The combination of density functional theory and single-site dynamical
mean-field theory, using both Hartree and full continuous-time quantum Monte
Carlo impurity solvers, is used to study the metal-insulator phase diagram of
perovskite transition-metal oxides of the form ABO3 with a rare-earth ion
A=Sr, La, Y and transition metal B=Ti, V, Cr. The correlated subspace is
constructed from atomiclike d orbitals defined using maximally localized
Wannier functions derived from the full p-d manifold; for comparison,
results obtained using a projector method are also given. Paramagnetic DFT+DMFT
computations using full charge self-consistency along with the standard "fully
localized limit" (FLL) double counting are shown to incorrectly predict that
LaTiO3, YTiO3, LaVO3 and SrMnO3 are metals. A more general
examination of the dependence of physical properties on the mean p-d energy
splitting, the occupancy of the correlated d states, the double-counting
correction, and the lattice structure demonstrates the importance of
charge-transfer physics even in the early transition-metal oxides and
elucidates the factors underlying the failure of the standard approximations.
If the double counting is chosen to produce a p-d splitting consistent with
experimental spectra, single-site dynamical mean-field theory provides a
reasonable account of the materials properties. The relation of the results to
those obtained from "d-only" models in which the correlation problem is based
on the frontier orbital p-d antibonding bands is determined. It is found
that if an effective interaction U is properly chosen the d-only model
provides a good account of the physics of the d1 and d2 materials.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figure