Exciton Dispersion and Exciton-phonon Interaction in Solids by Time-dependent Density Functional Theory
Overview
Chemistry
Affiliations
Understanding, predicting, and ultimately controlling exciton band structure and exciton dynamics are central to diverse chemical and materials problems. Here, we have developed a first-principles method to determine exciton dispersion and exciton-phonon interaction in semiconducting and insulating solids based on time-dependent density functional theory. The first-principles method is formulated in planewave bases and pseudopotentials and can be used to compute exciton band structures, exciton charge density, ionic forces, the non-adiabatic coupling matrix between excitonic states, and the exciton-phonon coupling matrix. Based on the spinor formulation, the method enables self-consistent noncollinear calculations to capture spin-orbital coupling. Hybrid exchange-correlation functionals are incorporated to deal with long-range electron-hole interactions in solids. A sub-Hilbert space approximation is introduced to reduce the computational cost without loss of accuracy. For validations, we have applied the method to compute the exciton band structure and exciton-phonon coupling strength in transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers; both agree very well with the previous GW-Bethe-Salpeter equation and experimental results. This development paves the way for accurate determinations of exciton dynamics in a wide range of solid-state materials.
Moiré magnetism and moiré excitons in twisted CrSBr bilayers.
Liu J, Zhang X, Lu G Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024; 122(1):e2413326121.
PMID: 39739786 PMC: 11725868. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2413326121.