1,107 research outputs found
Anharmonic properties from a generalized third order ab~initio approach: theory and applications to graphite and graphene
We have implemented a generic method, based on the 2n+1 theorem within
density functional perturbation theory, to calculate the anharmonic scattering
coefficients among three phonons with arbitrary wavevectors. The method is used
to study the phonon broadening in graphite and graphene mono- and bi-layer. The
broadening of the high-energy optical branches is highly nonuniform and
presents a series of sudden steps and spikes. At finite temperature, the two
linearly dispersive acoustic branches TA and LA of graphene have nonzero
broadening for small wavevectors. The broadening in graphite and bi-layer
graphene is, overall, very similar to the graphene one, the most remarkable
feature being the broadening of the quasi acoustical ZO' branch. Finally, we
study the intrinsic anharmonic contribution to the thermal conductivity of the
three systems, within the single mode relaxation time approximation. We find
the conductance to be in good agreement with experimental data for the
out-of-plane direction but to underestimate it by a factor 2 in-plane
Ab initio variational approach for evaluating lattice thermal conductivity
We present a first-principles theoretical approach for evaluating the lattice
thermal conductivity based on the exact solution of the Boltzmann transport
equation. We use the variational principle and the conjugate gradient scheme,
which provide us with an algorithm faster than the one previously used in
literature and able to always converge to the exact solution. Three-phonon
normal and umklapp collision, isotope scattering and border effects are
rigorously treated in the calculation. Good agreement with experimental data
for diamond is found. Moreover we show that by growing more enriched diamond
samples it is possible to achieve values of thermal conductivity up to three
times larger than the commonly observed in isotopically enriched diamond
samples with 99.93% C12 and 0.07 C13
Second order structural phase transitions, free energy curvature, and temperature-dependent anharmonic phonons in the self-consistent harmonic approximation: theory and stochastic implementation
The self-consistent harmonic approximation is an effective harmonic theory to
calculate the free energy of systems with strongly anharmonic atomic
vibrations, and its stochastic implementation has proved to be an efficient
method to study, from first-principles, the anharmonic properties of solids.
The free energy as a function of average atomic positions (centroids) can be
used to study quantum or thermal lattice instability. In particular the
centroids are order parameters in second-order structural phase transitions
such as, e.g., charge-density-waves or ferroelectric instabilities. According
to Landau's theory, the knowledge of the second derivative of the free energy
(i.e. the curvature) with respect to the centroids in a high-symmetry
configuration allows the identification of the phase-transition and of the
instability modes. In this work we derive the exact analytic formula for the
second derivative of the free energy in the self-consistent harmonic
approximation for a generic atomic configuration. The analytic derivative is
expressed in terms of the atomic displacements and forces in a form that can be
evaluated by a stochastic technique using importance sampling. Our approach is
particularly suitable for applications based on first-principles
density-functional-theory calculations, where the forces on atoms can be
obtained with a negligible computational effort compared to total energy
determination. Finally we propose a dynamical extension of the theory to
calculate spectral properties of strongly anharmonic phonons, as probed by
inelastic scattering processes. We illustrate our method with a numerical
application on a toy model that mimics the ferroelectric transition in
rock-salt crystals such as SnTe or GeTe
Anharmonic phonon spectra of PbTe and SnTe in the self-consistent harmonic approximation
At room temperature, PbTe and SnTe are efficient thermoelectrics with a cubic
structure. At low temperature, SnTe undergoes a ferroelectric transition with a
critical temperature strongly dependent on the hole concentration, while PbTe
is an incipient ferroelectric. By using the stochastic self-consistent harmonic
approximation, we investigate the anharmonic phonon spectra and the occurrence
of a ferroelectric transition in both systems. We find that vibrational spectra
strongly depends on the approximation used for the exchange-correlation kernel
in density functional theory. If gradient corrections and the theoretical
volume are employed, then the calculation of the free energy Hessian leads to
phonon spectra in good agreement with experimental data for both systems. In
PbTe, we reproduce the transverse optical mode phonon satellite detected in
inelastic neutron scattering and the crossing between the transverse optical
and the longitudinal acoustic modes along the X direction. In the case
of SnTe, we describe the occurrence of a ferroelectric transition from the high
temperature Fmm structure to the low temperature R3m one.Comment: 12 pages, 15 Picture
Hybrid-functional electronic structure of multilayer graphene
Multilayer graphene with rhombohedral and Bernal stacking are supposed to be
metallic, as predicted by density functional theory calculations using
semi-local functionals. However recent angular resolved photoemission and
transport data have questioned this point of view. In particular, rhombohedral
flakes are suggested to be magnetic insulators. Bernal flakes composed of an
even number of layers are insulating, while those composed of an odd number of
layers are pseudogapped. Here, by systematically benchmarking with plane waves
codes, we develop very accurate all-electron Gaussian basis sets for graphene
multilayers. We find that, in agreement with our previous calculations,
rhombohedral stacked multilayer graphene are gapped for and magnetic. However,
the valence band curvature and the details of the electronic structure depend
crucially on the basis set. Only substantially extended basis sets are able to
correctly reproduce the effective mass of the valence band top at the K point,
while the popular POB-TZVP basis set leads to a severe overestimation. In the
case of Bernal stacking, we show that exact exchange gaps the flakes composed
by four layers and opens pseudogaps for N = 3, 6, 7, 8. However, the gap or
pseudogap size and its behaviour as a function of thickness are not compatible
with experimental data. Moreover, hybrid functionals lead to a metallic
solution for 5 layers and a magnetic ground state for 5, 6 and 8 layers.
Magnetism is very weak with practically no effect on the electronic structure
and the magnetic moments are mostly concentrated in the central layers. Our
hybrid functional calculations on trilayer Bernal graphene multilayers are in
excellent agreement with non-magnetic GW calculations. For thicker multilayers,
our calculations are a benchmark for manybody theoretical modeling of the low
energy electronic structure.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Quantum effects in muon spin spectroscopy within the stochastic self-consistent harmonic approximation
In muon spin rotation experiments the positive implanted muon vibrates with
large zero point amplitude by virtue of its light mass. Quantum mechanical
calculations of the host material usually treat the muon as a point impurity,
ignoring this large vibrational amplitude. As a first order correction, the
muon zero point motion is usually described within the harmonic approximation,
despite the large anharmonicity of the crystal potential. Here we apply the
stochastic self-consistent harmonic approximation, a quantum variational method
devised to include strong anharmonic effects in total energy and vibrational
frequency calculations, in order to overcome these limitations and provide an
accurate ab initio description of the quantum nature of the muon. We applied
this full quantum treatment to the calculation of the muon contact hyperfine
field in textbook-case metallic systems, such as Fe, Ni, Co including MnSi and
MnGe, significantly improving agreement with experiments. Our results show that
muon vibrational frequencies are strongly renormalized by anharmonicity.
Finally, in contrast to the harmonic approximation, we show that including
quantum anharmonic fluctuations, the muon stabilizes at the octahedral site in
bcc Fe.Comment: 10 page
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