How chemistry controls electron localization in 3d1 perovskites: A Wannier-function study
E. Pavarini, A. Yamasaki, J. Nuss, and O. K. Andersen

TL;DR
This study investigates how chemical composition influences electron localization and the Mott transition in 3d1 perovskites, using Wannier functions and ab initio methods to reveal underlying mechanisms and compare with experimental data.
Contribution
It provides a detailed ab initio analysis of the chemical mechanisms controlling electron localization and the Mott transition in 3d1 perovskites, expanding previous DMFT studies.
Findings
Covalency increases along the series, affecting t2g level splittings.
Good agreement with experimental spectra and measured properties.
Predicted metallization volume for YTiO3 and magnetic order sensitivities.
Abstract
In the series of 3d1 t2g perovskites, SrVO3--CaVO3--LaTiO3--YTiO3 the transition-metal d electron becomes increasingly localized and undergoes a Mott transition between CaVO3 and LaTiO3. By defining a low-energy Hubbard Hamiltonian in the basis of Wannier functions for the t2g LDA band and solving it in the single-site DMFT approximation, it was recently shown[1] that simultaneously with the Mott transition there occurs a strong suppression of orbital fluctuations due to splitting of the t2g levels. The present paper reviews and expands this work, in particular in the direction of exposing the underlying chemical mechanisms by means of ab initio LDA Wannier functions generated with the NMTO method. The Wannier functions for the t2g band exhibit covalency between the transition-metal t2g, the large cation-d, and the oxygen-p states; this covalency, which increases along the series, turns…
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