Solving the Bethe-Salpeter Equation on a Subspace: Approximations and Consequences for Low-dimensional Materials
Diana Y. Qiu, Felipe H. da Jornada, Steven G. Louie

TL;DR
This paper investigates the accuracy of the S approximation in solving the Bethe-Salpeter equation for low-dimensional materials, showing its effectiveness in certain limits and its impact on exciton energy calculations.
Contribution
It systematically evaluates the S approximation's accuracy for different systems and demonstrates its potential to accelerate convergence in exciton energy computations.
Findings
S approximation is exact for small exciton binding energies.
It accelerates convergence of exciton energies with respect to empty states.
External dielectric environment has little effect on singlet-triplet splitting in most 2D materials.
Abstract
It is well known that the ambient environment can dramatically renormalize the quasiparticle gap and exciton binding energies in low-dimensional materials, but the effect of the environment on the energy splitting of the spin-singlet and spin-triplet exciton states is less understood. A prominent effect is the renormalization of the exciton binding energy and optical strength (and hence the optical spectrum) through additional screening of the direct Coulomb term describing the attractive electron-hole interaction in the kernel of the Bethe-Salpeter equation (BSE). The repulsive exchange interaction responsible for the singlet-triplet slitting, on the other hand, is unscreened within formal many-body perturbation theory. However, Loren Benedict argued that in practical calculations restricted to a subspace of the full Hilbert space, the exchange interaction should be appropriately…
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