Impact of exact exchange in the description of the electronic structure of organic charge-transfer molecular crystals
Author(s) -
Alexandr Fonari,
Christopher Sutton,
JeanLuc Brédas,
Veaceslav Coropceanu
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
physical review b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1538-4489
pISSN - 1098-0121
DOI - 10.1103/physrevb.90.165205
Subject(s) - charge (physics) , density functional theory , superexchange , pentacene , materials science , band gap , hybrid functional , crystal (programming language) , chemical physics , molecule , transfer (computing) , condensed matter physics , physics , molecular physics , nanotechnology , quantum mechanics , ferromagnetism , layer (electronics) , parallel computing , computer science , programming language , thin film transistor
We evaluate the impact that the amount of nonlocal Hartree-Fock (%HF) exchange included in a hybrid density functional has on the microscopic parameters (transfer integrals, band gaps, bandwidths, and effective masses) describing charge transport in high-mobility organic crystals. We consider both crystals based on a single molecule, such as pentacene, and crystals based on mixed-stack charge-transfer systems, such as dibenzo-TTF–TCNQ. In the pentacene crystal, the band gap decreases and the effective masses increase linearly with an increase in the amount of %HF exchange. In contrast, in the charge-transfer crystals, while the band gap increases linearly, the effective masses vary only slightly with an increase in %HF exchange. We show that the superexchange nature of the electronic couplings in charge-transfer systems is responsible for this peculiar evolution of the effective masses. We compare the density functional theory results with results obtained within the G0W0 approximation as a way of benchmarking the optimal amount of %HF exchange needed in a given functional
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