We have obtained the first-principles electronic structure of solid coronene,
which has been recently discovered to exhibit superconductivity with potassium
doping. Since coronene, along with picene, the first aromatic superconductor,
now provide a class of superconductors as solids of aromatic compounds, here we
compare the two cases in examining the electronic structures. In the undoped
coronene crystal, where the molecules are arranged in a herringbone structure
with two molecules in a unit cell, the conduction band above an insulating gap
is found to comprise four bands, which basically originate from the lowest two
unoccupied molecular orbitals
(doubly-degenerate, reflecting the high symmetry of the molecular shape) in
an isolated molecule but the bands are entangled as in solid picene. The Fermi
surface for a candidate of the structure of Kxcoronene with x=3, for which
superconductivity is found, comprises multiple sheets, as in doped picene but
exhibiting a larger anisotropy with different topology.Comment: 5 pages, to be published in Phys. Rev.