Issue 51, 2019

Development of a robust tool to extract Mulliken and Löwdin charges from plane waves and its application to solid-state materials

Abstract

Chemically understanding the electronic structure of a given material provides valuable information about its chemical as well as physical nature and, hence, is the key to designing materials with desired properties. For example, to rationalize the structures of solid-state materials in terms of the valence-electron distribution, highly schematic, essentially non-quantum-mechanical electron-partitioning models such as the Zintl–Klemm concept have been introduced by assuming idealized ionic charges. To go beyond the limits of the aforementioned concept, a Mulliken and Löwdin population analytical tool has been developed to accurately calculate the charges in solid-state materials solely from first-principles plane-wave-based computations. This population analysis tool, which has been implemented into the LOBSTER code, has been applied to diverse solid-state materials including polar intermetallics to prove its capability, including quick access to Madelung energies. In addition, a former weakness of the population analysis (namely, the basis-set dependency) no longer exists for the present approach which therefore represents a comparatively fast and accurate wave-function-based alternative for plane-wave calculations for which density-based charge approaches (e.g., Bader like) have been very popular.

Graphical abstract: Development of a robust tool to extract Mulliken and Löwdin charges from plane waves and its application to solid-state materials

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Jul 2019
Accepted
12 Sep 2019
First published
20 Sep 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2019,9, 29821-29830

Development of a robust tool to extract Mulliken and Löwdin charges from plane waves and its application to solid-state materials

C. Ertural, S. Steinberg and R. Dronskowski, RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 29821 DOI: 10.1039/C9RA05190B

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