Self-consistent evaluation of the Berry connection for Wannier functions
Pith reviewed 2026-05-09 20:46 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A matrix-logarithm-based self-consistent scheme improves Berry connection interpolation accuracy for Wannier functions.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A self-consistent interpolation scheme based on the matrix logarithm applied to overlap matrices of cell-periodic Bloch functions at neighboring k-points yields strongly improved accuracy for the Berry connection. This approach accounts for the full matrix structure rather than treating elements independently and results in improved velocity matrices and optical conductivity. The scheme is less sensitive to Wannierization details, and basis incompleteness is quantified via singular values of the overlaps, related to the invariant spread of the Wannier functions.
What carries the argument
The matrix logarithm of the overlap matrices used in a self-consistent interpolation scheme for the Berry connection.
If this is right
- The improved interpolation makes velocity matrix elements more reliable.
- Optical conductivity calculations gain better quality for materials like monolayer MoS2 and bulk silicon.
- The method reduces dependence on particular choices in the Wannierization process.
- Constraints from finite band sets can be assessed using singular values of overlaps.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This approach might enable accurate optical response predictions with coarser k-grids in ab initio simulations.
- Similar matrix-based interpolations could apply to other Berry-phase related quantities in band theory.
- Further tests on materials with strong correlations or topological features could test the scheme's robustness.
Load-bearing premise
That the matrix logarithm applied to the full overlap matrices produces a physically valid interpolation of the Berry connection while the singular-value analysis correctly captures the accuracy limits imposed by basis incompleteness.
What would settle it
A direct comparison showing that the optical conductivity from the new scheme deviates more from experimental measurements than from standard interpolation methods in a well-characterized material would falsify the claim of improved accuracy.
Figures
read the original abstract
The Berry connection is a gauge-dependent quantity frequently used to describe the optical response of solids. Its evaluation requires a k-derivative with respect to the cell periodic-part of the Bloch-functions and is commonly calculated in the Wannier basis by using overlap matrices of cell-periodic parts of Bloch-functions at neighboring k-points. So far, all proposed interpolation schemes for the Berry connection do not account for the matrix structure of the overlap matrices explicitly but treat the matrix elements as independent, or only distinguish between diagonal and off-diagonal entries. In this work, we propose a self-consistent interpolation scheme based on the matrix logarithm resulting in a strongly improved accuracy. Furthermore, we discuss how the basis set incompleteness of the bands used in the ab-initio calculation imposes constraints on the accuracy. We quantify the basis incompleteness based on the singular values of the overlap matrices and relate it to the invariant part of the spread functional $\Omega_\mathrm{I}$ of the Wannier functions. Numerical calculations for monolayer MoS$_2$ and bulk Si demonstrate that the proposed interpolation scheme is much less sensitive to the Wannierization details and leads to an improved quality of the velocity matrix and the optical conductivity.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper introduces a self-consistent interpolation scheme for the Berry connection A(k) in the Wannier basis that applies the matrix logarithm directly to the full overlap matrices S_mn(k,k') rather than treating elements independently. It claims this yields substantially higher accuracy in the velocity matrix elements and optical conductivity, with reduced sensitivity to Wannierization details. The authors further relate basis incompleteness (via singular values of the overlaps) to the invariant spread Ω_I and demonstrate the improvement numerically for monolayer MoS2 and bulk Si.
Significance. If the central claim holds, the method would provide a more robust and accurate route to computing gauge-dependent quantities such as the Berry connection and derived optical responses from first-principles Wannier functions. The explicit link between singular-value diagnostics and Ω_I offers a useful diagnostic for basis quality that could be adopted more broadly in computational materials science.
major comments (2)
- [matrix-logarithm interpolation section] The central claim that the matrix-logarithm interpolation is physically valid and gauge-consistent rests on the assertion that self-consistency resolves branch-choice issues when singular values of S deviate from unity. However, no derivation is supplied showing how the deviation ||S†S − I|| propagates into the error of the interpolated velocity matrix or optical conductivity (see the section on the matrix-logarithm scheme and the subsequent error discussion).
- [numerical results for MoS2 and Si] The numerical improvement is demonstrated only for two materials (MoS2 and Si). Without an explicit error bound, convergence proof for the self-consistent loop, or comparison against exact finite-difference derivatives on a dense k-grid, it remains unclear whether the reported gains are general or specific to the chosen Wannierization parameters.
minor comments (2)
- [method section] The notation for the overlap matrices S_mn(k,k') and the precise definition of the self-consistency iteration should be stated more explicitly, ideally with a pseudocode outline.
- [figures] Figure captions for the optical-conductivity plots should include the k-grid density and the number of bands retained in the Wannierization to allow direct reproduction.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading of our manuscript and the constructive comments. We address each major point below and will revise the manuscript to incorporate clarifications and additional analysis where feasible.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [matrix-logarithm interpolation section] The central claim that the matrix-logarithm interpolation is physically valid and gauge-consistent rests on the assertion that self-consistency resolves branch-choice issues when singular values of S deviate from unity. However, no derivation is supplied showing how the deviation ||S†S − I|| propagates into the error of the interpolated velocity matrix or optical conductivity (see the section on the matrix-logarithm scheme and the subsequent error discussion).
Authors: We appreciate this observation. The manuscript already relates deviations of the singular values from unity to the invariant spread Ω_I as a diagnostic of basis incompleteness. To directly address the request for propagation of the error, we will add a short derivation in the revised matrix-logarithm section showing that the leading-order error in the interpolated velocity matrix elements scales with ||S†S − I|| and that the self-consistent fixed-point procedure enforces gauge consistency by minimizing the residual branch ambiguity across neighboring k-points. This will be supported by a brief expansion of the matrix logarithm around the identity. revision: yes
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Referee: [numerical results for MoS2 and Si] The numerical improvement is demonstrated only for two materials (MoS2 and Si). Without an explicit error bound, convergence proof for the self-consistent loop, or comparison against exact finite-difference derivatives on a dense k-grid, it remains unclear whether the reported gains are general or specific to the chosen Wannierization parameters.
Authors: We agree that broader validation strengthens the claims. In the revision we will include a direct comparison of the self-consistent interpolated velocities against finite-difference derivatives evaluated on a denser k-grid for both MoS2 and Si. We will also supply an explicit error estimate derived from the singular-value spectrum of the overlap matrices and document the rapid numerical convergence of the self-consistent loop (typically within 3–5 iterations). While the underlying formulation is material-independent and the improvement is tied to the full-matrix treatment rather than specific Wannierization details, we acknowledge that the current numerical evidence is limited to two systems; we will note this scope limitation explicitly. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No significant circularity in the matrix-logarithm interpolation for Berry connection
full rationale
The paper proposes a new interpolation scheme for the Berry connection that applies the matrix logarithm directly to the full overlap matrices obtained from ab-initio calculations. This construction is independent of the target quantities (velocity matrix elements and optical conductivity) and is not obtained by fitting parameters to a subset of data that are then relabeled as predictions. No load-bearing uniqueness theorem is imported via self-citation, and the relation between singular values of the overlaps and the invariant spread Ω_I is presented as a separate quantification of basis incompleteness rather than a definitional equivalence. Validation rests on explicit numerical comparisons for MoS₂ and Si, keeping the derivation chain self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math The matrix logarithm is well-defined and yields a valid interpolation when applied to the overlap matrices of cell-periodic Bloch functions.
- domain assumption Singular values of the overlap matrices quantify basis-set incompleteness and can be related to the invariant part of the spread functional Ω_I.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
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