26 research outputs found
Investigation of the microscopic behavior of Mott insulators by means of the density functional theory and many-body methods
The objective of this work is twofold. First, we explore the performance of the density functional theory (DFT) when it is applied to solids with strong electronic correlations, such as transition metal compounds. Along this direction, particular effort is put into the refinement and development of parameterization techniques for deriving effective models on a basis of DFT calculations. Second, within the framework of the DFT, we address a number of questions related to the physics of Mott insulators, such as magnetic frustration and electron-phonon coupling (Cs2CuCl4 and Cs2CuBr4), high-temperature superconductivity (BSCCO) and doping of Mott insulators (TiOCl). In the frustrated antiferromagnets Cs2CuCl4 and Cs2CuBr4, we investigate the interplay between strong electronic correlations and magnetism on one hand and electron-lattice coupling on the other as well as the effect of this interplay on the microscopic model parameters. Another object of our investigations is the oxygen-doped cuprate superconductor BSCCO, where nano-scale electronic inhomogeneities have been observed in scanning tunneling spectroscopy experiments. By means of DFT and many-body calculations, we analyze the connection between the structural and electronic inhomogeneities and the superconducting properties of BSCCO. We use the DFT and molecular dynamic simulations to explain the microscopic origin of the persisting under doping Mott insulating state in the layered compound TiOCl
Correlation induced electron-hole asymmetry in quasi-2D iridates
We determine the motion of a charge (hole or electron) added to the Mott
insulating, antiferromagnetic (AF) ground-state of quasi-2D iridates such as Ba
2 IrO 4 or Sr 2 IrO 4 . We show that correlation effects, calculated within the
self-consistent Born approximation, render the hole and electron case very
different. An added electron forms a spin-polaron, which closely resembles the
well-known cuprates, but the situation of a removed electron is far more
complex. Many-body 5d 4 configurations form which can be singlet and triplets
of total angular momentum J and strongly affect the hole motion between AF
sublattices. This not only has important ramifications for the interpretation
of (inverse-)photoemission experiments of quasi-2D iridates but also
demonstrates that the correlation physics in electron- and hole-doped iridates
is fundamentally different.Comment: 11 pages main text, 11 pages supplementary, 10 figure
Distinct electridelike nature of infinite-layer nickelates and the resulting theoretical challenges to calculate their electronic structure
We demonstrate in this paper that the recently discovered infinite-layer (IL)
nickelates have much in common with a class of materials known as electrides.
Oxide based electrides are compounds in which topotactic removal of loosely
bound oxygens leaves behind voids with a landscape of attractive potentials for
electrons. We show that this is also what happens in the IL nickelates, where
one of the two electrons (per formula unit) freed during the topotactic
synthesis is to a large degree located in the oxygen vacancy position,
occupying partially a local -symmetry interstitial orbital, rather than
taking part alongside the other electon in converting Ni from 3+ to a full 1+
oxidation state. We demonstrate that the interstitial orbital in question,
referred to by us as the zeronium or Z orbital, forms strong covalent
bonds with neighboring Ni orbitals, which in turn facilitates
the one-dimensional-like dispersion of the Ni band along the
-axis direction, leading also to a possible large out-of-plane coupling
between Ni magnetic moments. This finding, reinforced by our electron
localization function analysis, points to a fundamental distinction between the
nickelates and the structurally analogous cuprates, may explain the absence of
superconductivity in hydrogen-poor samples, and is certainly in agreement with
the observed large -polarized component in the Ni -edge x-ray
absorption spectra. In addition, by using DFT+U calculations as an
illustration, we show that the electride-like nature of the IL nickelates is
one of the main reasons for the theoretical difficulty in determining the much
debated elusive Fermi surface of these novel superconductors and aslo in
exploring the possibility of them becoming excitonic insulators at low
temperatures
Effect of dopant atoms on local superexchange in cuprate superconductors: a perturbative treatment
Recent scanning tunneling spectroscopy experiments have provided evidence
that dopant impurities in high- Tc superconductors can strongly modify the
electronic structure of the CuO2 planes nearby, and possibly influence the
pairing. To investigate this connection, we calculate the local magnetic
superexchange J between Cu ions in the presence of dopants within the framework
of the three-band Hubbard model, up to fifth-order in perturbation theory. We
demonstrate that the sign of the change in J depends on the relative
dopant-induced spatial variation of the atomic levels in the CuO2 plane,
contrary to results obtained within the one-band Hubbard model. We discuss some
realistic cases and their relevance for theories of the pairing mechanism in
the cupratesComment: 5 pages, 4 figures, revised versio