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Optimised Projections for the Ab Initio Simulation of Large and Strongly Correlated Systems

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Optimised Projections for the Ab Initio Simulation of Large and Strongly Correlated Systems Synopsis

Density functional theory (DFT) has become the standard workhorse for quantum mechanical simulations as it offers a good compromise between accuracy and computational cost.
However, there are many important systems for which DFT performs very poorly, most notably strongly-correlated materials, resulting in a significant recent growth in interest in 'beyond DFT'  methods. The widely used  DFT+U technique, in particular, involves the addition of explicit Coulomb repulsion terms to reproduce the physics of spatially-localised electronic subspaces.
The magnitude of these corrective terms, measured by the famous Hubbard U parameter, has received much attention but less so for the projections used to delineate these subspaces.

The dependence on the choice of these projections is studied in detail here and a method to overcome this ambiguity in DFT+U, by self-consistently determining the projections, is introduced.
The author shows how nonorthogonal representations for electronic states may be used to construct these projections and, furthermore, how DFT+U may be implemented with a linearly increasing cost with respect to system size.
The use of nonorthogonal functions in the context of electronic structure calculations is extensively discussed and clarified, with new interpretations and results, and, on this topic, this work may serve as a reference for future workers in the field.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9783642232374
Publication date:
Author: David Daniel ORegan
Publisher: Springer an imprint of Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 230 pages
Series: Springer Theses
Genres: Materials science
Condensed matter physics (liquid state and solid state physics)
Mathematical physics