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Addressing correlated materials with dynamical functionals

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If you have a question about this talk, please contact Dr Sun-Woo Kim.

Electronic correlations play a central role in determining the ground state and response properties of many functional materials – ranging from Mott-Hubbard insulators to high-Tc superconductors and 2D materials. While density-functional theory (DFT) has been the workhorse for first-principles calculations for more than three decades, these complex materials elude a DFT description, both for practical and conceptual reasons. Dynamical frameworks, where frequency-dependent self-energies appear, as in many-body perturbation theory (MBPT) or dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT), provide a formally grounded approach to tackle excitations and electronic correlations.

Here, I discuss an alternative framework based on dynamical potentials, where a local and dynamical Hubbard functional is developed to address both spectral and thermodynamic properties in the presence of correlations. Such an approach is made possible by a computational framework we introduced – the algorithmic-inversion method on sum-over-poles – that supports dynamical formulations and their implementation into computer codes. With the theory, we obtain fully self-consistent results for thermodynamics and spectral properties in the paradigmatic correlated solid SrVO3, showing close agreement to the experiments. In addition, we study four Mott-Hubbard/charge-transfer transition-metal monoxides, highlighting the accuracy of the present approach against state-of-the art calculations and experiments.

This talk is part of the Lennard-Jones Centre series.

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