133 research outputs found
Ab initio calculations of response properties including electron-hole interaction
We discuss the current status of a computational approach which allows to
evaluate the dielectric matrix, and hence electronic excitations like optical
properties, including local field and excitonic effects. We introduce a recent
numerical development which greatly reduces the use of memory in such type of
calculations, and hence eliminates one of the bottlenecks for the application
to complex systems. We present recent applications of the method, focusing our
interest on insulating oxides.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 1999 MRS Proceedin
Beyond time-dependent exact-exchange: the need for long-range correlation
In the description of the interaction between electrons beyond the classical
Hartree picture, bare exchange often yields a leading contribution. Here we
discuss its effect on optical spectra of solids, comparing three different
frameworks: time-dependent Hartree-Fock, a recently introduced combined
density-functional and Green's functions approach applied to the bare exchange
self-energy, and time-dependent exact-exchange within time-dependent
density-functional theory (TD-EXX). We show that these three approximations
give rise to identical excitonic effects in solids; these effects are
drastically overestimated for semiconductors. They are partially compensated by
the usual overestimation of the quasiparticle band gap within Hartree-Fock. The
physics that lacks in these approaches can be formulated as screening. We show
that the introduction of screening in TD-EXX indeed leads to a formulation that
is equivalent to previously proposed functionals derived from Many-Body
Perturbation Theory. It can be simulated by reducing the long-range part of the
Coulomb interaction: this produces absorption spectra of semiconductors in good
agreement with experiment.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Ab initio calculation of excitonic effects in the optical spectra of semiconductors
An ab initio approach to the calculation of excitonic effects in the optical
absorption spectra of semiconductors and insulators is formulated. It starts
from a quasiparticle bandstructure calculation and is based on the relevant
Bethe--Salpeter equation.
An application to bulk silicon shows a substantial improvement with respect
to previous calculations in the description of the experimental spectrum, for
both peak positions and lineshape.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Photoemission Spectra from Reduced Density Matrices: the Band Gap in Strongly Correlated Systems
We present a method for the calculation of photoemission spectra in terms of
reduced density matrices. We start from the spectral representation of the
one-body Green's function G, whose imaginary part is related to photoemission
spectra, and we introduce a frequency-dependent effective energy that accounts
for all the poles of G. Simple approximations to this effective energy give
accurate spectra in model systems in the weak as well as strong correlation
regime. In real systems reduced density matrices can be obtained from reduced
density-matrix functional theory. Here we use this approach to calculate the
photoemission spectrum of bulk NiO: our method yields a qualitatively correct
picture both in the antiferromagnetic and paramagnetic phases, contrary to
mean-field methods, in which the paramagnet is a metal
Transforming nonlocality into frequency dependence: a shortcut to spectroscopy
Measurable spectra are theoretically very often derived from complicated
many-body Green's functions. In this way, one calculates much more information
than actually needed. Here we present an in principle exact approach to
construct effective potentials and kernels for the direct calculation of
electronic spectra. In particular, the potential that yields the spectral
function needed to describe photoemission turns out to be dynamical but {\it
local} and {\it real}. As example we illustrate this ``photoemission
potential'' for sodium and aluminium, modelled as homogeneous electron gas, and
discuss in particular its frequency dependence stemming from the nonlocality of
the corresponding self-energy. We also show that our approach leads to a very
short derivation of a kernel that is known to well describe absorption and
energy-loss spectra of a wide range of materials
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