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Small-wavevector excitations in Coulomb-interacting systems can be decomposed into the high-energy collective longitudinal plasmon and the low-energy single-electron excitations. At the critical wavevector and corresponding frequency where the plasmon branch merges with the single-electron excitation region, the collective energy of the plasmon dissipates into single electron-hole excitations. The jellium model provides a reasonable description of the electron-energy-loss spectrum (EELS) of metals close to the free-electron limit. The random phase approximation (RPA) is exact in the high-density limit but can capture the plasmonic dispersion reasonably even for densities with rs > 1. RPA and all beyond-RPA methods investigated here, result in a wrong infinite plasmon lifetime for a wavevector smaller than the critical one where the plasmon dispersion curve runs into particle-hole excitations. Exchange-correlation kernel corrections to RPA modify the plasmon dispersion curve. There is however a large difference in the construction and form of the kernels investigated earlier. Our current work introduces recent model exchange-only and exchange-correlation kernels and discusses the relevance of some exact constraints in the construction of the kernel. We show that, because the plasmon dispersion samples a range of wavevectors smaller than the range sampled by the correlation energy, different kernels can make a strong difference for the correlation energy and a weak difference for the plasmon dispersion. This work completes our understanding about the plasmon dispersion in realistic metals, such as Cs, where a negative plasmon dispersion has been observed. We find only positive plasmon dispersion in jellium at the density for Cs.
A new class of orbital-dependent exchange-correlation (xc) potentials for applications in noncollinear spin-density-functional theory is developed. Starting from the optimized effective potential (OEP) formalism for the exact exchange potential - gen
For more than three decades, nearly free electron elemental metals have been a topic of debate because the computed bandwidths are significantly wider in the local density approximation to density-functional theory (DFT) than indicated by angle-resol
We propose a computationally efficient approach to the nonadiabatic time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) which is based on a representation of the frequency-dependent exchange correlation kernel as a response of a set of damped oscillator
We examine the experimental and theoretical electron-energy loss spectra in 2$H$-Cu$_{0.2}$NbS$_2$ and find that the 1 eV plasmon in this material does not exhibit the regular positive quadratic plasmon dispersion that would be expected for a normal
The exact exchange-correlation (XC) potential in time-dependent density-functional theory (TDDFT) is known to develop steps and discontinuities upon change of the particle number in spatially confined regions or isolated subsystems. We demonstrate th