Over the years, Hedin's self-energy has been proven to be a rather accurate and simple approximation to evaluate electronic quasiparticle energies in solids and in molecules. Attempts to improve over the simple approximation, the so-called vertex corrections, have been constantly proposed in the literature. Here, we derive, analyze, and benchmark the complete second-order term in the screened Coulomb interaction for finite systems. This self-energy named 32 contains all the possible time orderings that combine 3 Green's functions and 2 dynamic . We present the analytic formula and its imaginary frequency counterpart, with the latter allowing us to treat larger molecules. The accuracy of the 32 self-energy is evaluated on well-established benchmarks (GW100, Acceptor 24, and Core 65) for valence and core quasiparticle energies. Its link with the simpler static approximation, named SOSEX for static screened second-order exchange, is analyzed, which leads us to propose a more consistent approximation named 2SOSEX. In the end, we find that neither the 32 self-energy nor any of the investigated approximations to it improve over one-shot with a good starting point. Only quasi-particle self-consistent HOMO energies are slightly improved by addition of the 32 self-energy correction. We show that this is due to the self-consistent update of the screened Coulomb interaction, leading to an overall sign change of the vertex correction to the frontier quasiparticle energies.
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J Phys Chem Lett
January 2025
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California 93106, United States.
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Terahertz Research Center, School of Electronic Science and Engineering, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu 611731, China.
Low-dimensional materials (LDMs) with unique electromagnetic properties and diverse local phenomena have garnered significant interest, particularly for their low-energy responses within the terahertz (THz) range. Achieving deep subwavelength resolution, THz nanoscopy offers a promising route to investigate LDMs at the nanoscale. Steady-state THz nanoscopy has been demonstrated as a powerful tool for investigating light-matter interactions across boundaries and interfaces, enabling insights into physical phenomena such as localized collective oscillations, quantum confinement of quasiparticles, and metal-to-insulator phase transitions (MITs).
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Google Quantum AI, Santa Barbara, California 93117, USA.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
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Institute of Solid State Physics, TU Wien, 1040, Vienna, Austria.
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