RESUMO
The Rashba spin splitting in uniaxial, inversion-asymmetric materials has attracted considerable interest for spintronic applications. The most widely used theoretical framework to model such states is Kohn-Sham density functional theory (DFT) in combination with standard (semi)local exchange-correlation density functional approximations (DFAs). However, in the presence of spin-orbit coupling, DFT misses contributions due to modification of the many-body interaction by spin currents Jâ. Inclusion of the latter effects requires a spin current DFT (SCDFT) formulation, which is seldom considered. We investigate the giant Rashba splitting in single-layer WSe2, and we quantify the effect of including spin currents in DFAs of the SCDFT. Crucially, we show that SCDFT allows fully capturing the giant Rashba band splitting in single-layer WSe2, otherwise previously systematically underestimated by standard (semi)local DFAs within the DFT framework. We find the inclusion of Jâ on the DFA increases the Rashba splitting by about 20%.
RESUMO
A previously proposed noncanonical coupled-perturbed Kohn-Sham density functional theory (KS-DFT)/Hartree-Fock (HF) treatment for spin-orbit coupling is here generalized to infinite periodic systems. The scalar-relativistic periodic KS-DFT/HF solution, obtained with a relativistic effective core potential, is taken as the zeroth-order approximation. Explicit expressions are given for the total energy through third-order, which satisfy the 2N + 1 rule (i.e., requiring only the first-order perturbed wave function for determining the energy through third-order). Expressions for additional second-order corrections to the perturbed wave function (as well as related one-electron properties) are worked out at the uncoupled-perturbed level of theory. The approach is implemented in the Crystal program and validated with calculations of the total energy, electronic band structure, and density variables of spin-current DFT on the tungsten dichalcogenide hexagonal bilayer series (i.e., WSe2, WTe2, WPo2, WLv2), including 6p and 7p elements as a stress test. The computed properties through second- or third-order match well with those from reference two-component self-consistent field (2c-SCF) calculations. For total energies, E(3) was found to consistently improve the agreement against the 2c-SCF reference values. For electronic band structures, visible differences w.r.t. 2c-SCF remained through second-order in only the single-most difficult case of WLv2. As for density variables of spin-current DFT, the perturbed electron density, being vanishing in first-order, is the most challenging for the perturbation theory approach. The visible differences in the electron densities are, however, largest close to the core region of atoms and smaller in the valence region. Perturbed spin-current densities, on the other hand, are well reproduced in all tested cases.