Integrating Phonon Screening in Ab Initio Downfolding: Implications for Electron-Electron Interactions and Superconductivity
ORAL
Abstract
Ab initio downfolding is a promising method for studies of strongly-correlated materials based on first principles [1]. Within this approach, electron-electron interactions are typically computed within the constrained random phase approximation to the screened Coulomb interaction. However, lattice screening of the Coulomb interaction can lead to significant changes in electronic properties, as shown recently for excitons [2]. The influence of phonon screening within the context of ab initio downfolding has mostly been overlooked, particularly for systems with long-range electron-phonon coupling. Here we present a theory and computational framework for integrating phonon screening with ab initiodownfolding. Applying this framework to select materials, we show that phonons can lead to a large modification of short- and long-range electron-electron interactions due to a combination of the Frohlich, piezoelectric, and deformation potential mechanisms. We capture cases where phonons lead to overall attractive interactions between electrons, and we discuss implications for superconductivity observed in carrier-doped GeTe and SrTiO3. Computational resources were provided by NERSC.
[1] Alvertis, Khan, Tubman, arXiv:2409.12237
[2] Alvertis, Haber, Coveney, Li, Louie, Filip, Neaton, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sciences, 121, e2403434121 (2024)
[1] Alvertis, Khan, Tubman, arXiv:2409.12237
[2] Alvertis, Haber, Coveney, Li, Louie, Filip, Neaton, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sciences, 121, e2403434121 (2024)
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Presenters
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Antonios M Alvertis
NASA Ames Research Center
Authors
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Antonios M Alvertis
NASA Ames Research Center
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Christopher J Coveney
University of Oxford
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Chih En Hsu
Department of Physics, Tamkang University, Tamkang University, University of Southern California
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Andres Montoya-Castillo
University of Colorado, Boulder
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Marina R Filip
University of Oxford
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Jeffrey B Neaton
Dept. of Physics, UC Berkeley; Materials Sciences Division, LBNL; Kavli Energy NanoScience Institute, UC Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and UC-Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Zhenglu Li
University of Southern California
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Vojtech Vlcek
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Norm M Tubman
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)