Abstract

The ground-state energy of a quantum impurity model can be calculated using the numerical renormalization group with a modified discretization scheme, with sufficient accuracy to reliably extract physical information about the system. The approach is applied to study binding of magnetic adsorbates modeled by the Anderson-Newns model for chemisorption on metal surfaces. The correlation energy is largest in the valence-fluctuation regime; in the strong-coupling (Kondo) regime the Kondo-singlet formation energy is found to be only a minor contribution. As an application of the method to more difficult surface-science problems, we study the binding energy of a magnetic atom adsorbed near a step edge on a surface with a strongly modulated surface-state electron density. The zero-temperature magnetic susceptibility is determined from the field dependence of the binding energy, thereby providing an independent result for the Kondo temperature ${T}_{K}$, which agrees very well with the ${T}_{K}$ extracted from a thermodynamic calculation.

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