TMCSIII: Jan 2012, Leeds
PSEUDOPOTENTIALS FOR BAND
STRUCTURE CALCULATIONS
       Rita Magri
       Physics Department, University of Modena and
       Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy
       CNR-Nano -S3 , Modena, Italy
OUTLINE
   Evolution of the Pseudopotential Concept
   First-Principles Pseudopotentials
   Empirical Pseudopotential Method
   Construction, Use and Results
EVOLUTION OF THE
PSEUDOPOTENTIAL CONCEPT
• The Beginning
   - OPW formalism - Herring , Phys. Rev. 57, 1169 (1940)
   - Phillips and Kleinman, Phys. Rev. 116, 287 (1959)
   - Cohen and Heine, Phys. Rev. 122, 1821 (1961)
•   Empirical Pseudopotentials
    - Cohen and Bergstresser, Phys. Rev. 141, 789 (1966)
    - Chelikowsky and Cohen, Phys. Rev. B 14, 556 (1976)
• Model Pseudopotentials
   - Abarenkov and Heine, Phil. Mag. 12, 529 (1965)
WHY PSEUDOPOTENTIALS?
                              The fundamental idea of
                               a pseudopotential is to
                               replace one problem with
                               another. (R. Martin,
            All-electron (true)“Electronic Structure”,
            Wave function      Cambridge)
                                 Replace the strong
                                 Coulomb potential of the
                                 nucleus and tightly
                                 bound core electrons by
                                 an effective ionic
    All-electron (true) Figura   potential acting on the
    potential                    valence electrons.
    THE GENESIS OF THE PSEUPODOTENTIAL
    CONCEPT
    Reciprocal Space Representation
   Taking the Fourier transforms of the periodic part of the Bloch
    function uk(r) and the periodic crystal potential V(r)
    (which become series in G) and substituting into the Schrödinger
    Equation we obtain:
                 
                                         i ( k  G )  r
                ik  r
     k (r )  e u k (r ) 
                      
                                 u k (G ) e
                                 G
     2   2                                         
        k  G  E ( k )  u k (G )  
                                       
                                          V ( G  G )u k (G )  0
     2m                              G
                                               Slowly
                                         Convergent uk and V
 HOW TO CALCULATE CRYSTAL BLOCH
 FUNCTIONS FOR VALENCE ELECTRONS?
• The first problem is that the crystal potential V is a highly
  varying function of real space. Also wavefunctions are expected
  to change a lot, with atomic-like behavior near the nuclei and a
  more plane wave-like behavior in the interstitial regions, where
  V is weaker.
• It is not possible to express uk (r) as a simple superposition of
  plane-waves. Too many would be required!!!
  > 105 plane waves
  per atom!!        Core Wiggles
    FIRST STEP
 The lower lying bands come from the atomic core levels,
  while the electrons in higher bands feel a weaker potential
  (screened by the core electrons).
• The main idea is to divide the bands into two groups,
   in the first group are the low-lying bands of core electrons,
   in the second group are the valence and conduction bands.
                 Valence states
                                                    Large
                                                    Energy
                                                    difference
                Core states
      Atomic C (Z = 6)     Atomic Cu (Z = 29)
  OPW FORMALISM (HERRING, 1940)
  • We assume the narrow lower bands are unchanged by
    the atom environment (Frozen Core
    Approximation): so we can approximate these
    states with the core states of the free atom or other
    appropriately chosen localized functions φj.
  • We are interested in describing valence electron
    bands (core electrons are chemically inert)
                                                             Core
  True                (r )   n,k (r )    j  n,k  j
                                   
                                                               States
 valence         n ,k
                                           j
function
                             Smooth       Localized function
                             function
  It   can be shown that ψn,k is orthogonal to all φj
  THE PSEUDOPOTENTIAL (PROTOTYPE PSP)
  • We now insert the expression
                                
        n , k ( r )   n , k ( r )    j  n , k  j
                            
                                          j
  into the Schrödinger equation and obtain:
                                                            
   Hˆ  n    j  n Hˆ  j  En (k )  n    j  n  j 
             j                                 j             
              
                            
                                                         
    Hˆ 0  V (r )  n   En (k )  E j  j  j  n  En (k )  n
                         j
Nuclear potentials
  • an equation for the smooth function χ. We
    have an effective potential:
                            
                                        
                                                         
        V ps (r ,  j )  V (r )   En (k )  E j   j (r )  j
                                  j
PROPERTIES OF PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
                                              >0
                             
         V ps (r ,  j )  V (r )                          
                                        En ( k )  E j   j ( r )  j
                                   j
                   Attractive                   Repulsive
                  long-ranged                  short-ranged
   Vps is a much weaker potential than V: the attractive and
    repulsive parts partly compensate in the core region
    (Cancellation Theorem, Cohen and Heine, 1961)
• Vps depends generally on the angular momentum φj = φlmj
  and is a non-local energy-dependent integral
  operator.
   No effect if there are no core functions with angular
    momentum l. The true valence function has no nodes.
 WHAT IS MORE IMPORTANT ….
   We got rid of the core states/electrons. Valence electrons
    feel a “pseudopotential “ weak in the core region
    instead of the nucleus + core electrons
  SAME EFFECTS
     ON THE
VALENCE ELECTRONS
     Core Electrons                  Pseudo Core
                  Valence Electron
THE PSEUDOFUNCTION FOR THE
VALENCE ELECTRON
• χ being slowly varying can be approximated by a
  few terms of a superposition of plane waves.
 Core region
                             Bonding region
PROPERTIES OF THE SMOOTH
PSEUDOFUNCTION
• χ is not the valence electron wavefunction but only its
  smooth part (no wiggles in the core).
• The equation for χ has the same eigenvalues En(k) for
  the valence electrons as the original Hamiltonian.
• χ is not uniquely defined.
• The “pseudofunction” χn,k:
       n , k  n , k  1    j  n , k
                                               2
                                                   Norm is not unity!
                             j
   Note: if we know the smooth “pseudofunction” we
    can always build the corresponding true valence
    function.
MODEL PSEUDOPOTENTIALS,
EMPIRICAL PSEUDOPOTENTIALS,
FIRST-PRINCIPLES PSEUDOPOTENTIALS
 In practice the expression for Vps is
  approximated.
 Vps can be built to satisfy our needs, for
  example we can require it to be the smoothest
  and weakest possible and maintaining the
  same scattering properties of the core potential
  on the valence electrons (ab-initio approaches),
  or reproduce some measured quantities
  (empirical approaches)
TERMINOLOGY: LOCAL PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
   The pseudopotential can be local, semilocal, non-
    local.
   Please note ALL the pseudopotentials are spherically
    symmetric. (thus given on a radial mesh)
     LOCAL                                  s, p, d electrons
                                              all feel the same
Pseudopotential                               potential
(the less accurate)
                                             EMPIRICAL and
                                              MODEL
    VˆL  VL (r )                             Pseudopotentials
TERMINOLOGY: SEMILOCAL PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
   SEMILOCAL                It is non-local in the angular
                              variables, local in the radial
    Pseudopotential           variable                           Pseudo
                                                                  Wave
     VˆSL   Ylm Vl (r ) Ylm                                   functions
            lm                   Spherical
                                 harmonics                            d
                                                                      p
                      s, p, d electrons
                       feel different
                       potentials
                                Mo – from Haman, Schluter and Chang
                                PRL 43, 1494 (1979)
TERMINOLOGY: NON-LOCAL PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
 NON LOCAL SEPARABLE
  Pseudopotential
                       Fully non local in angles θ
VˆNL    
          lm El  lm
         lm
                        and φ AND radius r
                             Functions of r, θ, φ
                                         
   In position representation      VNL (r , r )
   Note: this PSP form is closer to the prototype PSP
 THE L-DEPENDENT TERMS ARE SHORT-RANGED
  The l-dependent terms of V are different only inside the
   core region (radius rc). A common long-ranged local
   potential Vloc (r) is subtracted
  In this way the semilocal, non-local terms of the
   pseudopotential are zero outside rc.          r
                                                 c
Vˆ ps  Vlocps (r )    lm El  lm
                      lm
            Z ion e        Vanishes
 V  ps
   loc   
               r            outside
  at large r                  rc
MODEL PSEUDOPOTENTIALS
 The model potential of Abarenkov and Heine (1965)
 The core is a black box. Any core potential which
  yields the correct logarihmic derivative at rc is OK.
    Al
                         Usually Al(E) is often a constant
                                       value
                             fitted to reproduce the
                          atomic eigenvalues and data
    Al
FROM THE IONIC (OR ATOMIC)
PSEUDOPOTENTIAL TO THE CRYSTAL
POTENTIAL
 Valence electrons move in the crystal potential
 Pseudopotentials describe the interaction of the valence
  electrons with a single ionic core.
 In the crystal the valence electrons interact one each
  other
 We have screened pseudopotentials (usually in
  empirical calculations) or ionic (bare)
  pseudopotentials (unscreened, usually in first-
  principles calculations).
   The crystal potential is built as a superposition of atomic
    pseudopotentials
   CRYSTAL POTENTIAL
      Let’s suppose the pseudopotential is local, then it can
       be written simply as Vα(r). The electron Hamiltonian
       is:
(AB-INITIO)          Hˆ  Tˆ  VˆHxc  Vˆion or    Hˆ  Tˆ  Vˆion
                                                                screened
                                                                           (EPM)
                            α is the ion kind
       Vion (r ) 
             , R ,
                     V (r  R    )
                                R is the lattice vector
                                τα is the basis vector
     Whose Fourier expansion is:
                                 
  Vion (r )  
              
                e  e
                 iG  r  iG  
                                  V (G )            G is a reciprocal
                G                                       vector
                           Structure      Form
                          Factor Sα(G)    Factor
     EXAMPLE: GAAS BULK
   Two atoms in the unit cell:
 Ga in τGa = τ = (1/8,1/8,1/8)a, As in τAs = -(1/8, 1/8,1/8)a =-
    τ, we obtain:
   
                  
                             
                                      
                                                    
                                                                
                                                                         
                                                                                
             
V (r )  
         
            iGr
           e cos(G  ) VAs (G)  VGa (G)  i  sen(G  ) VAs (G)  VGa (G)
          G
                                 VS(G)                                  VA(G)
    And solve:
      2   2                                         
         k  G  E ( k )  u k (G )  
                                        
                                           V ( G  G )u k (G )  0
      2m                              G
    The form factors are treated as adjustable parameters
     (empirical approach). Only those corresponding to few
     G vectors are needed.
Cohen and      Phys. Rev.
Bergstresser   141, 789-796
               (1966)
   Using the empirical approach the band
    structures, reflectivity spectra and photoemission
    spectra of bulk IV, III-V, and II-VI
    semiconductors were calculated (Cohen and
    Chelikowsky “Electronic Structure and Optical
    Properties of Semiconductors”, Ed. Springer)
   It is difficult to apply this method for systems
    with hundreds or thousands of atoms per unit
    cell because the fitting parameters (the form
    factors for each G-shell) would become too many!
           -New Atomistic Pseudopotentials (AEPM)
FORM FACTORS FOR SEMI-LOCAL PSP
    If the pseudopotential is semi-local still we have
     the structure factor and the form factor is more
     complicated:
                            
    V (k , G, G)  V ,loc       
                        ,loc (G  G ) 
                                                     
               l
               P
               l
                  (cos  )  l l
                            V
                             0
                              ( r ) j ( k  G r ) jl ( k  G  r ) r 2
                                                                       dr
                                                 
                                     
     with:                        k  G  k  G
                          cos      
                                   k  G k  G
   It depends on k and requires a double loop over the G
    vectors or in real space a radial integral for each pair of
    basis functions  computationally very expensive!
NON-LOCAL (SEPARABLE) PSPS DO IT BETTER
   Non-local pseudopotentials make the
    computation of the Hamiltonian matrix elements
    less expensive. Instead of
                                                 
         Pl (cos  )  Vl (r ) jl ( k  G r ) jl ( k  G r )r dr
                                                            2
                     0
       We have:
                                                       
Pl (cos  )   l (r ) jl ( k  G r )r dr   l (r ) jl ( k  G r )r 2 dr
                                      2
                0                             0
       Factorized into a product of integrals for each basis
        function separately, in plane-wave calculations only
        single loops over G are involved.
    HOW TO GENERATE AN ATOMIC
    PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
   Pseudopotentials for first-principles
    calculations
                 Unscreened (bare) pseudopotential
                  (ionic psp)
                 Extracted from an all-electron
                  calculation on the free atom.
   Pseudopotentials for semiempirical
    calculations
               Extracted fitting experimental data of
                (one or more) compounds containing
                the atom.
               It is assumed to be screened.
PSEUDOPOTENTIALS FOR FIRST-
PRINCIPLES CALCULATIONS
    Main steps in development
   Hamann, Schlüter, and Chang, PRL 43, 1494 (1979) – Norm-
    Conserving Pseudopotentials
   Kleinman and Bylander, PRL 48, 1425 (1982) – Separable
    Pseudopotentials
   Louie, Froyen, and Cohen, PRB 26, 1738 (1982) – Non linear
    core correction
   Vanderbilt, PRB (RC) 41, 7892 (1990) – Ultrasoft
    Pseudopotentials
   Blöchl, PRB (RC) 41, 5414 (1990) – Generalized Separable
    Pseudopotentials
   Blöchl, PRB 50, 17953 (1994) - PAW
    REQUIREMENS FOR CONSTRUCTING A GOOD
    NORM-CONSERVING PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
           Hamann et al. PRL 43, 1494 (1979)
 Choose an atomic reference configuration Example: Si 3s2 3p2
 Use an atomic code to calculate the all-electron valence
  wavefunctions (AE).
   Impose that the
    pseudo-wavefunction
    (PS) agrees with the
    (AE) wave-function
    beyond a chosen cutoff
    radius rc (l-dependent)
   Also the l-channel pseudo-potential (PS) has to
    agree with the AE potential for r > rc.
      1 d 2 l (l  1)                    nlm
           2
                    2
                        VAE (r )   nl  AE (r )  0
                          scr .
      2m dr     2mr                     
       1 d 2 l (l  1)                   nlm
            2
                     2
                         VPS (r )   l  PS (r )  0
                            scr .
       2m dr     2mr                    
    for the same eigenvalue εnl = εl
NORM-CONSERVATION REQUIREMENT
        The integrals from 0 to rc of the real and pseudo
         charge densities agree for each valence state.
    rc                    rc
                                                      rc
                    dr   r 
               l 2                 nlm 2
         r 
          2
               PS
                               2
                                   AE      dr
0                        0
         The charge contained
         in this region is the
         same for AE and PS
         wave-functions
SCATTERING PROPERTIES
       1 d 2 l (l  1)                    nlm
            2
                     2
                         VAE (r )   nl  AE (r )  0
                           scr .
       2m dr     2mr                     
        1 d 2 l (l  1)                   nlm
             2
                      2
                          VPS (r )   l  PS (r )  0
                             scr .
        2m dr     2mr                    
   . By construction, we know that at energy ε = εnl, the
    solution ψPS(r ) coincides with the ψAE(r ) for r > rc.
    But what about other energies? The transferability
    of the pseudopotential depends on the fact that ψPS(r )
    reproduces ψAE(r ) over a certain range of energies
    about εnl. We are interested in the energy range of
    valence bands in solid.
       The logarithmic derivatives of the real and pseudo
        wave function and their first energy derivatives
        agree for r > rc.
Logarithmic
derivative
                 l( , r )    d
Dl ( , r )  r               r ln l ( , r )
                 l ( , r )    dr
   The first energy      d
    derivative of the        Dl ( , r )
    logarithmic          d
    derivatives of the all-
    electron and pseudo
    wave-functions agrees
    at rc, and therefore for
    all r > rc.
SCATTERING PROPERTIES
    The fundamental advance of Hamann, Schlüter
     and Chang, 1979, is to have shown that:
     If norm conservation is imposed, then pseudo
     Dl(ε,r) matches all-electron Dl(ε,r) to second
     order in (ε –εl)
    This means that the norm-conserving
     pseudopotential has the same scattering phase
     shifts as the all-electron atom to linear order in
     energy around the chosen energy εl.
    These properties however leaves plenty of
     freedom in the form of the pseudopotential and in
     its construction.
STEPS FOR PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
CONSTRUCTION
 Step 1: choose a reference configuration
              F : (1s)2             (2s)2(2p)5
              Si: (1s)2(2s)2(2p)6   (3s)2(3p)2
 Step 2: solve the all-electron problem:
               VAE(r),ψAE,nl(r)
 Step 3: construct the pseudo wavefunction that satifies
  rules (nodeless, matching to AE wavefunction, norm-
  conservation, etc)
 Step 4: Invert the Schrödinger equation to get VPS,l(r)
  which is a screened potential
 Step 5: Unscreening the potential to obtain the bare
  VPS,l,ion
         PSEUDOPOTENTIAL GENERATION
VERY IMPORTANT STEP: THE PSEUDO
TEST
(1) Tests on excited configurations”
Example: Reference configuration for Si [core]s2p2
we compare AE and PS results for other configurations:
[core]sp3
[core] s2p1 ….. and many others
   We compare
    - Total energies
    - Energy Eigenvalues
    - Logarithmic derivatives
   Then calculate small (well-known) systems and check
    …..
OPTIMIZATION OF A PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
    Pseudopotentials are optimized with regard to:
1.     Accuracy and trasferability – leads to
      choose small cutoff radius rc and harder
      pseudopotentials
2.    Smoothness – leads to choose a larger cutoff
      radius rc and softer pseudopotentials
                                           Different
                                           Authors
                                           have
                                           Proposed
                                           different
                                           Recipes
CONSTRUCTION RECIPES FOR SMOOTH
AND ACCURATE NORM-CONSERVING PSPS
   Bachelet, Hamann, Schlüter, PRB 26, 4199 (1982)
   Vanderbilt, PRB 32, 8412 (1985)
   Kerker, J. Phys. C 13,L189 (1980)
   Troullier and Martins, PRB 43, 1993 (1991)
   Rappe, Rabe, Kaxiras, and Joannopoulos, PRB 41, 1227 (1990)
   ………..                                        Cu
Troullier-Martins   Kerker            HSC            Vanderbilt
                From Troullier and Martins, PRB 43, 1993 (1991)
UNSCREENING THE PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
   The inversion of the Schrödinger equation gives the
    screened pseudopotential. We need to unscreen it.
       To unscreen:
           nPS (r )   f l  (r )
                                         2
                                  l
                                  PS
                                              Pseudo valence charge density
                   (r )  VH [nPS ], r   Vxc ([nPS ], r )
                         l
              PS
           V Hxc
             PS
           Vion ,l ( r )  V PS
                            scr .,l ( r )  V PS
                                             Hxc ( r )
   However, Vxc is a non-linear functional of n so it is ambiguous
    to separate the effects of core and valence charge if there is a
    significant overlap of the two densities.
   This leads to errors and reduced transferability.
           NON-LINEAR
        CORE CORRECTIONS
                                             Vxc ([ntotal ( PS  core ) ], r )
IMPROVEMENTS ON THE METHOD: SEPARABLE
PSEUDOPOTENTIALS
   We separate the semi-local pseudopotential in a long-
    range local part and one short-range l-dependent part
              PS
            Vion (r )  Vlocal
                          PS
                               (r )   l , m Vl PS (r ) l , m
                                     lm
    Separable Pseudopotentials (Kleinman-Bylander
     Trasform) 1982
                                      PS
                                           V   PS
                                                    V   PS
                                                              PS
                         VˆNL  V local ( r )  
                         PS           lm      l        l      lm
For each l-channel
                                               l ,m     lmPS  V l PS  lmPS
     VNL acts on the reference state ψlm as the
     semilocal pseudopotential ΔVl
    Possible presence of bound ghost states at lower
     energies requires some care.
   IMPROVEMENTS ON THE METHOD: ULTRA-
   SOFT PSEUDOPOTENTIALS
     First-row elements have valence states with angular
      momentum l without l core state. Already nodeless!
                       PS      O: 1s2 2s2 2p4 no p states in core
         AE                     core valence
                               O 2p wavefunction
                            NORM-CONSERVATION makes PS  AE
                               Highly localized states in first
                               row and transition-metal atoms
New “core”                             Difficult convergence in a
Radius for UltraSoft                   plane wave basis
   D. Vanderbilt, Phys. Rev. B 41, 7892 (1990)
   Release the norm conservation criteria to obtain
    smoother pseudo wave functions. This is done by
    splitting the pseudo wave functions into two parts:
1. The ultrasoft valence wave function that do not
   fulfill the norm conservation criteria:
                                 (r )
                                 US
                                 i
2. Plus a core augmentation charge (charge deficit
   in the core region):
         Qij (r )   i, AE (r ) jAE (r )  i,US (r ) US
                                                            j (r )
   The Ultra-Soft Pseudopotential takes the NL form
         US
        V  Vlocal (r )   Dij  i  j             i   i  T  Vloc  i
                           ij
   An overlap operator S is introduced:
                   
                   S  1   Qij  i  j
                            ij
                  2                                  
       n(r )    i (r )   Qlk (r )  i  l  k i 
               i            lk                         
                           0 in case of norm-conservation
 Main Properties:
1 Changed orthonormalization: i Sˆ  j   i , j
2 Generalized eigenvalue problem to be solved
                     ( Hˆ   nk Sˆ )  nk  0
2 The NL Pseudopotential is updated during the
  iterative procedure
                                                   
                    D It
                      mn    D   dr VHxc (r )Qmn (r )
                                 0
                                 mn
A PSEUDOPOTENTIAL FOR ALL SEASONS
   Many different PSPs and Pseudo Generator
    Codes provided in packages:
     Plane-waves pseudopotential codes
 http://www.quantum-espresso.org/pseudo.php
 On-The-Fly Pseudopotential Generation in CASTEP -
 a 164 kB pdf tutorial.
    http://cms.mpi.univie.ac.at/vasp/vasp/
    http://www.abinit.org/downloads/atomic-data-files
        http://www.quantum-espresso.org/pseudo.php
PSEUDO-ELEMENT TABLES
   Name: Oxygen
    Symbol: O
    Atomic number: 8
    Atomic configuration: [He] 2s2 2p4
    Atomic mass: 15.9994 (3)
    Available pseudopotentials:
    O.pz-mt.UPF (details)
    Perdew-Zunger (LDA) exch-corr Martins-Troullier
    O.blyp-van_ak.UPF (details)
    Becke-Lee-Yang-Parr (BLYP) exch-corr
    Vanderbilt ultrasoft author: ak
    O.pbe-van_gipaw.UPF (details)                            And many other…….
    Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) exch-corr
    Vanderbilt ultrasoft author: gipaw
    O.blyp-mt.UPF (details)
    Becke-Lee-Yang-Parr (BLYP) exch-corr Martins-Troullier
    O.pz-kjpaw.UPF (details)
    Perdew-Zunger (LDA) exch-corr Projector Augmented
    Waves (Kresse-Joubert paper)
    O.pbe-van_ak.UPF (details)
    Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) exch-corr Vanderbilt
    ultrasoft author: ak
    O.pbe-rrkjus.UPF (details)
    Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) exch-corr Rabe Rappe
    Kaxiras Joannopoulos (ultrasoft)
PSEUDOPOTENTIALS FOR SEMIEMPIRICAL
CALCULATIONS
    Main steps in development
   Chelikowsky and Cohen, PRB 14, 556 (1976)
Atomistic Empirical Pseudopotential
   Mader and Zunger, PRB 50, 17393 (1994) –
   Wang and Zunger, PRB 51, 17398 (1995) – LDA derived
    semiempirical pseudopotentials
LDA-DERIVED EMPRICAL PSEUDOPOTENTIALS
  Problems with first-principles methods
  1. Difficult to apply to systems with thousands-
     million atoms (nanostructured materials)
     2. Problem with excited states: the band gap is
        often severely understimated  comparison
        with experiments (spectroscopies) not goood
             Transferable screened pseudopotentials
The idea: reproduce experimentally determined band
energies, optical spectra, etc, and at the same time, LDA-
quality wavefunctions and related quantities.
SEPM FROM LDA CALCULATIONS
1.     LDA                 SLDA
                                             Form factors 
                                                     
                                            Local Potential
 - Calculate LDA for structure                     VLDA (G )
                                               Vloc+VHxc
 - Spherical Average of the Screened Local Potential
                                    , 
           V 
             LDA   (G )   S (G )vSLDA ( G )
                               ,
                                
                                                      ,
 - Structural average                   vSLDA (r )  vSLDA (r )
                                                                  
                         
                                              
     -The points     v   SLDA   (G )      vs   G   are fitted by the continous
      function :
                                    N
2.    SLDA                             SEPM
    - Only the Coefficients CSLDA are adjusted to fit
      the experimental or quasiparticle calculated
      excitation properties
   Unlike standard EPM, which produces only discrete
    form factors and is hence suitable only for a
    particular crystal structure and lattice constant, the
    new SEPM or AEPM can be used for different
    structures and volumes with good transferability.
The form factors for each particular structure
are extracted from a “Universal” continous
function of q
           N ( 4 , 5, 6 )
                                                                                    q 2  a1
                                     cn ( q bn )
                                                                 v ( q )  a 0
                                                        2
v (q)                     a n e                          or                          a 3 q 2
               n 1                                                                a e
                                                                                    2               1
PROPERTIES OF AEPMS
•   Good band structure
•   Accurate effective masses
•   Accurate band gaps
•   Good elastic properties
          (Bulk modulus, deformation potentials)
•   Transferable
•   Low Energy cut-off (~5 Ryd)
•   Simple analytic form (few parameters)
AVAILABLE ATOMISTIC EMPIRICAL
PSEUDOPOTENTIALS
                                Only certain
                                combinations
                                are available
                                (IV, III-V, II-
                                      VI)
AN EXAMPLE: THE INAS/GASB SYSTEM
                  Broken Gap System
                  Semiconductor because of the e1
                   and h1 confinement
                  Possibility of tuning the band
                   gap between 0 ↔ 400 meV
                   Type II: short periods SLs to
                   increase the radiative
                   ricombination efficiency
                    GaAs             InAs              GaAs
         CA
                           As                     As
                    G           In           In
                                                       G
                    a
                                                       a
The single (001)
interface has C2v
  symmetry                 As                     Sb
                    Ga                       In        G
                                In
        NCA                                            a
                    GaSb                               GaSb
                                      InAs
IN-PLANE POLARIZATION ANISOTROPY
   e h   
 I      ( p [1 1 0 ])
   e h                1
 I      ( p [ 1 1 0 ])
                                 InAs/AlSb
                                 superlattice
                      Y=[-110]
                      X=[110]
                                 Fuchs et al. in
                                 “Antimonide-Related
                                 Strained-Layer
                                 Heterostructures”
      Wavenumber (cm-1)
 ATOMISTIC EMPIRICAL PSEUDOPOTENTIAL
 ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE
• Solve the Schrödinger equation FULLY ATOMISTICALLY,
           2
                                                                plane wave
        v r  R n  (r )   (r )                     expansion
     2m n                                                     of ψ(r)
          each atom      strain
          individually   minimizing
          described      atomic positions
                                   Folded
  • not   self-consistent          spectrum
                                   method
  • no   LDA errors
                                        The spectrum at the left is the original
                                        spectrum of H. The spectrum at the right is
                                        the folded spectrum of (H-E_ref)^2
    FORM FACTORS
•    v(q) continous function of q
    v (r )  e            v (| q |)1  vn                     vn ( )  a4 Tr( )
                i q( r )
                                                q 2  a1
                             v ( q )  a 0        a 3 q 2
                                               a e
                                                2               1
     Parameters fit to reproduce:
1. Gaps Eg and effective masses m*
2. Hydrostatic ag and                                                         for ALL 4
   biaxial b deformation potentials                                           binaries
3. Band offsets and spin-orbit splitting so
4. LDA-predicted single band edge
   deformation potentials av, ac
FIT: RESULTS
  HANDLING OF BIAXIAL STRAIN
• Explicit   strain dependence in v(q,)
      with     v n  (  )  a 4 Tr (  )
                                              EPM
                                              LAPW
        IF specific offsets
        IF specific bonds
 CRYSTAL POTENTIAL FROM A
 SUPERPOSITION OF ATOMIC POTENTIALS
Interfaces or                      n             4n
                vIn (Asn Sb 4n )  vIn (InAs)      vIn (InSb)
  Disorder                         4              n
FIRST HEAVY-HOLE CHARGE DENSITY
The method predicts the positive band bowings parameters
of the ternary alloys in agreement with experiment!
 RESULTS FOR THE (INAS)6/(GASB)M AND
(INAS)8/(GASB)N SUPERLATTICES
      Eg
                     with increasing n
CORRECT TREND!
                       (InAs)8/(GaSb)n
         Number of GaSb monolayers n
OVERLAP OF THE ELECTRON STATES
  InAs       GaSb
LONG-PERIOD INAS/GASB SLS
                               (InAs)46(GaSb)14
MORE TO BE SEEN FRIDAY MORNING ……
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION
• If we choose a plane wave for χn,k we call the ψnk
  an OPW (orthogonalized plane wave)
                        1  1 q  r                                     
           OPW
            
            q     (r )    e
                         V 
                                                               j   q  j  OPW
                                                      j                     
• OPWs were used as basis functions for expansion:
                      
               n,k (r )    i  qOPW
                                       ,i
                                                  i
                                             Dependence on l,m
   j  l ,m, j (r )
                                               
                   nl ,,mk ( r )   n , k ( r )    l , m , j  n , k  l , m , j
                                                          j