First-principles study of self-trapped polarons

ORAL

Abstract

The polaron is a quasiparticles consisting of an electron or hole dressed by a cloud of phonons. Self-trapped polarons are found when the electron-phonon interaction is so strong that the electron is bound by the potential of the lattice distortion that it induces. Here we investigate the mechanisms of polaron formation in wide-gap insulators, using Li2O2 as a prototypical example. We study self-trapping both via direct density-functional theory (DFT) calculations and using a perturbation theory approach. We analyze the binding energy in terms of the underlying band structure and phonon dispersions, and we compare our findings with previous calculations and with classic models of self-trapped polarons. We discuss open questions in the ab initio study of polarons and possible solutions.

*The work was supported by the UK EPSRC (EP/L015722/1and EP/M020517/1) and the Leverhulme Trust (RL-2012-001), the Graphene Flagship (Horizon 2020 Grant No. 785219 - GrapheneCore2), the University of Oxford ARC facility, PRACE-15 and PRACE-17 resources MareNostrum at BSC.

Presenters

  • WENG HONG SIO

    • Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford

Authors

  • WENG HONG SIO

    • Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford
  • Carla Verdi

    • Department of Materials, University of Oxford
  • Samuel Ponce

    • Department of Materials, University of Oxford
  • Feliciano Giustino

    • Department of Materials, University of Oxford