Structural and electronic properties of α, β-(BEDT-TTF)<sub>2</sub>I<sub>3</sub> and κ-(BEDT-TTF)<sub>2</sub>X<sub>3</sub> (X=I,F,Br,Cl) organic charge transfer salts

ORAL

Abstract

Studies of organic crystalline materials have become an active area of research over the past few decades. Physical properties of some of these materials can be tuned with relative ease utilizing minor modifications of their structures by applying pressure or chemical substitution. One class of such compounds is the BEDT-TTF-based charge transfer salts that are packed in a quasi-two-dimensional structure. Using first principles calculations, we have studied α, β and κ-phases of (BEDT-TTF)2I3 as well as chemical substitutions of other Halogens in the κ-phase, which has a non-symmorphic space group (1). The κ-phase, under the anion substitution I-> F, shows a topological transformation in its band structure near the Fermi level. In addition, we are evaluating the superconducting order parameter and its symmetry properties of some of these phases through a Bethe-Salpeter approach.

(1) Commeau, et al. PRB 96.12 (2017): 125135.

*Supported by US DOE, BES E3B7, Swedish Research Council Grant No.~638-2013-9243, Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, and European Research Council under European Union’s Seventh Framework Program (FP/2207-2013)/ERC Grant Agreement No.~DM-321031, Used computing resources at HPC2N, SNIC-Sweden, HPC Clust

Presenters

  • Gayanath Fernando

    • Physics, Univ of Connecticut

Authors

  • Gayanath Fernando

    • Physics, Univ of Connecticut
  • Benjamin Commeau

    • Univ of Connecticut - Storrs
    • Physics, Univ of Connecticut
  • Matthias Geilhufe

    • Nordita, KTH Royal Institute of Technology and Stockholm University
  • Alexander Balatsky

    • NORDITA
    • Institute for Materials Science, Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Nordita
    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
    • Nordita, KTH Royal Institute of Technology and Stockholm University; Institute for Materials Science, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Department of Physics, University of Conn
    • Instittute for Materials Science, Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Institute for Materials Science, Los Alamos National Laboratory/Nordita/University of Connecticut