Competition between exchange-driven dimerization and magnetism in diamond (111)

Betül Pamuk and Matteo Calandra
Phys. Rev. B 99, 155303 – Published 11 April 2019

Abstract

Strong electron-electron interaction in ultraflat edge states can be responsible for correlated phases of matter, such as magnetism, charge-density wave, or superconductivity. Here we consider the diamond (111) surface that, after Pandey reconstruction, presents zigzag carbon chains, generating a flat surface band. By performing full structural optimization with hybrid functionals and neglecting spin polarization, we find that a substantial dimerization (0.090Å/0.076Å bond disproportionation in the PBE0/HSE06) occurs on the chains; a structural effect absent in calculations with functionals based on the local density/generalized gradient approximation. This dimerization is the primary mechanism for the opening of an insulating gap in the absence of spin polarization. The single-particle direct gap is 1.7eV (1.0eV) in the PBE0 (HSE06), comparable with the experimental optical gap of 1.47eV, and on the larger (smaller) side of the estimated experimental single-particle gap window of 1.57–1.87 eV, after inclusion of excitonic effects. However, by including spin polarization in the calculation, we find that the exchange interaction stabilizes a different ground state, undimerized, with no net magnetization and ferrimagnetic along the Pandey π chains with magnetic moments as large as 0.20.3μB in the PBE0. The direct single-particle band gap in the equal spin channel is approximately 2.2eV (1.5eV) with the PBE0 (HSE06) functional. Our work is relevant for systems with flat bands in general and wherever the interplay between structural, electronic, and magnetic degrees of freedom is crucial, as in twisted bilayer graphene, IVB atoms on IVB(111) surfaces such as Pb/Si(111), or molecular crystals.

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  • Received 1 October 2018
  • Revised 31 January 2019
  • Corrected 30 April 2019

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.99.155303

©2019 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Corrections

30 April 2019

Correction: The title contained an error and has been fixed.

Authors & Affiliations

Betül Pamuk1,* and Matteo Calandra2,†

  • 1School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA
  • 2Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Institut des Nanosciences de Paris, UMR7588, F-75252 Paris, France

  • *betul.pamuk@cornell.edu
  • matteo.calandra@upmc.fr

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Issue

Vol. 99, Iss. 15 — 15 April 2019

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