904 research outputs found

    Connection between charge transfer and alloying core-level shifts based on density-functional calculations

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    The measurement of alloying core-level binding energy (CLBE) shifts has been used to give a precise meaning to the fundamental concept of charge transfer. Here, ab-initio density-functional calculations for the intermetallic compound MgAu are used to investigate models which try to make a connection between the core levels shifts and charge transfer. The calculated CLBE shifts agree well with experiment, and permit an unambiguous separation into initial-state and screening contributions. Interestingly, the screening contribution is large and cannot be neglected in any reasonable description. Comparison of the calculated results with the predictions of simple models show that these models are not adequate to describe the realistic situation. On the positive side, the accuracy of the density-functional calculations indicates that the combination of experiments with such calculations is a powerful tool to investigate unknown systems.Comment: RevTeX 10 pages incl 8 figure

    Reconstruction Mechanism of FCC Transition-Metal (001) Surfaces

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    The reconstruction mechanism of (001) fcc transition metal surfaces is investigated using a full-potential all-electron electronic structure method within density-functional theory. Total-energy supercell calculations confirm the experimental finding that a close-packed quasi-hexagonal overlayer reconstruction is possible for the late 5dd-metals Ir, Pt, and Au, while it is disfavoured in the isovalent 4dd metals (Rh, Pd, Ag). The reconstructive behaviour is driven by the tensile surface stress of the unreconstructed surfaces; the stress is significantly larger in the 5dd metals than in 4dd ones, and only in the former case it overcomes the substrate resistance to the required geometric rearrangement. It is shown that the surface stress for these systems is due to dd charge depletion from the surface layer, and that the cause of the 4th-to-5th row stress difference is the importance of relativistic effects in the 5dd series.Comment: RevTeX 3.0, 12 pages, 1 PostScript figure available upon request] 23 May 199

    Many-body effects in iron pnictides and chalcogenides -- non-local vs dynamic origin of effective masses

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    We apply the quasi-particle self-consistent GW (QSGW) approximation to some of the iron pnictide and chalcogenide superconductors. We compute Fermi surfaces and density of states, and find excellent agreement with experiment, substantially improving over standard band-structure methods. Analyzing the QSGW self-energy we discuss non-local and dynamic contributions to effective masses. We present evidence that the two contributions are mostly separable, since the quasi-particle weight is found to be essentially independent of momentum. The main effect of non locality is captured by the static but non-local QSGW effective potential. Moreover, these non-local self-energy corrections, absent in e.g. dynamical mean field theory (DMFT), can be relatively large. We show, on the other hand, that QSGW only partially accounts for dynamic renormalizations at low energies. These findings suggest that QSGW combined with DMFT will capture most of the many-body physics in the iron pnictides and chalcogenides.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figure

    Theory of Adsorption and Surfactant Effect of Sb on Ag (111)

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    We present first-principles studies of the adsorption of Sb and Ag on clean and Sb-covered Ag (111). For Sb, the {\it substitutional} adsorption site is found to be greatly favored with respect to on-surface fcc sites and to subsurface sites, so that a segregating surface alloy layer is formed. Adsorbed silver adatoms are more strongly bound on clean Ag(111) than on Sb-covered Ag. We propose that the experimentally reported surfactant effect of Sb is due to Sb adsorbates reducing the Ag adatom mobility. This gives rise to a high density of Ag islands which coalesce into regular layers.Comment: RevTeX 3.0, 11 pages, 0 figures] 13 July 199

    Extracting convergent surface energies from slab calculations

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    The formation energy of a solid surface can be extracted from slab calculations if the bulk energy per atom is known. It has been pointed out previously that the resulting surface energy will diverge with slab thickness if the bulk energy is in error, in the context of calculations which used different methods to study the bulk and slab systems. We show here that this result is equally relevant for state-of-the-art computational methods which carefully treat bulk and slab systems in the same way. Here we compare different approaches, and present a solution to the problem that eliminates the divergence and leads to rapidly convergent and accurate surface energies.Comment: 3 revtex pages, 1 figure, in print on J. Phys. Cond. Mat

    GW correlation effects on plutonium quasiparticle energies: changes in crystal-field splitting

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    We present results for the electronic structure of plutonium by using a recently developed quasiparticle self-consistent GWGW method (\qsgw). We consider a paramagnetic solution without spin-orbit interaction as a function of volume for the face-centered cubic (fcc) unit cell. We span unit-cell volumes ranging from 10% greater than the equilibrium volume of the δ\delta phase to 90 % of the equivalent for the α\alpha phase of Pu. The self-consistent GWGW quasiparticle energies are compared to those obtained within the Local Density Approximation (LDA). The goal of the calculations is to understand systematic trends in the effects of electronic correlations on the quasiparticle energy bands of Pu as a function of the localization of the ff orbitals. We show that correlation effects narrow the ff bands in two significantly different ways. Besides the expected narrowing of individual ff bands (flatter dispersion), we find that an even more significant effect on the ff bands is a decrease in the crystal-field splitting of the different bands.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 3 table

    Ab-initio procedure for effective models of correlated materials with entangled band structure

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    We present a first-principles method for deriving effective low-energy models of electrons in solids having entangled band structure. The procedure starts with dividing the Hilbert space into two subspaces, the low-energy part ("dd space'') and the rest of the space ("rr space''). The low-energy model is constructed for the dd space by eliminating the degrees of freedom of the rr space. The thus derived model contains the strength of electron correlation expressed by a partially screened Coulomb interaction, calculated in the constrained random-phase-approximation (cRPA) where screening channels within the dd space, PdP_d, are subtracted. One conceptual problem of this established downfolding method is that for entangled bands it is not clear how to cut out the dd space and how to distinguish PdP_d from the total polarization. Here, we propose a simple procedure to overcome this difficulty. In our scheme, the dd subspace is cut out from the Hilbert space of the Kohn Sham eigenfunctions with the help of a procedure to construct a localized Wannier basis. The rr subspace is constructed as the complementary space orthogonal to the dd subspace. After this disentanglement, PdP_d becomes well defined. Using the disentangled bands, the effective parameters are uniquely determined in the cRPA. The method is successfully applied to 3dd transition metals.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Charge redistribution at Pd surfaces: ab initio grounds for tight-binding interatomic potentials

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    A simplified tight-binding description of the electronic structure is often necessary for complex studies of surfaces of transition metal compounds. This requires a self-consistent parametrization of the charge redistribution, which is not obvious for late transition series elements (such as Pd, Cu, Au), for which not only d but also s-p electrons have to be taken into account. We show here, with the help of an ab initio FP-LMTO approach, that for these elements the electronic charge is unchanged from bulk to the surface, not only per site but also per orbital. This implies different level shifts for each orbital in order to achieve this orbital neutrality rule. Our results invalidate any neutrality rule which would allow charge redistribution between orbitals to ensure a common rigid shift for all of them. Moreover, in the case of Pd, the power law which governs the variation of band energy with respect to coordination number, is found to differ significantly from the usual tight-binding square root.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, Latex; Phys.Rev. B 56 (1997

    Screened Coulomb interaction in the maximally localized Wannier basis

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    We discuss a maximally localized Wannier function approach for constructing lattice models from first-principles electronic structure calculations, where the effective Coulomb interactions are calculated in the constrained random-phase-approximation. The method is applied to the 3d transition metals and a perovskite (SrVO_3). We also optimize the Wannier functions by unitary transformation so that U is maximized. Such Wannier functions unexpectedly turned out to be very close to the maximally localized ones.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure

    Realistic many-body models for Manganese Monoxide under pressure

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    In materials like transition metals oxides where electronic Coulomb correlations impede a description in terms of standard band-theories, the application of genuine many-body techniques is inevitable. Interfacing the realism of density-functional based methods with the virtues of Hubbard-like Hamiltonians, requires the joint ab initio construction of transfer integrals and interaction matrix elements (like the Hubbard U) in a localized basis set. In this work, we employ the scheme of maximally localized Wannier functions and the constrained random phase approximation to create effective low-energy models for Manganese monoxide, and track their evolution under external pressure. We find that in the low pressure antiferromagnetic phase, the compression results in an increase of the bare Coulomb interaction for specific orbitals. As we rationalized in recent model considerations [Phys. Rev. B 79, 235133 (2009)], this seemingly counter-intuitive behavior is a consequence of the delocalization of the respective Wannier functions. The change of screening processes does not alter this tendency, and thus, the screened on-site component of the interaction - the Hubbard U of the effective low-energy system - increases with pressure as well. The orbital anisotropy of the effects originates from the orientation of the orbitals vis-a-vis the deformation of the unit-cell. Within the high pressure paramagnetic phase, on the other hand, we find the significant increase of the Hubbard U is insensitive to the orbital orientation and almost exclusively owing to a substantial weakening of screening channels upon compression.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
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