Electronic Transport Calculation using Fermi Surface Geometry and Topology

ORAL

Abstract

The topology and geometry of the Fermi surface can be used to calculate transport properties. Haldane showed that the non-quantized anomalous Hall conductivity is purely a Fermi surface property. We show that the geometrical properties of the Fermi surface are fully described by a 3D discrete manifold. Using DFT and maximally localized Wannier functions, a tight-binding model was obtained and used to construct the Fermi surface as a discrete mesh. Geometric properties such as spin and Berry phase are resolved on the Fermi surface and the extrinsic and intrinsic conductivity are calculated as a surface integral over the Fermi surface. We demonstrate our approach works for the s-orbital tight-binding and the 2x2 Weyl semimetal models, iron, and platinum. Our results indicate that this method provides a robust and efficient way to calculate transport properties of various model Hamiltonians and real materials.

*This work is supported by the National Science Foundation (US) under Grant Number ECCS-2151809 and Number DMR-1950502. This work used Bridges-2 at Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center through allocation PHY230018 from the Advanced Cyberinfrastructure CoordinationEcosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program, which is supported by National Science Foundation (US) grants #2138259, #2138286, #2138307, #2137603, and #2138296.

Presenters

  • Nhat Huy Mai Tran

    • University of Florida

Authors

  • Nhat Huy Mai Tran

    • University of Florida
  • Amy Y Liu

    • Georgetown University
  • Gen Yin

    • Georgetown University