84 research outputs found
Na Induced Correlations in NaCoO
Increasing experimental evidence is building which indicates that signatures
of strong correlations are present in the Na rich region of NaCoO (ie.
) and absent in the Na poor region (ie. ). This is
unexpected given that NaCoO is a band insulator and CoO has an integer
filled open shell making it a candidate for strong correlations. We explain
these experimental observations by presenting a minimal low-energy Hamiltonian
for the cobaltates and solving it within LDA+DMFT. The Na potential is shown to
be a key element in understanding correlations in this material. Furthermore,
LDA calculations for the realistic Na ordering predict a \emph{binary}
perturbation of the Co sites which correlates with the Na sites (ie. Na
sites above/below Co sites)
Dynamical Mean Field Theory of Nickelate Superlattices
Dynamical mean field methods are used to calculate the phase diagram,
many-body density of states, relative orbital occupancy and Fermi surface shape
for a realistic model of -based superlattices. The model is derived
from density functional band calculations and includes oxygen orbitals. The
combination of the on-site Hunds interaction and charge-transfer between the
transition metal and the oxygen orbitals is found to reduce the orbital
polarization far below the levels predicted either by band structure
calculations or by many-body analyses of Hubbard-type models which do not
explicitly include the oxygen orbitals. The findings indicate that
heterostructuring is unlikely to produce one band model physics and demonstrate
the fundamental inadequacy of modeling the physics of late transition metal
oxides with Hubbard-like models.Comment: Values of orbitals polarizations reported in Fig. 2 corrected. We
thank E. Benckiser and M. Wu for pointing out the error
Precisely computing phonons via irreducible derivatives
Computing phonons from first-principles is typically considered a solved
problem, yet inadequacies in existing techniques continue to yield deficient
results in systems with sensitive phonons. Here we circumvent this issue using
the lone irreducible derivative (LID) and bundled irreducible derivative (BID)
approaches to computing phonons via finite displacements, where the former
optimizes precision via energy derivatives and the latter provides the most
efficient algorithm using force derivatives. A condition number optimized (CNO)
basis for BID is derived which guarantees the minimum amplification of error.
Additionally, a hybrid LID-BID approach is formulated, where select irreducible
derivatives computed using LID replace BID results. We illustrate our approach
on two prototypical systems with sensitive phonons: the shape memory alloy AuZn
and metallic lithium. Comparing our resulting phonons in the aforementioned
crystals to calculations in the literature reveals nontrivial inaccuracies. Our
approaches can be fully automated, making them well suited for both niche
systems of interest and high throughput approaches
Chemical control of orbital polarization in artificially structured transition-metal oxides: La2NiXO6 (X=B, Al, Ga, In) from first principles
The application of modern layer-by-layer growth techniques to
transition-metal oxide materials raises the possibility of creating new classes
of materials with rationally designed correlated electron properties. An
important step toward this goal is the demonstration that electronic structure
can be controlled by atomic composition. In compounds with partially occupied
transition-metal d shells, one important aspect of the electronic structure is
the relative occupancy of different d orbitals. Previous work has established
that strain and quantum confinement can be used to influence orbital occupancy.
In this paper we demonstrate a different modality for orbital control in
transition-metal oxide heterostructures, using density-functional band
calculations supplemented by a tight-binding analysis to show that the choice
of nontransition-metal counterion X in transition-metal oxide heterostructures
composed of alternating LaNiO3 and LaXO3 units strongly affects orbital
occupancy, changing the magnitude and in some cases the sign of the orbital
polarization
Failure mechanisms of graphene under tension
Recent experiments established pure graphene as the strongest material known
to mankind, further invigorating the question of how graphene fails. Using
density functional theory, we reveal the mechanisms of mechanical failure of
pure graphene under a generic state of tension. One failure mechanism is a
novel soft-mode phonon instability of the -mode, whereby the graphene
sheet undergoes a phase transition and is driven towards isolated benzene rings
resulting in a reduction of strength. The other is the usual elastic
instability corresponding to a maximum in the stress-strain curve. Our results
indicate that finite wave vector soft modes can be the key factor in limiting
the strength of monolayer materials
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