The macroscopic dielectric function,
, measures how a given dielectric medium reacts when subject to an external electric field. From
one can extract several optical properties such as absorption, optical conductivity, reflectance. However, it is important that the interacting electrons and holes are taken into account. This makes the evaluation of the macroscopic dielectric function more involved, since it goes beyond the single-particle level, working either at the Bethe-Salpeter or time-dependent density-functional theory level.
Within VASP, users can select two different methods for how
is computed. The first is based on the eigendecomposition of the electron-hole Hamiltonian,
. It allows for the evaluation of
by first obtaining the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of
and it is based on the Bethe-Salpeter equation or the Casida equation. The second method transforms the mathematical expression of
into a time-dependent integral. By propagating in time the dipolar moments and then applying a Fourier transform, it can compute
.
The advantage of the later method in comparison to the former is related to the cost, with the time-dependent integral being
, while the eigendecomposition has a cost of
, where
is the rank of
. This means that for very large numbers of bands or k-points, the time-dependent formalism is cheaper than the eigendecomposition method.
Below we present a brief description of the method, from its theoretical support to how calculations should be performed, with the relevant approximations needed in the two-particle Hamiltonian.
The macroscopic-dielectric function as a time-dependent integral
The starting point is that one can re-write
as a time-dependent integral[1]. It starts from its expression, given by
,
where
is the dipolar moment associated to the the conduction
and valence band
, and k-point
,
is the index of the eigenstate of
, with
and
being the associated eigenvector and eigenvalue. This equation can be brought into operational form,
![{\displaystyle
\epsilon^M(\omega)=1+\frac{4 \pi}{\Omega_0}\left\langle\mu\left|\left[\frac{1}{\omega+\mathrm{i} \eta+\hat{H}^{\mathrm{exc}}}-\frac{1}{\omega+\mathrm{i} \eta-\hat{H}^{\mathrm{exc}}}\right]\right| \mu\right\rangle
}](/wiki/index.php?title=Special:MathShowImage&hash=c1a36161307730e99c2fa46831ce83c9&mode=mathml)
by using the spectral decomposition
. Then, one can bring the new expression of
into a time-dependent integral, by using
,
and recognising that
is the exponential form of a time-dependent equation. These considerations allow the expression of
to be written as
,
The fundamental aspect behind this transformation is that the new, time-dependent vector
follows the equation
![{\displaystyle
\mathrm i \frac{\mathrm d}{\mathrm d t}\left|\xi^j(t)\right\rangle=\hat{H}(t)\left|\xi^j(t)\right\rangle,
}](/wiki/index.php?title=Special:MathShowImage&hash=074ab8aca03155dac09394d03ce7f584&mode=mathml)
with the initial vector elements given by
. It is worthy to note that
is split into two parts,
, where
is the ground-state Hamiltonian, and
is the time-dependent perturbation.
The delta-like perturbation
explain how the system is perturbed with the delta-potential
The many-body terms in the hamiltonian
Independent-particle approximation
Hartree exchange potential
Screened two-particle interaction
Exchange-correlation effects from time-dependent density functional theory
Ladder diagrams from many-body perturbation theory
explain what different components are included in H (LFXC,LHARTREE,LADDER, or none)
Step-by-step instructions
Step 2: Time-evolution run
Setting up the time-step
Choosing the direction of perturbation
Comparison to other methods
Bethe-Salpeter equation
Casida equation
Related tags and articles
References