We develop a correlated-electron minimal model for the normal state of
charged phenanthrene ions in the solid state, within the reduced space of the
two lowest antibonding molecular orbitals of phenanthrene. Our model is general
and can be easily extended to study the normal states of other polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbon superconductors. The main difference between our approach
and previous correlated-electron theories of phenacenes is that our
calculations are exact within the reduced basis space, albeit for finite
clusters. The enhanced exchange of electron populations between these molecular
orbitals, driven by Coulomb interactions over and above the bandwidth effects,
gives a theoretical description of the phenanthrene trianions that is very
different from previous predictions. Exact many-body finite cluster
calculations show that while the systems with molecular charges of −1 and
−2 are one- and two-band Mott-Hubbard semiconductors, respectively, molecular
charge −3 gives two nearly 43-filled bands, rather than a
completely filled lower band and a 21-filled upper band. The carrier
density per active molecular orbital is thus nearly the same in the normal
state of the superconducting aromatics and organic charge-transfer solids, and
may be the key to understanding unconventional superconductivity in these
molecular superconductors.Comment: Published in Phys. Rev. B. Title changed on editorial request. In
all, 13 pages, 14 captioned figures, and 2 table