Phys. Rev. B 72, 035105 (2005) [13 pages]Systematic treatment of displacements, strains, and electric fields in density-functional perturbation theoryReceived 21 January 2005; published 5 July 2005 The methods of density-functional perturbation theory may be used to calculate various physical response properties of insulating crystals including elastic, dielectric, Born charge, and piezoelectric tensors. These and other important tensors may be defined as second derivatives of an appropriately defined energy functional with respect to atomic-displacement, electric-field, or strain perturbations, or as mixed derivatives with respect to two of these perturbations. The resulting tensor quantities tend to be coupled in complex ways in polar crystals, giving rise to a variety of variant definitions. For example, it is generally necessary to distinguish between elastic tensors defined under different electrostatic boundary conditions, and between dielectric tensors defined under different elastic boundary conditions. Here, we describe an approach for computing all of these various response tensors in a unified and systematic fashion. Applications are presented for two materials, hexagonal ZnO and rhombohedral BaTiO3, at zero temperature. © 2005 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.72.035105
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.72.035105
PACS:
62.20.Dc, 77.22.Ch, 77.65.Bn
|
