120 research outputs found

    Strain-induced tuning of the electronic Coulomb interaction in 3d transition metal oxide perovskites

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    Epitaxial strain offers an effective route to tune the physical parameters in transition metal oxides. So far, most studies have focused on the effects of strain on the bandwidths and crystal field splitting, but recent experimental and theoretical works have shown that also the effective Coulomb interaction changes upon structural modifications. This effect is expected to be of paramount importance in current material engineering studies based on epitaxy-based material synthesization. Here, we perform constrained random phase approximation calculations for prototypical oxides with a different occupation of the d shell, LaTiO3 (d1), LaVO3 (d2), and LaCrO3 (d3), and systematically study the evolution of the effective Coulomb interactions (Hubbard U and Hund's J) when applying epitaxial strain. Surprisingly, we find that the response upon strain is strongly dependent on the material. For LaTiO3, the interaction parameters are determined by the degree of localization of the orbitals, and grow with increasing tensile strain. In contrast, LaCrO3 shows the opposite trends: the interactions parameters shrink upon tensile strain. This is caused by the enhanced screening due to the larger electron filling. LaVO3 shows an intermediate behavior

    Converged GW quasiparticle energies for transition metal oxide perovskites

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    The ab initio calculation of quasiparticle (QP) energies is a technically and computationally challenging problem. In condensed matter physics the most widely used approach to determine QP energies is the GW approximation. Although the GW method has been widely applied to many typical semiconductors and insulators, its application to more complex compounds such as transition metal oxide perovskites has been comparatively rare, and its proper use is not well established from a technical point of view. In this work, we have applied the single-shot G0W0 method to a representative set of transition metal oxide perovskites including 3d (SrTiO3, LaScO3, SrMnO3, LaTiO3, LaVO3, LaCrO3, LaMnO3, and LaFeO3), 4d (SrZrO3, SrTcO3, and Ca2RuO4) and 5d (SrHfO3, KTaO3 and NaOsO3) compounds with different electronic configurations, magnetic orderings, structural characteristics and bandgaps ranging from 0.1 to 6.1 eV. We discuss the proper procedure to obtain well converged QP energies and accurate bandgaps within single-shot G0W0 by comparing the conventional approach based on an incremental variation of a specific set of parameters (number of bands, energy cutoff for the plane-wave expansion and number of k-points and the basis-set extrapolation scheme [Phys. Rev. B 90, 075125 (2014)]. In addition, we have inspected the difference between the adoption of norm-conserving and ultrasoft potentials in GW calculations. A minimal statistical analysis indicates that the correlation of the GW data with the DFT gap is more robust than the correlation with the experimental gaps; moreover we identify the static dielectric constant as alternative useful parameter for the approximation of GW gap in high-throughput automatic procedures. Finally, we compute the QP band structure and spectra within the random phase approximation and compare the results with available experimental data.Comment: Physical Review Materials, accepte

    Lifshitz transition driven by spin fluctuations and spin-orbit renormalization in NaOsO3_3

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    In systems where electrons form both dispersive bands and small local spins, we show that changes of the spin configuration can tune the bands through a Lifshitz transition, resulting in a continuous metal-insulator transition associated with a progressive change of the Fermi surface topology. In contrast to a Mott-Hubbard and Slater pictures, this spin-driven Lifshitz transition appears in systems with small electron-electron correlation and large hybridization. We show that this situation is realized in 5dd distorted perovskites with an half-filled t2gt_{2g} bands such as NaOsO3_3, where the strong pdp-d hybridization reduces the local moment, and spin-orbit coupling causes a large renormalization of the electronic mobility. This weakens the role of electronic correlations and drives the system towards an itinerant magnetic regime which enables spin-fluctuations

    Quasiparticle and excitonic properties of monolayer SrTiO3_3

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    Strontium titanate SrTiO3_3 is one of the most studied and paradigmatic transition metal oxides. Recently, a breakthrough has been achieved with the fabrication of freestanding SrTiO3_3 ultrathin films down to the monolayer limit. However, the many-body effects on the quasiparticle and optical properties of monolayer SrTiO3_3 remain unexplored. Using state-of-the-art many-body perturbation theory in the GW approximation combined with the Bethe-Salpeter equation, we study the quasiparticle band structure, optical and excitonic properties of monolayer SrTiO3_3. We show that quasiparticle corrections significantly alter the band structure topology; however, the widely used diagonal G0W0G_0W_0 approach yields unphysical band dispersions. The correct band dispersions are restored only by taking into account the off-diagonal elements of the self-energy. The optical properties are studied both in the optical limit and for finite momenta by computing the electron energy loss spectra. We find that the imaginary part of dielectric function at the long wavelength limit is dominated by three strongly bound excitonic peaks and the direct optical gap is associated to a bright exciton state with a large binding energy of 0.93 eV. We discuss the character of the excitonic peaks via the contributing interband transitions, and reveal that the lowest bound excitonic state becomes optical inactive for finite momenta along Γ\Gamma-M, while the other two excitonic peaks disperse to higher energies and eventually merge for momenta close to M.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure

    Relativistic GWGW+BSE study of the optical properties of Ruddlesden-Popper iridates

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    We study the optical properties of the Ruddlesden-Popper series of iridates Srn+1_{n+1}Irn_nO3n+1_{3n+1} (nn=1, 2 and \infty) by solving the Bethe-Salpeter equation (BSE), where the quasiparticle (QP) energies and screened interactions WW are obtained by the GWGW approximation including spin-orbit coupling. The computed optical conductivity spectra show strong excitonic effects and reproduce very well the experimentally observed double-peak structure, in particular for the spin-orbital Mott insulators Sr2_2IrO4_4 and Sr3_3Ir2_2O7_7. However, GWGW does not account well for the correlated metallic state of SrIrO3_3 owing to a much too small band renormalization, and this affects the overall quality of the optical conductivity. Our analysis describes well the progressive redshift of the main optical peaks as a function of dimensionality (nn), which is correlated with the gradual decrease of the electronic correlation (quantified by the constrained random phase approximation) towards the metallic n=n=\infty limit. We have also assessed the quality of a computationally cheaper BSE approach that is based on a model dielectric function and conducted on top of DFT+UU one-electron energies. Unfortunately, this model BSE approach does not accurately reproduce the outcome of the full GWGW+BSE method and leads to larger deviations to the measured spectra.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure

    Accurate optical spectra through time-dependent density functional theory based on screening-dependent hybrid functionals

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    We investigate optical absorption spectra obtained through time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) based on nonempirical hybrid functionals that are designed to correctly reproduce the dielectric function. The comparison with state-of-the-art GWGW calculations followed by the solution of the Bethe-Sapeter equation (BSE-GWGW) shows close agreement for both the transition energies and the main features of the spectra. We confront TD-DFT with BSE-GWGW by focusing on the model dielectric function and the local exchange-correlation kernel. The present TD-DFT approach achieves the accuracy of BSE-GWGW at a fraction of the computational cost
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