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A multipole approach for dielectric screening in metallic systems

ORAL

Abstract

The plasmon pole (PPA) model is a popular approximation adopted for treating the frequency dependence in GW. This method has been successfully applied to a large variety of systems ranging from insulators and semiconductors, the homogeneous electron gas and simple metals like Al and Na. In contrast, metals with small plasmon energies, such as Ni, Cu and Co, are particularly challenging for simple models like in PPA, since they present strong screening effects resulting in multiple plasmonic excitations. In these cases a more accurate but computationally costly full frequency (FF) approach is usually preferred.

 

In this work we propose the use of a multipole approach (MPA) to overcome the limitations of PPA in these metals while limiting the computational cost. The proposed MPA technique has been recently developed and validated for semiconductors [1], with a particular focus on good sampling strategies in the complex frequency plane. In the present work we further extend the sampling strategies to the case of metals with small plasmon energies. We compare results of quasiparticles energies in different metallic systems computed via PPA, MPA and FF approaches.

References

[1]  D. A. Leon, et al. Phys. Rev. B 104, 115157 (2021)

Publication: [1] D. A. Leon, Claudia Cardoso, Tommaso Chiarotti, Daniele Varsano, Elisa Molinari, and Andrea Ferretti. Frequency dependence in GW made simple using a multipole approximation. Phys. Rev. B. 104, 115157 https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.104.115157<br><br>[2] D. A. Leon, Claudia Cardoso, Daniele Varsano, Elisa Molinari, and Andrea Ferretti. A multipole approach for dielectric screening in metallic systems. (in preparation).

Presenters

  • Dario A Leon Valido

    CNR Institute for Nanoscience

Authors

  • Dario A Leon Valido

    CNR Institute for Nanoscience

  • Claudia Cardoso

    CNR Institute for Nanoscience

  • Daniele Varsano

    Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), CNR Institute for Nanoscience

  • Elisa Molinari

    University of Modena & Reggio Emilia

  • Andrea Ferretti

    University of Modena & Reggio Emilia, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), CNR Institute for Nanoscience