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Dive into the research topics where Malte Schüler is active.

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Featured researches published by Malte Schüler.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Optimal Hubbard Models for Materials with Nonlocal Coulomb Interactions: Graphene, Silicene, and Benzene

Malte Schüler; Malte Rösner; T. O. Wehling; A. I. Lichtenstein; M. I. Katsnelson

To understand how nonlocal Coulomb interactions affect the phase diagram of correlated electron materials, we report on a method to approximate a correlated lattice model with nonlocal interactions by an effective Hubbard model with on-site interactions U(*) only. The effective model is defined by the Peierls-Feynman-Bogoliubov variational principle. We find that the local part of the interaction U is reduced according to U(*)=U-V[over ¯], where V[over ¯] is a weighted average of nonlocal interactions. For graphene, silicene, and benzene we show that the nonlocal Coulomb interaction can decrease the effective local interaction by more than a factor of 2 in a wide doping range.


Physical Review B | 2016

Capturing nonlocal interaction effects in the Hubbard model: Optimal mappings and limits of applicability

E. G. C. P. van Loon; Malte Schüler; M. I. Katsnelson; T. O. Wehling

We investigate the Peierls-Feynman-Bogoliubov variational principle to map Hubbard models with nonlocal interactions to effective models with only local interactions. We study the renormalization of the local interaction induced by nearest-neighbor interaction and assess the quality of the effective Hubbard models in reproducing observables of the corresponding extended Hubbard models. We compare the renormalization of the local interactions as obtained from numerically exact determinant quantum Monte Carlo to approximate but more generally applicable calculations using dual boson, dynamical mean field theory, and the random phase approximation. These more approximate approaches are crucial for any application with real materials in mind. Furthermore, we use the dual boson method to calculate observables of the extended Hubbard models directly and benchmark these against determinant quantum Monte Carlo simulations of the effective Hubbard model.


Physical Review B | 2015

Variational exact diagonalization method for Anderson impurity models

Malte Schüler; C. Renk; T. O. Wehling

We describe a variational approach to solving Anderson impurity models by means of exact diagonalization. Optimized parameters of a discretized auxiliary model are obtained on the basis of the Peierls-Feynman-Bogoliubov principle. Thereby, the variational approach resolves ambiguities related with the bath discretization, which is generally necessary to make Anderson impurity models tractable by exact diagonalization. The choice of variational degrees of freedom made here allows systematic improvements of total energies over mean field decouplings like Hartree-Fock. Furthermore, our approach allows us to embed arbitrary bath discretization schemes in total energy calculations and to systematically optimize and improve on traditional routes to the discretization problem such as fitting of hybridization functions on Matsubara frequencies. Benchmarks in terms of a single orbital Anderson model demonstrate that the variational exact diagonalization method accurately reproduces free energies as well as several single- and two-particle observables obtained from an exact solution. Finally, we demonstrate the applicability of the variational exact diagonalization approach to realistic five orbital problems with the example system of Co impurities in bulk Cu and compare to continuous-time Monte Carlo calculations. The accuracy of established bath discretization schemes is assessed in the framework of the variational approach introduced here.


Physical Review B | 2016

Correlated electron behavior of metal-organic molecules : Insights from density functional theory combined with many-body effects using exact diagonalization

Sumanta Bhandary; Malte Schüler; Patrik Thunström; Igor Di Marco; Barbara Brena; Olle Eriksson; T. O. Wehling; Biplab Sanyal

A proper theoretical description of the electronic structure of the 3d orbitals in the metal centers of functional metalorganics is a challenging problem. We apply density functional theory and an exact diagonalization method in a many-body approach to study the ground-state electronic configuration of an iron porphyrin (FeP) molecule. Our study reveals that the consideration of multiple Slater determinants is important, and FeP is a potential candidate for realizing a spin crossover due to a subtle balance of crystal-field effects, on-site Coulomb repulsion, and hybridization between the Fe-d orbitals and ligand N-p states. The mechanism of switching between two close-lying electronic configurations of Fe-d orbitals is shown. We discuss the generality of the suggested approach and the possibility to properly describe the electronic structure and related low-energy physics of the whole class of correlated metal-centered organometallic molecules.


Physical Review B | 2016

Nickel: The time-reversal symmetry conserving partner of iron on a chalcogenide topological insulator

M. Vondráček; Lasse Cornils; J. Minár; Jonas Warmuth; Matteo Michiardi; Cinthia Piamonteze; Lucas Barreto; Jill A. Miwa; Marco Bianchi; Ph. Hofmann; Lihui Zhou; Anand Kamlapure; Alexander Ako Khajetoorians; R. Wiesendanger; Jianli Mi; Bo B. Iversen; S. Mankovsky; St. Borek; H. Ebert; Malte Schüler; T. O. Wehling; Jens Wiebe; Jan Honolka

We report on the quenching of single Ni adatom moments on Te-terminated Bi2Te2Se and Bi2Te3 topological insulator surfaces. The effect becomes manifested as a missing X-ray magnetic circular dichroism for resonant L3,2 transitions into partially filled Ni 3d states of occupancy nd = 9.2. On the basis of a comparative study of Ni and Fe using scanning tunneling microscopy and ab initio calculations we are able to relate the element specific moment formation to a local Stoner criterion. While Fe adatoms form large spin moments of ms = 2.54μB with out-of-plane anisotropy due to a sufficiently large density of states at the Fermi energy, Ni remains well below an effective Stoner threshold for local moment formation. With the Fermi level remaining in the bulk band gap after adatom deposition, non-magnetic Ni and preferentially out-of-plane oriented magnetic Fe with similar structural properties on Bi2Te2Se surfaces constitute a perfect platform to study off-on effects of time-reversal symmetry breaking on topological surface states.


European Physical Journal-special Topics | 2017

Realistic theory of electronic correlations in nanoscopic systems

Malte Schüler; Stefan Barthel; T. O. Wehling; M. Karolak; Angelo Valli; G. Sangiovanni

Abstract Nanostructures with open shell transition metal or molecular constituents host often strong electronic correlations and are highly sensitive to atomistic material details. This tutorial review discusses method developments and applications of theoretical approaches for the realistic description of the electronic and magnetic properties of nanostructures with correlated electrons. First, the implementation of a flexible interface between density functional theory and a variant of dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) highly suitable for the simulation of complex correlated structures is explained and illustrated. On the DMFT side, this interface is largely based on recent developments of quantum Monte Carlo and exact diagonalization techniques allowing for efficient descriptions of general four fermion Coulomb interactions, reduced symmetries and spin-orbit coupling, which are explained here. With the examples of the Cr (001) surfaces, magnetic adatoms, and molecular systems it is shown how the interplay of Hubbard U and Hund’s J determines charge and spin fluctuations and how these interactions drive different sorts of correlation effects in nanosystems. Non-local interactions and correlations present a particular challenge for the theory of low dimensional systems. We present our method developments addressing these two challenges, i.e., advancements of the dynamical vertex approximation and a combination of the constrained random phase approximation with continuum medium theories. We demonstrate how non-local interaction and correlation phenomena are controlled not only by dimensionality but also by coupling to the environment which is typically important for determining the physics of nanosystems.


Physical Review B | 2016

Many-body effects on Cr(001) surfaces: An LDA plus DMFT study

Malte Schüler; Stefan Barthel; M. Karolak; A. I. Poteryaev; A. I. Lichtenstein; M. I. Katsnelson; G. Sangiovanni; T. O. Wehling

The electronic structure of the Cr(001) surface with its sharp resonance at the Fermi level is a subject of controversial debate of many experimental and theoretical works. To date, it is unclear whether the origin of this resonance is an orbital Kondo or an electron-phonon coupling effect. We have combined ab initio density functional calculations with dynamical mean-field simulations to calculate the orbitally resolved spectral function of the Cr(001) surface. The calculated orbital character and shape of the spectrum is in agreement with data from (inverse) photoemission experiments. We find that dynamic electron correlations crucially influence the surface electronic structure and lead to a low energy resonance in the d(z2) and d(xz/yz) orbitals. Our results help to reconvene controversial experimental results from (I)PES and STM measurements.


Physical Review B | 2016

Manifestation of nonlocal electron-electron interaction in graphene

Søren Ulstrup; Malte Schüler; Marco Bianchi; Felix Fromm; Christian Raidel; Thomas Seyller; T. O. Wehling; Philip Hofmann

Graphene is an ideal platform to study many-body effects due to its semimetallic character and the possibility to dope it over a wide range. Here we study the width of graphenes occupied


Physical Review B | 2018

First-order metal-insulator transitions in the extended Hubbard model due to self-consistent screening of the effective interaction

Malte Schüler; E. G. C. P. van Loon; M. I. Katsnelson; T. O. Wehling

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Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2018

Charge self-consistent many-body corrections using optimized projected localized orbitals

Malte Schüler; Oleg E. Peil; Gernot J. Kraberger; Ronald Pordzik; Martijn Marsman; Georg Kresse; T. O. Wehling; Markus Aichhorn

-band as a function of doping using angle-resolved photoemission. Upon increasing electron doping, we observe the expected shift of the band to higher binding energies. However, this shift is not rigid and the bottom of the band moves less than the Dirac point. We show that the observed shift cannot be accounted for by band structure calculations in the local density approximation but that non-local exchange interactions must be taken into account.

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M. I. Katsnelson

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Marco Bianchi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Bin Shao

University of Bremen

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