CPM Seminar
Engineering electronic states at transition metal
oxide interfaces: picoscale distortions and electronic correlations
Sohrab Ismail-Beigi
Department of Applied Physcis Yale University
The atomic-scale structure and bonding topology in a material determines its
resulting properties. Alterable or reversible bond distortions at the picometer
length scale in turn modify a material's electronic configuration and can give
rise to functional properties. Picoscale bond perturbations represent the
ultimate length scale for materials engineering: any smaller and the effects
are too small to matter; any larger and the bonds are completely broken so
we are describing a different material. Using first principles theory based
on density functional theory (DFT), I will present examples of metal oxide
interfaces where picoscale distortions can control relative 3d orbital energies
and electron occupancies. This approach permits one to answer questions
such as “what does Ni3+ do when its orbital degeneracy
is broken strongly?” or “can one make an atom behave
partway between two neighboring atoms in the periodic table?”
Despite permitting us to make such advances in materials theory and engineering,
the workhorse DFT approach has some serious shortcomings. While optimized
atomic geometries, electron densities and mean orbital occupations from DFT
are typically high quality, DFT-predicted electronic band structures often
suffers from qualitative errors for materials with strong and localized
electronic correlations such as transition metal oxides. I will give a
short pedagogical introduction to how slave-boson methods go beyond band
theory (i.e., DFT) to incorporate correlations, and then relate my work on
developing slave-boson methods that describe dynamic electron fluctuations
and band renormalizations.
Thursday, April 26th 2018, 10:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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