1,336 research outputs found
Evolution of the electronic structure across the filling-control and bandwidth-control metal-insulator transitions in pyrochlore-type Ru oxides
We have performed photoemission and soft x-ray absorption studies of
pyrochlore-type Ru oxides, namely, the filling-control system
SmCaRuO and the bandwidth-control system
SmBiRuO, which show insulator-to-metal transition with
increasing Ca and Bi concentration, respectively. Core levels and the O 2
valence band in SmCaRuO show almost the same amount of
monotonous upward energy shifts with Ca concentration, which indicates that the
chemical potential is shifted downward due to hole doping. The Ru 4 band in
SmCaRuO is also shifted toward the Fermi level () with
hole doping and the density of states (DOS) at increases. The core levels
in SmBiRuO, on the other hand, do not show clear energy
shifts except for the Ru 3 core level, whose line shape change also reflects
the increase of metallic screening with Bi concentration. We observe pronounced
spectral weight transfer from the incoherent to the coherent parts of the Ru 4d
band with Bi concentration, which is expected for a bandwidth-control
Mott-Hubbard system. The increase of the DOS at is more abrupt in the
bandwidth-control SmBiRuO than in the filling-control
SmCaRuO, in accordance with a recent theoretical
prediction. Effects of charge transfer between the Bi 6 band and the Ru
4 band are also discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Renormalized mean-field t-J model of high-Tc superconductivity: comparison with experiment
Using an advanced version of the renormalized mean-field theory (RMFT) for
the t-J model, we examine spin-singlet superconducting (SC) state of -symmetry. Overall doping dependence of the SC gap magnitude is in good
agreement with experimental results for (BSCCO) and
(LSCO) compounds at the
optimal doping and in the overdoped regime. We also calculate the dispersion
relation for the Bogoliubov quasiparticles and compare our findings both with
the angle resolved photoemission data for the cuprates, as well as with the
variational Monte Carlo and other mean-field studies. Within the method
proposed by Fukushima [cf. Phys. Rev. B \textbf{78}, 115105 (2008)], we analyze
different forms of the t-J Hamiltonian, i.e. modifications caused by the form
of exchange interaction, and by the presence of three-site terms. It is shown
that although the former has a small influence, the latter suppresses strongly
the superconductivity. We also analyze the temperature dependence of the gap
magnitude and compare the results with those of the recently introduced
finite-temperature renormalized mean-field theory (TRMFT) of Wang et al. [cf.
Phys. Rev. B \textbf{82}, 125105 (2010)].Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to Physical Review
Orbital Symmetry and Electron Correlation in Na_{x}CoO_2
Measurements of polarization-dependent soft x-ray absorption reveal that the
electronic states determining the low-energy excitations of NaCoO
have predominantly symmetry with significant O character. A large
transfer of spectral weight observed in O x-ray absorption provides
spectral evidence for strong electron correlations in the layered cobaltates.
Comparing Co x-ray absorption with calculations based on a cluster model,
we conclude that NaCoO exhibits a charge-transfer electronic
character rather than a Mott-Hubbard character
ARPES Study of the Metal-Insulator Transition in Bismuth Cobaltates
We present an angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study of a
Mott-Hubbard-type bismuth cobaltate system across a metal-insulator transition.
By varying the amount of Pb substitution, and by doping with Sr or Ba cation, a
range of insulating to metallic properties is obtained. We observe a systematic
change in the spectral weight of the coherent and incoherent parts, accompanied
by an energy shift of the incoherent part. The band dispersion also shows the
emergence of a weakly dispersing state at the Fermi energy with increasing
conductivity. These changes correspond with the changes in the
temperature-dependent resistivity behavior. We address the nature of the
coherent-incoherent parts in relation to the peak-dip-hump feature seen in
cuprates superconductors
Hall Transport in Granular Metals and Effects of Coulomb Interactions
We present a theory of Hall effect in granular systems at large tunneling
conductance . Hall transport is essentially determined by the
intragrain electron dynamics, which, as we find using the Kubo formula and
diagrammatic technique, can be described by nonzero diffusion modes inside the
grains. We show that in the absence of Coulomb interaction the Hall resistivity
depends neither on the tunneling conductance nor on the intragrain
disorder and is given by the classical formula , where
differs from the carrier density inside the grains by a numerical
coefficient determined by the shape of the grains and type of granular lattice.
Further, we study the effects of Coulomb interactions by calculating
first-order in corrections and find that (i) in a wide range of
temperatures T \gtrsim \Ga exceeding the tunneling escape rate \Ga, the
Hall resistivity and conductivity \sig_{xy} acquire logarithmic
in corrections, which are of local origin and absent in homogeneously
disordered metals; (ii) large-scale ``Altshuler-Aronov'' correction to
\sig_{xy}, relevant at T\ll\Ga, vanishes in agreement with the theory of
homogeneously disordered metals.Comment: 29 pages, 16 figure
Disorder Effects in the Bipolaron System TiO Studied by Photoemission Spectroscopy
We have performed a photoemission study of TiO around its two
transition temperatures so as to cover the metallic, high-temperature
insulating (bipolaron-liquid), and low-temperature insulating
(bipolaron-crystal) phases. While the spectra of the low-temperature insulating
phase show a finite gap at the Fermi level, the spectra of the high-temperature
insulating phase are gapless, which is interpreted as a soft Coulomb gap due to
dynamical disorder. We suggest that the spectra of the high-temperature
disordered phase of FeO, which exhibits a charge order-disorder
transition (Verwey transition), can be interpreted in terms of a Coulomb gap.Comment: 4 pages, 3 epsf figures embedde
Structural importance of Stone-Thrower-Wales defects in rolled and flat graphenes from surface-enhanced Raman scattering
We first survey the historical aspects of the term Stone-Thrower-Wales (STW) defect and its experimental identification. Physicochemical properties associated with the STW defect have been extensively investigated theoretically as well. However, it is difficult to verify the predicted properties by means of experiments. Here we demonstrate an experimental way to probe the vibrational properties of STW defects in single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) using surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SEAS). We also performed density functional theory calculations to support our interpretation of the SERS spectra. The characteristic fluctuations of peak intensities and frequencies are ascribed to dynamic motion of an STW defect in the hexagonal SWCNT lattice. The role of an STW defect at edges is also discussed in terms of its relevance to the stability and O-2 reactivity of flat and curved graphene structures.ArticleCARBON. 50(9):3274-3279 (2012)journal articl
Non-Abelian Vortices on Cylinder -- Duality between vortices and walls
We investigate vortices on a cylinder in supersymmetric non-Abelian gauge
theory with hypermultiplets in the fundamental representation. We identify
moduli space of periodic vortices and find that a pair of wall-like objects
appears as the vortex moduli is varied. Usual domain walls also can be obtained
from the single vortex on the cylinder by introducing a twisted boundary
condition. We can understand these phenomena as a T-duality among D-brane
configurations in type II superstring theories. Using this T-duality picture,
we find a one-to-one correspondence between the moduli space of non-Abelian
vortices and that of kinky D-brane configurations for domain walls.Comment: 33 pages, 17 figures, v2: references added, typos corrected, the
final version published in PR
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