论文标题
晶体中光空间分散的多极理论
Multipole theory of optical spatial dispersion in crystals
论文作者
论文摘要
自然光活性是源自原子量表上电磁场的弱空间不均匀性的范式示例。在分子中,这种效应通过电磁的多重极理论很好地描述了,在该理论中,与光的耦合在电偶极子近似之外进行半经典处理。该理论有两个缺点:它仅限于有限的系统,其构件 - 多极过渡矩 - 与起源有关。在这项工作中,我们以翻译不变的形式重塑了多产理论,该理论对晶体仍然有效。在独立的粒子近似中工作,我们引入了独立的“固有”多极跃迁矩,并在Bloch特征态的仪表转换下进行了协方差。电偶极转变由带浆果的连接给出,而磁性 - 二极管和电肢过渡则通过固有磁矩和量子度量的矩阵概括来描述。除了类似多极的术语外,在光线的波形中,晶体的响应还包含分子理论中没有对应物的带状术语。完整的响应分解为磁电和四极零件,可以在电场和磁场分离的静态极限中隔离。发现晶体的旋转力总和规则与平衡中消失的手性磁效应的拓扑约束相同,形式主义通过数值紧密结合计算验证。
Natural optical activity is the paradigmatic example of an effect originating in the weak spatial inhomogeneity of the electromagnetic field on the atomic scale. In molecules, such effects are well described by the multipole theory of electromagnetism, where the coupling to light is treated semiclassically beyond the electric-dipole approximation. That theory has two shortcomings: it is limited to bounded systems, and its building blocks - the multipole transition moments - are origin dependent. In this work, we recast the multipole theory in a translationally-invariant form that remains valid for crystals. Working in the independent-particle approximation, we introduce "intrinsic" multipole transition moments that are origin independent and transform covariantly under gauge transformations of the Bloch eigenstates. Electric-dipole transitions are given by the interband Berry connection, while magnetic-dipole and electric-quadrupole transitions are described by matrix generalizations of the intrinsic magnetic moment and quantum metric. In addition to multipole-like terms, the response of crystals at first order in the wavevector of light contains band-dispersion terms that have no counterpart in molecular theories. The full response is broken down into magnetoelectric and quadrupolar parts, which can be isolated in the static limit where electric and magnetic fields become decoupled. The rotatory-strength sum rule for crystals is found to be equivalent to the topological constraint for a vanishing chiral magnetic effect in equilibrium, and the formalism is validated by numerical tight-binding calculations.