461 research outputs found

    Polyethylene under tensile load: strain energy storage and breaking of linear and knotted alkanes probed by first-principles molecular dynamics calculations

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    The mechanical resistance of a polyethylene strand subject to tension and the way its properties are affected by the presence of a knot is studied using first-principles molecular dynamics calculations. The distribution of strain energy for the knotted chains has a well-defined shape that is very different from the one found in the linear case. The presence of a knot significantly weakens the chain in which it is tied. Chain rupture invariably occurs just outside the entrance to the knot, as is the case for a macroscopic rope.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figures, to appear on J. Chem. Phy

    Entropy-based measure of structural order in water

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    We analyze the nature of the structural order established in liquid TIP4P water in the framework provided by the multi-particle correlation expansion of the statistical entropy. Different regimes are mapped onto the phase diagram of the model upon resolving the pair entropy into its translational and orientational components. These parameters are used to quantify the relative amounts of positional and angular order in a given thermodynamic state, thus allowing a structurally unbiased definition of low-density and high-density water. As a result, the structurally anomalous region within which both types of order are simultaneously disrupted by an increase of pressure at constant temperature is clearly identified through extensive molecular-dynamics simulations.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. E (Rapid Communication

    Giant non-adiabatic effects in layer metals: Raman spectra of intercalated graphite explained

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    The occurrence of non-adiabatic effects in the vibrational properties of metals have been predicted since the 60's, but hardly confirmed experimentally. We report the first fully \emph{ab initio} calculations of non-adiabatic frequencies of a number of layer and conventional metals. We suggest that non-adiabatic effects can be a feature of the vibrational Raman spectra of any bulk metal, and show that they are spectacularly large (up to 30% of the phonon frequencies) in the case of layer metals, such as superconducting MgB2MgB_2, CaC6CaC_6 and other graphite intercalated compounds. We develop a framework capable to estimate the electron momentum-relaxation time of a given system, and thus its degree of non-adiabaticity, in terms of the experimentally observed frequencies and linewidths.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl

    Ab-initio study of gap opening and screening effects in gated bilayer graphene

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    The electronic properties of doped bilayer graphene in presence of bottom and top gates have been studied and characterized by means of Density Functional Theory calculations. Varying independently the bottom and top gates it is possible to control separately the total doping charge on the sample, and the average external electric field acting on the bilayer. We show that, at fixed doping level, the band gap at the K point in the Brillouin zone depends linearly on the average electric field, whereas the corresponding proportionality coefficient has a non-monotonic dependence on doping. We find that the DFT-calculated band gap at K, for small doping levels, is roughly half of the band gap obtained with standard Tight Binding approach. We show that this discrepancy arises from an underestimate, in the TB model, of the screening of the system to the external electric field. In particular, on the basis of our DFT results we observe that, when the bilayer graphene is in presence of an external electric field, both an interlayer and an intralayer screening occur. Only the interlayer screening is included in TB calculations, while both screenings are fundamental for the description of the band gap opening. We finally provide a general scheme to obtain the full band structure of the gated bilayer graphene, for an arbitrary value of the external electric field and of the doping.Comment: 15 pages 20 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Structure and stability of graphene nanoribbons in oxygen, carbon dioxide, water, and ammonia

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    We determine, by means of density functional theory, the stability and the structure of graphene nanoribbon (GNR) edges in presence of molecules such as oxygen, water, ammonia, and carbon dioxide. As in the case of hydrogen-terminated nanoribbons, we find that the most stable armchair and zigzag configurations are characterized by a non-metallic/non-magnetic nature, and are compatible with Clar's sextet rules, well known in organic chemistry. In particular, we predict that, at thermodynamic equilibrium, neutral GNRs in oxygen-rich atmosphere should preferentially be along the armchair direction, while water-saturated GNRs should present zigzag edges. Our results promise to be particularly useful to GNRs synthesis, since the most recent and advanced experimental routes are most effective in water and/or ammonia-containing solutions.Comment: accepted for publication in PR

    Structure, Stability, Edge States and Aromaticity of Graphene Ribbons

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    We determine the stability, the geometry, the electronic and magnetic structure of hydrogen-terminated graphene-nanoribbons edges as a function of the hydrogen content of the environment by means of density functional theory. Antiferromagnetic zigzag ribbons are stable only at extremely-low ultra-vacuum pressures. Under more standard conditions, the most stable structures are the mono- and di-hydrogenated armchair edges and a zigzag edge reconstruction with one di- and two mono-hydrogenated sites. At high hydrogen-concentration ``bulk'' graphene is not stable and spontaneously breaks to form ribbons, in analogy to the spontaneous breaking of graphene into small-width nanoribbons observed experimentally in solution. The stability and the existence of exotic edge electronic-states and/or magnetism is rationalized in terms of simple concepts from organic chemistry (Clar's rule)Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication by Physical Review Letter

    A new and efficient approach to time-dependent density-functional perturbation theory for optical spectroscopy

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    Using a super-operator formulation of linearized time-dependent density-functional theory, the dynamical polarizability of a system of interacting electrons is given a matrix continued-fraction representation whose coefficients can be obtained from the non-symmetric block-Lanczos method. The resulting algorithm allows for the calculation of the {\em full spectrum} of a system with a computational workload which is only a few times larger than that needed for {\em static} polarizabilities within time-independent density-functional perturbation theory. The method is demonstrated with the calculation of the spectrum of benzene, and prospects for its application to the large-scale calculation of optical spectra are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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