Quasiparticle spectra and excitons of organic molecules deposited on
substrates: G0W0-BSE approach applied to benzene on graphene and metallic
substrates
We present an alternative methodology for calculating the quasi-particle
energy, energy loss, and optical spectra of a molecule deposited on graphene or
a metallic substrate. To test the accuracy of the method it is first applied to
the isolated benzene (C6H6) molecule. The quasiparticle energy levels and
especially the energies of the benzene excitons (triplet, singlet, optically
active and inactive) are in very good agreement with available experimental
results. It is shown that the vicinity of the various substrates
(pristine/doped graphene or (jellium) metal surface) reduces the quasiparticle
HOMO-LUMO gap by an amount that slightly depends on the substrate type. This is
consistent with the simple image theory predictions. It is even shown that the
substrate does not change the energy of the excitons in the isolated molecule.
We prove (in terms of simple image theory) that energies of the excitons are
indeed influenced by two mechanisms which cancel each other. We demonstrate
that the benzene singlet optically active (E1u) exciton couples to real
electronic excitations in the substrate. This causes it substantial decay, such
as {\Gamma} = 174 meV for pristine graphene and {\Gamma} = 362 meV for metal
surfaces as the substrate. However, we find that doping graphene does not
influence the E1u exciton decay rate.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure