Symmetry-Breaking Polymorphous Descriptions for Correlated Materials without Interelectronic <i>U</i>

ORAL

Abstract

Correlated materials with open-shell d- and f-ions having degenerate band edge states show a rich variety of interesting properties. The textbook view for the electronic structure of these materials is that mean-field approaches are inappropriate, as the interelectronic interaction U is required to open a band gap between the occupied and unoccupied degenerate states while retaining symmetry. We show that the mean-field band theory can lift such degeneracies when nontrivial unit cell representations (polymorphous networks) are allowed to break symmetry, in conjunction with a recently developed non-empirical exchange and correlation density functional without an on-site interelectronic interaction U. We rationalize how density functional theory (DFT) in the polymorphous representation achieves band gap opening in correlated materials through a separate mechanism to the Mott-Hubbard approach. We show the method predicts magnetic moments and gaps for four classical 3d transition-metal monoxides in both the antiferromagnetic and paramagnetic phases, offering a highly-efficient alternative to symmetry-conserving approaches for studying a range of functionalities in open d- and f-shell complex materials.

*Work supported by DOE under grant DE-SC0235021 at Tulane and by DOE-BES-DM at CU

Presenters

  • Jianwei Sun

    • Tulane Univ
    • Tulane University
    • Physics and Engineering Physics, Tulane University

Authors

  • Yubo Zhang

    • Tulane University
    • Tulane Univ
  • James Furness

    • Tulane Univ
    • Tulane University
    • Physics and Engineering Physics, Tulane University
  • Ruiqi Zhang

    • Tulane Univ
    • Tulane University
  • Zhi Wang

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
    • university of colorado
  • Alex Zunger

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
    • University of Colorado Boulder
    • university of colorado
  • Jianwei Sun

    • Tulane Univ
    • Tulane University
    • Physics and Engineering Physics, Tulane University