Fully anharmonic nonperturbative theory of vibronically renormalized electronic band structures
Marios Zacharias, Matthias Scheffler, Christian Carbogno
Abstract
We develop a first-principles approach for the treatment of vibronic interactions in solids that overcomes the main limitations of state-of-the-art electron-phonon coupling formalisms. In particular, anharmonic effects in the nuclear dynamics are accounted for to all orders via ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. This nonperturbative, self-consistent approach evaluates the response of the wave functions along the computed anharmonic trajectory; thus, it fully considers the coupling between nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom. We validate and demonstrate the merits of the concept by calculating temperature-dependent, momentum-resolved spectral functions for silicon and the cubic perovskite ${\mathrm{SrTiO}}_{3}$, a strongly anharmonic material featuring soft modes. In the latter case, our approach reveals that anharmonicity and higher-order vibronic couplings contribute substantially to the electronic structure at finite temperatures, noticeably affecting band gaps and effective masses and hence macroscopic properties such as transport coefficients.