A theory for colors of strongly correlated electronic systems

ORAL

Abstract

Many strongly correlated transition metal insulators are colored, even though they have band gaps much larger than the highest energy photons from the visible light. An adequate explanation for the color requires a theoretical approach able to compute subgap excitons in periodic crystals, reliably and without free parameters—a formidable challenge. The literature often fails to disentangle two important factors: what makes excitons form and what makes them optically bright. We pick two archetypal cases as examples: NiO with green color and MnF2 with pink color, and employ two kinds of ab initio many body Green’s function theories; the first, a perturbative theory based on low-order extensions of the GW approximation, is able to explain the color in NiO, while the same theory is unable to explain why MnF2 is pink. We show its color originates from higher order spin-flip transitions that modify the optical response, which is contained in dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT). We show that symmetry lowering mechanisms may determine how ‘bright’ these excitons are, but they are not fundamental to their existence.

* S.A. was supported by the ERC Synergy Grant, project 854843 FASTCORR (Ultrafast dynamics of correlated electrons in solids) and Computational Chemical Sciences program within the Office of Basic Energy Sciences, U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC36-08GO28308.

Publication: Nature Communications volume 14, Article number: 5565 (2023)

Presenters

  • Swagata Acharya

    National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Authors

  • Swagata Acharya

    National Renewable Energy Laboratory

  • Dimitar Pashov

    King's College London

  • Cedric Weber

    King's College London

  • Mark van Schilfgaarde

    National renewable energy Laboratory, National Renewable Energy Lab

  • Alexander I Lichtenstein

    University of Hamburg, Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of Hamburg, 20355 Hamburg, Germany

  • Mikhail I Katsnelson

    Radboud University Nijmegen, Radboud University, Radboud University, Institute for Molecules and Materials, 6525AJ Nijmegen, The Netherlands