Electronic structure, magnetism and exchange integrals in transition
metal oxides: role of the spin polarization of the functional in DFT+U
calculations
Density functional theory augmented with Hubbard-U corrections (DFT+U) is
currently one of the widely used methods for first-principles electronic
structure modeling of insulating transition metal oxides (TMOs). Since U is
relatively large compared to band widths, the magnetic excitations in TMOs are
expected to be well described by a Heisenberg model. However, in practice the
calculated exchange parameters Jij depend on the magnetic configuration
from which they are extracted and on the functional used to compute them. In
this work we investigate how the spin polarization dependence of the underlying
exchange-correlation functional influences the calculated magnetic exchange
constants of TMOs. We perform a systematic study of the predictions of
calculations based on the local density approximation plus U (LDA+U) and
the local spin density approximation plus U (LSDA+U) for the electronic
structures, total energies and magnetic exchange interactions Jij's
extracted from ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic (AFM) configurations of
several transition metal oxide materials. We report that, for realistic choices
of Hubbard U and Hund's J parameters, LSDA+U and LDA+U calculations
result in different values of the magnetic exchange constants and band gap. The
dependence of the band gap on the magnetic configuration is stronger in LDA+U
than in LSDA+U and we argue that this is the main reason why the
configuration dependence of the Jij's is found to be systematically more
pronounced in LDA+U than in LSDA+U calculations. We report a very good
correspondence between the computed total energies and the parameterized
Heisenberg model for LDA+U calculations, but not for LSDA+U, suggesting
that LDA+U is a more appropriate method for estimating exchange interactions