A first-principles study on the electronic structure of BaSbO3 and electron-phonon coupling in K-doped superconducting antimonate
Abstract
The present study attempts to explore the electronic structure of pure BaSbO3 and the effect of K-doping on the electronic structure and electron-phonon interaction in K-doped barium antimonate (BKSO) superconductor using the first-principles method. A strong orbital hybridization is found to occur between Sb-s and O-pσ states, which is enhanced in the collapsed octahedra of pure BaSbO3. Also, the degree of the hybridization increases with the increase in K concentration in the system. O K-edge XANES study reveals that the self-doped holes do not reside on the ligand oxygen in the spσ antibonding orbital. This suppression of oxygen hole in the antimonate is consistent with the positive charge transfer energy of the systems. With increasing K doping in the superconducting antimonate, the electron-phonon coupling strength in the materials decreases. The coupling between the electrons and the phonons corresponding to the oxygen bond-stretching vibrations has the major contribution to the electron-phonon coupling and hence, superconductivity in the systems. The DFT-GGA calculated values of λ and Tc, using the Migdal-Eliashberg formalism, are heavily underestimated compared to the experimental values. The inclusion of long-range interaction and screening in the calculations by using HSE06 hybrid functional significantly enhanced the superconducting parameters, resulting in a Tc value of 14.611 K for the material with x = 0.65, which is quite close to the experimental value of 15 K. This study also concludes that the suppression of the oxygen hole in the conduction band serves as a crucial factor for having a lower Tc of antimonate compared to that of superconducting bismuthate.
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