Validity and Limits of Low Order Hybridization Expansion Approaches for Multi-Orbital Systems
Dolev Goldberger, Ido Zemach, Lei Zhang, Yang Yu, Emanuel Gull + 2 more
TLDR
Low-order hybridization expansion methods' accuracy in multi-orbital systems is limited by the least correlated orbital, which suppresses features.
Key contributions
- Derived analytic connections between multi-orbital and single-orbital restricted propagators.
- Identified diagrammatic mechanisms causing low-order method breakdown in multi-orbital systems.
- Found that the least correlated orbital dictates accuracy, spuriously suppressing features like Kondo resonance.
- Numerically confirmed these limitations across representative two-orbital model systems.
Why it matters
This paper provides crucial insights into the reliability of widely used low-order impurity solvers for multi-orbital systems. It offers a practical guide for researchers to assess when single-orbital insights can be applied and serves as a vital benchmark for developing more accurate higher-order solvers.
Original Abstract
Low-order hybridization expansion methods such as the non-crossing approximation (NCA) and the one-crossing approximation (OCA) are widely used impurity solvers in the study of strongly correlated systems, yet their accuracy in genuine multi-orbital settings remains poorly understood. Using the decoupled orbital limit as a controlled reference point, we derive analytic results connecting multi-orbital restricted propagators and Green's functions to their single-orbital counterparts, identify the diagrammatic mechanisms responsible for the breakdown of low-order methods in multi-orbital settings, and determine their regimes of applicability. Our central finding is that the accuracy of these methods is governed by the least correlated orbital: i.e., the orbital with the most rapidly decaying retarded Green's function. That orbital's properties are transferred to all other orbitals through a spurious coupling generated by the truncated expansion, thereby suppressing correlation-induced features such as the Kondo resonance. This occurs even in orbitals that are themselves strongly correlated within single-orbital calculations using the same approximation scheme. We confirm this numerically across representative two-orbital model systems in the steady-state, systematically identifying the parameter regimes in which low-order methods succeed or fail. Our results provide a practical guide for assessing when insights from single-orbital calculations carry over to multi-orbital settings, and serve as a benchmark for the development and validation of higher-order multi-orbital impurity solvers.
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