COMP-PHNANACHEM-PHJan 25, 2018

Variational formulation for Wannier functions with entangled band structure

arXiv:1801.0857219 citationsh-index: 14
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This work provides a theoretical framework and robust algorithm for constructing localized Wannier functions in entangled band systems, addressing a known bottleneck in quantum chemistry and materials science.

The authors develop a variational formulation for computing maximally localized Wannier functions in systems with entangled band structure, demonstrating robust performance on real materials (silicon, copper, aluminum) and showing that the resulting functions decay only algebraically for the free electron gas, with a modification proposed for super-algebraic decay.

Wannier functions provide a localized representation of spectral subspaces of periodic Hamiltonians, and play an important role for interpreting and accelerating Hartree-Fock and Kohn-Sham density functional theory calculations in quantum physics and chemistry. For systems with isolated band structure, the existence of exponentially localized Wannier functions and numerical algorithms for finding them are well studied. In contrast, for systems with entangled band structure, Wannier functions must be generalized to span a subspace larger than the spectral subspace of interest to achieve favorable spatial locality. In this setting, little is known about the theoretical properties of these Wannier functions, and few algorithms can find them robustly. We develop a variational formulation to compute these generalized maximally localized Wannier functions. When paired with an initial guess based on the selected columns of the density matrix (SCDM) method, our method can robustly find Wannier functions for systems with entangled band structure. We formulate the problem as a constrained nonlinear optimization problem, and show how the widely used disentanglement procedure can be interpreted as a splitting method to approximately solve this problem. We demonstrate the performance of our method using real materials including silicon, copper, and aluminum. To examine more precisely the localization properties of Wannier functions, we study the free electron gas in one and two dimensions, where we show that the maximally-localized Wannier functions only decay algebraically. We also explain using a one dimensional example how to modify them to obtain super-algebraic decay.

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