Quasiparticle and excitonic properties of monolayer SrTiO3

Lorenzo Varrassi, Peitao Liu, and Cesare Franchini
Phys. Rev. Materials 8, 024001 – Published 7 February 2024

Abstract

SrTiO3 is one of the most studied transition metal oxides. Recently, a breakthrough was achieved with the fabrication of freestanding SrTiO3 ultrathin films down to the monolayer limit. However, the many-body effects on the quasiparticle and optical properties of monolayer SrTiO3 remain unexplored. Using state-of-the-art many-body perturbation theory in the GW approximation combined with the Bethe-Salpeter equation, we study the quasiparticle band structure, optical, and excitonic properties of monolayer SrTiO3. We show that quasiparticle corrections significantly alter the band-structure topology; however, the widely used diagonal G0W0 approach yields unphysical band dispersions. The correct band dispersions are restored only by taking into account the off-diagonal elements of the self-energy. The optical properties are studied both in the optical limit and for finite momenta by computing the electron energy loss spectra. We find that the imaginary part of two-dimensional polarizability at the long wavelength limit is dominated by three strongly bound excitonic peaks and the direct optical gap is associated to a bright exciton state with a large binding energy of 0.93 eV. We discuss the character of the excitonic peaks via the contributing interband transitions and reveal that the lowest bound excitonic state becomes dark for finite momenta along ΓM, while the other two excitonic peaks disperse to higher energies and eventually merge for momenta close to M.

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  • Received 20 June 2023
  • Revised 7 November 2023
  • Accepted 8 January 2024

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.8.024001

©2024 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Lorenzo Varrassi1,*, Peitao Liu2, and Cesare Franchini1,3

  • 1Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia, Universitá di Bologna, 40127 Bologna, Italy
  • 2Shenyang National Laboratory for Materials Science, Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 110016, China
  • 3Faculty of Physics and Center for Computational Materials Science, University of Vienna, Kolingasse 14-16, A-1090, Vienna, Austria

  • *Corresponding author: lorenzo.varrassi3@unibo.it

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Issue

Vol. 8, Iss. 2 — February 2024

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