Sec III
This commit is contained in:
parent
9b51a663c0
commit
2b58dc0b45
@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ Unless otherwise stated, atomic units are used throughout.
|
||||
\label{sec:gw}
|
||||
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
||||
|
||||
The central equation of many-body perturbation theory based on Hedin's equations is the so-called quasiparticle equation which, within the $GW$ approximation, reads
|
||||
The central equation of many-body perturbation theory based on Hedin's equations is the so-called dynamical and non-hermitian quasiparticle equation which, within the $GW$ approximation, reads
|
||||
\begin{equation}
|
||||
\label{eq:quasipart_eq}
|
||||
\qty[ \bF + \bSig(\omega = \epsilon_p) ] \psi_p(\bx) = \epsilon_p \psi_p(\bx),
|
||||
@ -176,9 +176,7 @@ Throughout the manuscript, the indices $p,q,r,s$ are general orbitals while $i,j
|
||||
The indices $\mu$ and $\nu$ are composite indices, \eg $\nu=(ia)$, referring to neutral (single) excitations.
|
||||
|
||||
The self-energy can be physically understood as a correction to the Hartree-Fock (HF) problem (represented by $\bF$) accounting for dynamical screening effects.
|
||||
Similarly to the HF case, Eq.~\eqref{eq:quasipart_eq} has to be solved self-consistently.
|
||||
\titou{Note that $\bSig(\omega)$ is dynamical which implies that it depends on both the one-electron orbitals $\psi_p(\bx)$ and their corresponding energies $\epsilon_p$, while $\bF$ depends only on the orbitals.}
|
||||
\PFL{I still don't like it.}
|
||||
Similarly to the HF case, Eq.~\eqref{eq:quasipart_eq} has to be solved self-consistently but the dynamical and non-hermitian nature of $\bSig(\omega)$, as well as its functional form, makes it much more challenging to solve from a practical point of view.
|
||||
|
||||
The matrix elements of $\bSig(\omega)$ have the following closed-form expression \cite{Hedin_1999,Tiago_2006,Bruneval_2012,vanSetten_2013,Bruneval_2016}
|
||||
\begin{equation}
|
||||
@ -212,10 +210,9 @@ and
|
||||
are bare two-electron integrals in the spin-orbital basis.
|
||||
|
||||
The diagonal matrix $\boldsymbol{\Omega}$ contains the positive eigenvalues of the RPA problen defined in Eq.~\eqref{eq:full_dRPA} and its elements $\Omega_\nu$ appear in Eq.~\eqref{eq:GW_selfenergy}.
|
||||
In the Tamm-Dancoff approximation (TDA), one sets $\bB = \bO$ in Eq.~\eqref{eq:full_dRPA} which reduces to a Hermitian eigenvalue problem of the form $\bA \bX = \bX \bOm$.
|
||||
\ant{The corresponding TDA screened two-electron integrals are computed using Eq.~(\ref{eq:GW_sERI}) with $\bY=0$.}
|
||||
In the Tamm-Dancoff approximation (TDA), one sets $\bB = \bO$ in Eq.~\eqref{eq:full_dRPA} which reduces to a Hermitian eigenvalue problem of the form $\bA \bX = \bX \bOm$ (hence $\bY=0$).
|
||||
|
||||
Because of the frequency dependence of the self-energy, solving exactly the quasiparticle equation \eqref{eq:quasipart_eq} is a rather complicated task.
|
||||
As mentioned above, because of the frequency dependence of the self-energy, solving exactly the quasiparticle equation \eqref{eq:quasipart_eq} is a rather complicated task.
|
||||
Hence, several approximate schemes have been developed to bypass self-consistency.
|
||||
The most popular strategy is the one-shot (perturbative) $G_0W_0$ scheme, where the self-consistency is completely abandoned, and the off-diagonal elements of Eq.~\eqref{eq:quasipart_eq} are neglected.
|
||||
Assuming a HF starting point, this results in $K$ quasiparticle equations that read
|
||||
@ -237,10 +234,8 @@ These additional solutions with large weights are the previously mentioned intru
|
||||
One obvious drawback of the one-shot scheme mentioned above is its starting point dependence.
|
||||
Indeed, in Eq.~\eqref{eq:G0W0} we choose to rely on HF orbital energies but this is arbitrary and one could have chosen Kohn-Sham energies (and orbitals) instead.
|
||||
As commonly done, one can even ``tune'' the starting point to obtain the best possible one-shot $GW$ quasiparticle energies. \cite{Korzdorfer_2012,Marom_2012,Bruneval_2013,Gallandi_2015,Caruso_2016,Gallandi_2016}
|
||||
Alternatively, one may solve this set of quasiparticle equations self-consistently leading to the ev$GW$ scheme.
|
||||
\ant{To do so the quasiparticle energies are used to define a new RPA problem leading to updated two-electron screened integrals.
|
||||
Then the diagonal elements of the self-energy are updated as well and Eq.~\eqref{eq:G0W0} is solved again to obtain new quasiparticle energies.}
|
||||
This procedure is then iterated until convergence on the quasiparticle energies is reached.
|
||||
|
||||
Alternatively, one may solve iteratively the set of quasiparticle equations \eqref{eq:G0W0} to reach convergence of the quasiparticle energies, leading to the partially self-consistent scheme named ev$GW$.
|
||||
However, if one of the quasiparticle equations does not have a well-defined quasiparticle solution, reaching self-consistency can be challenging, if not impossible.
|
||||
Even at convergence, the starting point dependence is not totally removed as the quasiparticle energies still depend on the initial set of orbitals. \cite{Marom_2012}
|
||||
|
||||
@ -268,10 +263,11 @@ If it is not the case, the qs$GW$ self-consistent scheme inevitably oscillates b
|
||||
|
||||
The satellites causing convergence problems are the above-mentioned intruder states.
|
||||
One can deal with them by introducing \textit{ad hoc} regularizers.
|
||||
\ant{The $\ii\eta$ term in the denominators of Eq.~(\ref{eq:GW_selfenergy}), which stems from a regularization of the convolution to obtain $\Sigma$ and should theoretically be set to 0,\cite{Martin_2016} is similar to the usual imaginary-shift regularizer employed in various other theories plagued by the intruder-state problem. \cite{Surjan_1996,Forsberg_1997,Monino_2022,Battaglia_2022}.}
|
||||
For example, the $\ii\eta$ term in the denominators of Eq.~\eqref{eq:GW_selfenergy}, sometimes referred to as a broadening parameter linked to the width of the quasiparticle peak, is similar to the usual imaginary-shift regularizer employed in various other theories plagued by the intruder-state problem. \cite{Surjan_1996,Forsberg_1997,Monino_2022,Battaglia_2022}.
|
||||
However, this $\eta$ parameter stems from a regularization of the convolution to obtain $\Sigma$ and should theoretically be set to zero. \cite{Martin_2016}
|
||||
Several other regularizers are possible \cite{Stuck_2013,Rostam_2017,Lee_2018a,Evangelista_2014b,Shee_2021} and in particular, it was shown in Ref.~\onlinecite{Monino_2022} that a regularizer inspired by the SRG had some advantages over the imaginary shift.
|
||||
Nonetheless, it would be more rigorous, and more instructive, to obtain this regularizer from first principles by applying the SRG formalism to many-body perturbation theory.
|
||||
This is the central aim of the present work.
|
||||
This is one of the aims of the present work.
|
||||
|
||||
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
||||
\section{The similarity renormalization group}
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user