Four-Dimensional Scaling of Dipole Polarizability in Quantum Systems

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Abstract

Polarizability is a key response property of physical and chemical systems, which has an impact on intermolecular interactions, spectroscopic observables, and vacuum polarization. The calculation of polarizability for quantum systems involves an infinite sum over all excited (bound and continuum) states, concealing the physical interpretation of polarization mechanisms and complicating the derivation of efficient response models. Approximate expressions for the dipole polarizability, α, rely on different scaling laws α∝R3, R4, or R7, for various definitions of the system radius R. Here, we consider a range of single-particle quantum systems of varying spatial dimensionality and having qualitatively different spectra, demonstrating that their polarizability follows a universal four-dimensional scaling law α=C(4μq2/ℏ2)L4, where μ and q are the (effective) particle mass and charge, C is a dimensionless excitation-energy ratio, and the characteristic length L is defined via the L2 norm of the position operator. This unified formula is also applicable to many-particle systems, as shown by accurately predicting the dipole polarizability of 36 atoms, 1641 small organic molecules, and Bloch electrons in periodic systems.

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Szabó, P., Góger, S., Charry, J., Karimpour, M. R., Fedorov, D. V., & Tkatchenko, A. (2022). Four-Dimensional Scaling of Dipole Polarizability in Quantum Systems. Physical Review Letters, 128(7). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.128.070602

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