Electronic properties of IV-VI semiconductors obtained with G0W0 including off-diagonal corrections

ORAL

Abstract

The computation of electronic properties of IV-VI semiconductors constitutes a challenge for traditional density functional theory (DFT) methods. The underestimation of the bang gap by DFT can lead, in these materials, to a spurious band gap inversion that hinders the characterization of their electronic properties, and therefore the modeling of their thermoelectric performance. In addition, the G0W0 approach often used to correct the DFT band structure also fails because of its perturbative nature, making necessary to improve the starting wavefunctions (e.g. using hybrid DFT) or to use more sophisticated approaches such as quasiparticle self-consistent GW. Here instead we use traditional DFT+G0W0 with corrections from the relevant off-diagonal elements of the self-energy in order to obtain the band structure of some of these materials, e.g. PbTe. This method, which does not require adjustable parameters, is utilized to extract from first principles band structure characteristics necessary for the calculation of transport coefficients. Band gaps, effective masses and deformation potentials are obtained in good agreement and at a fraction of the computational cost of more sophisticated methods.

Presenters

  • Pablo Aguado-Puente

    School of Maths and Physics, Queen's University Belfast, Queen's University Belfast

Authors

  • Pablo Aguado-Puente

    School of Maths and Physics, Queen's University Belfast, Queen's University Belfast

  • Piotr Chudzinski

    School of Maths and Physics, Queen's University Belfast, Queen's University Belfast

  • Tchavdar Todorov

    School of Maths and Physics, Queen's University Belfast

  • Jorge Kohanoff

    School of Maths and Physics, Queen's University Belfast

  • Stephen B Fahy

    University College Cork, University College Cork, Ireland, Department of Physics, University College Cork, Department of Physics, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland, Materials Theory, Tyndall National Institute

  • Myrta Grüning

    School of Maths and Physics, Queen's University Belfast