Existence and computation of generalized Wannier functions for non-periodic systems in two dimensions and higher
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Abstract
Exponentially-localized Wannier functions (ELWFs) are a basis of the Fermi
projection of a material consisting of functions which decay exponentially fast
away from their maxima. When the material is insulating and crystalline,
conditions which guarantee existence of ELWFs in dimensions one, two, and three
are well-known, and methods for constructing the ELWFs numerically are
well-developed. We consider the case where the material is insulating but not
necessarily crystalline, where much less is known. In one spatial dimension,
Kivelson and Nenciu-Nenciu have proved ELWFs can be constructed as the
eigenfunctions of a self-adjoint operator acting on the Fermi projection. In
this work, we identify an assumption under which we can generalize the
Kivelson-Nenciu-Nenciu result to two dimensions and higher. Under this
assumption, we prove that ELWFs can be constructed as the eigenfunctions of a
sequence of self-adjoint operators acting on the Fermi projection. We
conjecture that the assumption we make is equivalent to vanishing of
topological obstructions to the existence of ELWFs in the special case where
the material is crystalline. We numerically verify that our construction yields
ELWFs in various cases where our assumption holds and provide numerical
evidence for our conjecture.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20352Collections
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Jianfeng Lu
Professor of Mathematics
Jianfeng Lu is an applied mathematician interested in mathematical analysis and algorithm
development for problems from computational physics, theoretical chemistry, materials
science and other related fields.More specifically, his current research focuses include:Electronic
structure and many body problems; quantum molecular dynamics; multiscale modeling
and analysis; rare events and sampling techniques.
Kevin Stubbs
Research Assistant, Ph D Student
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) CandidateMy interests lie at the intersection between mathematics,
signal processing, and physics with a particular focus on efficient algorithms for
high dimensional problems. My current work focuses on tensor network representations
and quantum information theory. EducationDoctor of PhilosophyDuke University (Durham,
NC, USA) 2015-Bachelor of Science<br
Alexander Watson
William W. Elliott Assistant Research Professor
I am an applied mathematician interested in partial differential equations, numerical
methods, and mathematical physics. My research has focused on problems arising in
condensed matter physics and photonics. My post-doc mentor at Duke is Jianfeng Lu.
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