396 research outputs found
Orbital fluctuations in the different phases of LaVO3 and YVO3
We investigate the importance of quantum orbital fluctuations in the
orthorhombic and monoclinic phases of the Mott insulators LaVO3 and YVO3.
First, we construct ab-initio material-specific t2g Hubbard models. Then, by
using dynamical mean-field theory, we calculate the spectral matrix as a
function of temperature. Our Hubbard bands and Mott gaps are in very good
agreement with spectroscopy. We show that in orthorhombic LaVO3, quantum
orbital fluctuations are strong and that they are suppressed only in the
monoclinic 140 K phase. In YVO3 the suppression happens already at 300 K. We
show that Jahn-Teller and GdFeO3-type distortions are both crucial in
determining the type of orbital and magnetic order in the low temperature
phases.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, final version. To appear in PR
Nature of the Mott transition in Ca2RuO4
We study the origin of the temperature-induced Mott transition in Ca2RuO4. As
a method we use the local-density approximation+dynamical mean-field theory. We
show the following. (i) The Mott transition is driven by the change in
structure from long to short c-axis layered perovskite (L-Pbca to S-Pbca); it
occurs together with orbital order, which follows, rather than produces, the
structural transition. (ii) In the metallic L-Pbca phase the orbital
polarization is ~0. (iii) In the insulating S-Pbca phase the lower energy
orbital, ~xy, is full. (iv) The spin-flip and pair-hopping Coulomb terms reduce
the effective masses in the metallic phase. Our results indicate that a similar
scenario applies to Ca_{2-x}Sr_xRuO_4 (x<0.2). In the metallic x< 0.5
structures electrons are progressively transferred to the xz/yz bands with
increasing x, however we find no orbital-selective Mott transition down to ~300
K.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; published versio
Mott transition and suppression of orbital fluctuations in orthorhombic 3 perovskites
Using Wannier-functions, a low-energy Hamiltonian is derived for
orthorhombic transition-metal oxides. Electronic correlations are
treated with a new implementation of dynamical mean-field theory for non-cubic
systems. Good agreement with photoemission data is obtained. The interplay of
correlation effects and cation covalency (GdFeO-type distortions) is
found to suppress orbital fluctuations in LaTiO and even more in
YTiO, and to favor the transition to the insulating state.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; revised manuscrip
Many-body models for molecular nanomagnets
We present a flexible and effective ab-initio scheme to build many-body
models for molecular nanomagnets, and to calculate magnetic exchange couplings
and zero-field splittings. It is based on using localized Foster-Boys orbitals
as one-electron basis. We apply this scheme to three paradigmatic systems, the
antiferromagnetic rings Cr8 and Cr7Ni and the single molecule magnet Fe4. In
all cases we identify the essential magnetic interactions and find excellent
agreement with experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The electronic structures and magnetic properties of perovskite ruthenates from constrained orbital hybridization calculations
We introduce a method to analyze the effect of hybridization by shifting
corresponding atomic levels using external potentials. Based on this approach,
we study perovskite ruthenates,\ and unambiguously identify that the covalency
between the \textit{A}-site cation and O ion will modify the Ru-O hybridization
and change the density of state at Fermi level, consequently affect the
magnetic properties significantly. We also study the effect of pressure and
reveal that hydrostatic pressure has a small effect on the Ru-O-Ru bond angle
of SrRuO, while it will decrease the Ru-O length and increase the band
width significantly. Therefore, the magnetic ordering temperature will decrease
monotonically with pressure
Role of covalency in the ground state properties of perovskite ruthenates: A first principle study using local spin density approximations
We investigate the electronic structure of SrRuO3 and CaRuO3 using full
potential linearized augmented plane wave method within the local spin density
approximations. The ferromagnetic ground state in SrRuO3 could exactly be
described in these calculations and the calculated spin magnetic moment is
found to be close to the experimentally observed values. Interestingly, the
spin polarized calculations for CaRuO3 exhibit large spin moment as observed in
the experiments but the magnetic ground state has higher energy than that in
the non-magnetic solution. Various calculations for different structural
configurations indicate that Ca-O covalency plays the key role in determining
the electronic structure and thereby the magnetic ground state in this system.Comment: 8 figure
Electronic Structure Calculations with LDA+DMFT
The LDA+DMFT method is a very powerful tool for gaining insight into the
physics of strongly correlated materials. It combines traditional ab-initio
density-functional techniques with the dynamical mean-field theory. The core
aspects of the method are (i) building material-specific Hubbard-like many-body
models and (ii) solving them in the dynamical mean-field approximation. Step
(i) requires the construction of a localized one-electron basis, typically a
set of Wannier functions. It also involves a number of approximations, such as
the choice of the degrees of freedom for which many-body effects are explicitly
taken into account, the scheme to account for screening effects, or the form of
the double-counting correction. Step (ii) requires the dynamical mean-field
solution of multi-orbital generalized Hubbard models. Here central is the
quantum-impurity solver, which is also the computationally most demanding part
of the full LDA+DMFT approach. In this chapter I will introduce the core
aspects of the LDA+DMFT method and present a prototypical application.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures. Chapter of "Many-Electron Approaches in Physics,
Chemistry and Mathematics: A Multidisciplinary View", eds. V. Bach and L.
Delle Site, Springer 201
On the mechanism for orbital-ordering in KCuF3
The Mott insulating perovskite KCuF3 is considered the archetype of an
orbitally-ordered system. By using the LDA+dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT)
method, we investigate the mechanism for orbital-ordering (OO) in this
material. We show that the purely electronic Kugel-Khomskii super-exchange
mechanism (KK) alone leads to a remarkably large transition temperature of T_KK
about 350 K. However, orbital-order is experimentally believed to persist to at
least 800 K. Thus Jahn-Teller distortions are essential for stabilizing
orbital-order at such high temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Orbital-quenching-induced magnetism in Ba_2NaOsO_6
The double perovskite \bnoo with heptavalent Os () is observed to remain
in the ideal cubic structure ({\it i.e.} without orbital ordering) despite
single occupation of the orbitals, even in the ferromagnetically
ordered phase below 6.8 K. Analysis based on the {\it ab initio} dispersion
expressed in terms of an Os -based Wannier function picture, spin-orbit
coupling, Hund's coupling, and strong Coulomb repulsion shows that the magnetic
OsO cluster is near a moment-less condition due to spin and orbital
compensation. Quenching (hybridization) then drives the emergence of the small
moment. This compensation, unprecedented in transition metals, arises in a
unified picture that accounts for the observed Mott insulating behavior.Comment: in press at Europhysics Letter
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