Abstract

The failure of many approximate electronic structure methods can be traced to their erroneous description of fractional charge and spin redistributions in the asymptotic limit toward infinity, where violations of the flat-plane conditions lead to delocalization and static correlation errors. Although the energetic consequences of the flat-planes are known, the underlying quantum phase transitions that occur when (spin)charge is redistributed have not been characterized. In this study, we use open subsystems to redistribute (spin)charges in the tilted Hubbard model by imposing suitable Lagrange constraints on the Hamiltonian. We computationally recover the flat-plane conditions and quantify the underlying quantum phase transitions using quantum entanglement measures. The resulting entanglement patterns quantify the phase transition that gives rise to the flat-plane conditions and quantify the complexity required to accurately describe charge redistributions in strongly correlated systems. Our study indicates that entanglement patterns can uncover those phase transitions that have to be modeled accurately if the delocalization and static correlation errors of approximate methods are to be reduced.

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