Abramovitch, D. J., Coulter, J., Beck, S., & Andrew J. Millis. (2025). Electron-phonon coupling in correlated metals: A dynamical mean-field theory study. Physical Review B, 112(7), Article 075113. https://doi.org/10.1103/467t-z5b2
E138-02 - Forschungsbereich Correlations: Theory and Experiments
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Journal:
Physical Review B
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ISSN:
2469-9950
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Date (published):
7-Aug-2025
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Number of Pages:
15
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Publisher:
AMER PHYSICAL SOC
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Peer reviewed:
Yes
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Keywords:
electron-phonon coupling; DFT; DMFT
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Abstract:
Strong electron-electron interactions are known to significantly modify the electron-phonon coupling relative to the predictions of density functional theory, but this effect is challenging to calculate with realistic theories of strongly correlated materials. Here we define and calculate a version of the electron-phonon coupling applicable beyond band theory by combining first-principles density functional theory plus dynamical mean-field theory with finite-difference phonon perturbations, presenting results for several representative phonon modes in two materials of interest. In the three-orbital correlated metal SrVO3, we find that intra-V-<inf>t<sup>2</sup>g</inf>-band correlation significantly increases the coupling of these electrons to a Jahn-Teller phonon mode that splits the degenerate orbital energies, while slightly reducing the coupling associated with a breathing phonon that couples to the charge on each V atom. In the infinite layer cuprate CaCuO<inf>2</inf>, we find that local correlation within the d<inf>x<sup>2</sup>−y<sup>2</sup></inf> orbital derived band has a modest effect on coupling of near-Fermi-surface electrons to optical breathing modes. In both cases, the interaction correction to the electron-phonon coupling predicted by dynamical mean-field theory has a significant dependence on the electronic frequency, arising from a lattice-distortion dependence of the correlated electron dynamics, showing the inadequacy of the simple picture in which correlations change static local susceptibilities. We also show that the electron-phonon scattering and phonon lifetimes associated with these phonon modes are modified by the electronic correlation. Our findings shed light on the material- and mode-specific role of dynamical electronic correlation in electron-phonon coupling and highlight the importance of developing efficient computational methods for treating electron-phonon coupling in correlated materials.
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Research Areas:
Quantum Many-body Systems Physics: 50% Computational Materials Science: 50%