6533b851fe1ef96bd12a99a5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Theory of bound polarons in oxide compounds

Evghenii P. PokatilovEugene A. KotominVladimir M. FominRoberts I. EglitisYu. F. ZhukovskiiJ. T. Devreese

subject

PhysicsCoupling constantStrongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)FOS: Physical sciencesPhotoionizationCoupling (probability)PolaronCondensed Matter - Strongly Correlated ElectronsExcited statePhysics::Atomic and Molecular ClustersAbsorption (logic)Atomic physicsContinuum hypothesisEnergy (signal processing)Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics

description

We present a multilateral theoretical study of bound polarons in oxide compounds MgO and \alpha-Al_2O_3 (corundum). A continuum theory at arbitrary electron-phonon coupling is used for calculation of the energies of thermal dissociation, photoionization (optically induced release of an electron (hole) from the ground self-consistent state), as well as optical absorption to the non-relaxed excited states. Unlike the case of free strong-coupling polarons, where the ratio \kappa of the photoionization energy to the thermal dissociation energy was shown to be always equal to 3, here this ratio depends on the Froehlich coupling constant \alpha and the screened Coulomb interaction strength \beta. Reasonable variation of these two parameters has demonstrated that the magnitude of \kappa remains usually in the narrow interval from 1 to 2.5. This is in agreement with atomistic calculations and experimental data for hole O^- polarons bound to the cation vacancy in MgO. The thermal dissociation energy for the ground self-consistent state and the energy of the optically induced charge transfer process (hops of a hole between O^{2-} ions) have been calculated using the quantum-chemical method INDO. Results obtained within the two approaches for hole O$^-$ polarons bound by the cation vacancies (V^-) in MgO and by the Mg^{2+} impurity (V_{Mg}) in corundum are compared to experimental data and to each other. We discuss a surprising closeness of the results obtained on the basis of independent models and their agreement with experiment.

10.1103/physrevb.63.184304https://hdl.handle.net/10067/343130151162165141