A first-principles Quantum Monte Carlo study of two-dimensional (2D) GaSe
Daniel Wines, Kayahan Saritas, Can Ataca

TL;DR
This study uses quantum Monte Carlo methods to accurately determine the electronic and structural properties of monolayer GaSe, providing a reliable benchmark that overcomes the limitations of traditional DFT and GW approaches.
Contribution
The paper applies many-body Diffusion Monte Carlo to 2D GaSe, offering more accurate predictions of its properties and establishing a benchmark for future research.
Findings
Monolayer GaSe is an indirect gap semiconductor (Gamma-M)
DMC results closely match experimental quasiparticle gaps
Provides benchmark data for lattice parameters and charge density
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) post-transition metal chalcogenides (PTMC) have attracted attention due to their suitable band gaps and lower exciton binding energies, making them more appropriate for electronic, optical and water-splitting devices than graphene and monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). Of the predicted 2D PTMCs, GaSe has been reliably synthesized and experimentally characterized. Despite this fact, quantities such as lattice parameters and band character vary significantly depending on which density functional theory (DFT) functional is used. Although many-body perturbation theory (GW approximation) has been used to correct the electronic structure and obtain the excited state properties of 2D GaSe, and solving the Bethe-Salpeter equation (BSE) has been used to find the optical gap, we find that the results depend strongly on the starting wavefunction. In attempt to…
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