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Efficient Method for Modeling Polarons Using Electronic Structure Methods.

Thang Duc PhamN Aaron Deskins
Published in: Journal of chemical theory and computation (2020)
Polarons are localized electronic states that occur in many semiconductors. Modeling polarons at the quantum or atomic scale is often performed using electronic structure methods such as density functional theory (DFT). A problem using DFT to model polarons is that self-interaction errors (SIEs) often result in delocalized electronic states rather than localized states. Methods such as DFT + U or hybrid functionals can be used to overcome SIE, but these methods may still not form stable polarons. The initial geometries and wavefunctions strongly influence and determine how and if polarons may arise during electronic structure calculations. In this paper, we have assessed different strategies to efficiently obtain low-energy localized polarons in several semiconductors (TiO2, m-HfO2, and m-BiVO4). These strategies involve distorting the initial geometry to create polaron-like geometries or generating initial wavefunctions that mimic polaronic states. We show that perturbing the crystal's structure to induce polaron formation (which we call the bond distortion method) is a very efficient approach to form stable polarons, requiring less computational time than other methods. In contrast, other methods that we assessed may not lead to stable polaron states or may require much greater time (up to four times more computational time). Having a reliable, efficient method to ensure polaron formation is crucial to modeling polarons. The results described herein will save wasted computational efforts and also enable efforts such as high-throughput simulation of polarons.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
  • high throughput
  • molecular docking
  • quality improvement
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • patient safety
  • adverse drug