducting planes.
This two-step process comprises partial or total alignment of moments in
ferromagnetic bands followed by an itinerant metamagnetic transition whose
critical field increases with rotation. Evidence for itinerant metamagnetism is
provided by the Shubnikov-de Hass effect which shows a non-trivial evolution of
the geometry of the Fermi surface and an enhancement of the quasiparticles
effective-mass across the transition. The metamagnetic response of
SrRuO is orbital-dependent and involves ferromagnetic and
metamagnetic bands.Comment: Physical Review B (in press
Dynamical Decoupling in Optical Fibers: Preserving Polarization Qubits from Birefringent Dephasing
One of the major challenges in quantum computation has been to preserve the
coherence of a quantum system against dephasing effects of the environment. The
information stored in photon polarization, for example, is quickly lost due to
such dephasing, and it is crucial to preserve the input states when one tries
to transmit quantum information encoded in the photons through a communication
channel. We propose a dynamical decoupling sequence to protect photonic qubits
from dephasing by integrating wave plates into optical fiber at prescribed
locations. We simulate random birefringent noise along realistic lengths of
optical fiber and study preservation of polarization qubits through such fibers
enhanced with Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) dynamical decoupling. This
technique can maintain photonic qubit coherence at high fidelity, making a step
towards achieving scalable and useful quantum communication with photonic
qubits.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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