Consider Free scalar field theory $$ S[\psi^*,\psi] = -\int dx^4 (\partial_\mu \psi^* \partial^\mu \psi + m^2 \psi^* \psi) $$ Upon usual quantisation $$ \hat{\psi}(x) = \int \frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3 2 E_p} \left( a_p e^{i x_\mu p^\mu} + b^\dagger e^{-i x_\mu p^\mu}\right), \quad \quad E_p=\sqrt{p^2+m^2},$$ one finds the usual Hamiltonian $$\hat{\mathcal{H}} = \Pi \dot{\psi} + \Pi^* \dot{\psi^*} - \mathcal{L} = \int d^3p E_p \left( a^\dagger_p a_p+ b^\dagger_p b_p \right).$$
Suppose, however, I redefined my fields as $\psi = e^{-i\alpha t}\psi'$, where $\alpha$ is a constant, so that $$ S[\psi^*,\psi] = -\int dx^4 \left[\eta^{\mu\nu}(\partial_\mu + i \alpha \delta_{\mu t})\psi^*(\partial_\nu -i\alpha \delta_{\nu t}) \psi + m^2 \psi^* \psi \right] .$$ Notice this theory now looks CPT violating. Quantising this theory I find that $$\hat{\psi}'(x) = \hat{\psi}(x) e^{i\alpha t}, \quad \quad \Pi'(x) = \Pi(x) e^{-i\alpha t}, $$ and have found (apologies for skipping many steps here; it's the usual canonical quantisation procedure and would clutter the page. I will give more details if requested)
$$\hat{\mathcal{H}}' = \Pi' \dot{\psi'} + \Pi'^* \dot{\psi'^*} - \mathcal{L'}$$ $$ =\Pi \dot{\psi} + i \alpha \Pi \psi + \Pi^* \dot{\psi^*} - i\alpha \Pi^* \psi^* - \mathcal{L}$$ $$ = \hat{\mathcal{H}} + i \alpha( \Pi \psi -\Pi^* \psi^*)$$ $$ =\int d^3p \left[ (E_p-\alpha)a^\dagger_p a_p + (E_p+\alpha)b^\dagger_p b_p \right].$$
So the field redefinition has seemingly changed the energies of the 1-particle states.
1) Are the energies of the canonically quantised 1 particle states supposed to be field redefinition invariant? 2) If so, is there something wrong with the redefinition $\psi = e^{-i\alpha t}\psi'$ or have I missed an extra piece that arises from this redefinition?