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Long-range corrected hybrid functionals that employ a nonempirically tuned range-separation parameter have been demonstrated to yield accurate ionization potentials and fundamental gaps for a wide range of finite systems. Here, we address the question of whether this high level of accuracy is limited to the highest occupied/lowest unoccupied energy levels to which the range-separation parameter is tuned or whether it is retained for the entire valence spectrum. We examine several pi-conjugated molecules and find that orbitals of a different character and symmetry require significantly different range-separation parameters and fractions of exact exchange. This imbalanced treatment of orbitals of a different nature biases the resulting eigenvalue spectra. Thus, the existing schemes for the tuning of range-separated hybrid functionals, while providing for good agreement between the highest occupied energy level and the first ionization potential, do not achieve accuracy comparable to reliable G(0)W(0) computations for the entire quasiparticle spectrum.
Many-body perturbation theory in the GW approximation is a useful method for describing electronic properties associated with charged excitations. A hierarchy of GW methods exists, starting from non-self-consistent G(0)W(0), through partial self-consistency in the eigenvalues and in the Green's function (scGW(0)), to fully self-consistent GW (scGW). Here, we assess the performance of these methods for benzene, pyridine, and the diazines. The quasiparticle spectra are compared to photoemission spectroscopy (PES) experiments with respect to all measured particle removal energies and the ordering of the frontier orbitals. We find that the accuracy of the calculated spectra does not match the expectations based on their level of self-consistency. In particular, for certain starting points G(0)W(0) and scGW(0) provide spectra in better agreement with the PES than scGW.
We aim to find homovalent alternatives for lead and iodine in CH3NH3PbI3 perovskites that show bandgaps suitable for building novel perovskite-perovskite tandem solar cells. To this end, we employ a computational screening for materials with a bandgap between 1.0 eV and 1.9 eV, using density functional theory calculations at the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof and Heyd-Scuseria-Ernzerhof levels of theory. The room-temperature stability of the materials and their phases that satisfy the bandgap criteria is evaluated based on the empirical Goldschmidt tolerance factor. In total, our screening procedure covers 30 different perovskite structures in three phases (orthorhombic, cubic, tetragonal) each. We find 9 materials that are predicted to be stable at room temperature and to have bandgaps in an energy range suitable for application in tandem solar cells. Published by AIP Publishing.