786 research outputs found
Rings sliding on a honeycomb network: Adsorption contours, interactions, and assembly of benzene on Cu(111)
Using a van der Waals density functional (vdW-DF) [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92,
246401 (2004)], we perform ab initio calculations for the adsorption energy of
benzene (Bz) on Cu(111) as a function of lateral position and height. We find
that the vdW-DF inclusion of nonlocal correlations (responsible for dispersive
interactions) changes the relative stability of eight binding-position options
and increases the binding energy by over an order of magnitude, achieving good
agreement with experiment. The admolecules can move almost freely along a
honeycomb web of "corridors" passing between fcc and hcp hollow sites via
bridge sites. Our diffusion barriers (for dilute and two condensed adsorbate
phases) are consistent with experimental observations. Further vdW-DF
calculations suggest that the more compact (hexagonal) Bz-overlayer phase, with
lattice constant a = 6.74 \AA, is due to direct Bz-Bz vdW attraction, which
extends to ~8 \AA. We attribute the second, sparser hexagonal Bz phase, with a
= 10.24 \AA, to indirect electronic interactions mediated by the metallic
surface state on Cu(111). To support this claim, we use a formal
Harris-functional approach to evaluate nonperturbationally the asymptotic form
of this indirect interaction. Thus, we can account well for benzene
self-organization on Cu(111).Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables, submitted for publication Accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev. B. This version contains improved notation (with
corresponding relabeling of figures), very small corrections to some
tabulated values, and corrections concerning lattice lengths and subsequent
discussion of commensurability of unit-cell dimension
Response of the Shockley surface state to an external electrical field: A density-functional theory study of Cu(111)
The response of the Cu(111) Shockley surface state to an external electrical
field is characterized by combining a density-functional theory calculation for
a slab geometry with an analysis of the Kohn-Sham wavefunctions. Our analysis
is facilitated by a decoupling of the Kohn-Sham states via a rotation in
Hilbert space. We find that the surface state displays isotropic dispersion,
quadratic until the Fermi wave vector but with a significant quartic
contribution beyond. We calculate the shift in energetic position and effective
mass of the surface state for an electrical field perpendicular to the Cu(111)
surface; the response is linear over a broad range of field strengths. We find
that charge transfer occurs beyond the outermost copper atoms and that
accumulation of electrons is responsible for a quarter of the screening of the
electrical field. This allows us to provide well-converged determinations of
the field-induced changes in the surface state for a moderate number of layers
in the slab geometry.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication by Phys. Rev.
B; changes from v1 in response to referee comments, esp. to Sections I and
V.B (inc. Table 4), with many added references, but no change in results or
conclusion
Math, Science, and Engineering Integration in a High School Engineering Course: A Qualitative Study
Engineering in K-12 classrooms has been receiving expanding emphasis in the United States. The integration of science, mathematics, and engineering is a benefit and goal of K-12 engineering; however, current empirical research on the efficacy of K-12 science, mathematics, and engineering integration is limited. This study adds to this growing field, using discourse analysis techniques to examine whether and why students integrate math and science concepts into their engineering design work. The study focuses on student work during a unit from a high school engineering course. Video data were collected during the unit and were used to identify episodes of students discussing math and science concepts. Using discourse analysis, the authors found that students successfully applied math and science concepts to their engineering design work without teacher prompting when the concepts were familiar. However, explicit teacher prompting and instruction regarding the integration of less familiar concepts did not seem to facilitate student use of those concepts. Possible explanations and implications are discussed
In pursuit of consensus: Disagreement and legitimization during small group argumentation
In recent years, an emphasis on scientific argumentation in classrooms has brought into focus collaborative consensus-building as an instructional strategy. In these situations, students with differing and competing arguments are asked to work with one another in order to establish a shared perspective. However, the literature suggests that consensus-building can be challenging for students because their interpretations of the argumentative task and context may not enable their productive engagement with counter-arguments and evidence. In this paper, our goal is to explore the ways in which interactions of students support or inhibit their consensus-building. To that end, we examine and describe three cases that represent different ways in which initially dissenting students try to work towards a consensus with their peers. Through these cases, we demonstrate that legitimization of disparate or incorrect ideas can enable students whose arguments rely on incorrect ideas to feel that their ideas were heard and valued by the rest of their group. As such, we suggest that this legitimization is important because it can help students ‘save face’. This enables students to move away from the competitive and persuasive aspects of argumentation towards interactions that align more closely with sensemaking and consensus-building
Lattice thermal conductivity of TiZrHfNiSn half-Heusler alloys calculated from first principles: Key role of nature of phonon modes
In spite of their relatively high lattice thermal conductivity
, the XNiSn (X=Ti, Zr or Hf) half-Heusler compounds are good
thermoelectric materials. Previous studies have shown that can
be reduced by sublattice-alloying on the X-site. To cast light on how the alloy
composition affects , we study this system using the phonon
Boltzmann-transport equation within the relaxation time approximation in
conjunction with density functional theory.The effect of alloying through
mass-disorder scattering is explored using the virtual crystal approximation to
screen the entire ternary TiZrHfNiSn phase diagram. The
lowest lattice thermal conductivity is found for the TiHfNiSn
compositions; in particular, there is a shallow minimum centered at
TiHfNiSn with taking values between 3.2 and 4.1 W/mK
when the Ti content varies between 20 and 80\%. Interestingly, the overall
behavior of mass-disorder scattering in this system can only be understood from
a combination of the nature of the phonon modes and the magnitude of the mass
variance. Mass-disorder scattering is not effective at scattering acoustic
phonons of low energy. By using a simple model of grain boundary scattering, we
find that nanostructuring these compounds can scatter such phonons effectively
and thus further reduce the lattice thermal conductivity; for instance,
TiHfNiSn with a grain size of nm experiences a 42\%
reduction of compared to that of the single crystal
Graphene Nanogap for Gate Tunable Quantum Coherent Single Molecule Electronics
We present atomistic calculations of quantum coherent electron transport
through fulleropyrrolidine terminated molecules bridging a graphene nanogap. We
predict that three difficult problems in molecular electronics with single
molecules may be solved by utilizing graphene contacts: (1) a back gate
modulating the Fermi level in the graphene leads facilitate control of the
device conductance in a transistor effect with high on/off current ratio; (2)
the size mismatch between leads and molecule is avoided, in contrast to the
traditional metal contacts; (3) as a consequence, distinct features in charge
flow patterns throughout the device are directly detectable by scanning
techniques. We show that moderate graphene edge disorder is unimportant for the
transistor function.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Evaluation of New Density Functional with Account of van der Waals Forces by Use of Experimental H2 Physisorption Data on Cu(111)
Detailed experimental data for physisorption potential-energy curves of H2 on
low-indexed faces of Cu challenge theory. Recently, density-functional theory
has been developed to also account for nonlocal correlation effects, including
van der Waals forces. We show that one functional, denoted vdW-DF2, gives a
potential-energy curve promisingly close to the experiment-derived
physisorptionenergy curve. The comparison also gives indications for further
improvements of the functionals
Stochastic B-series and order conditions for exponential integrators
We discuss stochastic differential equations with a stiff linear part and
their approximation by stochastic exponential integrators. Representing the
exact and approximate solutions using B-series and rooted trees, we derive the
order conditions for stochastic exponential integrators. The resulting general
order theory covers both It\^{o} and Stratonovich integration
Understanding adhesion at as-deposited interfaces from ab initio thermodynamics of deposition growth: thin-film alumina on titanium carbide
We investigate the chemical composition and adhesion of chemical vapour
deposited thin-film alumina on TiC using and extending a recently proposed
nonequilibrium method of ab initio thermodynamics of deposition growth (AIT-DG)
[Rohrer J and Hyldgaard P 2010 Phys. Rev. B 82 045415]. A previous study of
this system [Rohrer J, Ruberto C and Hyldgaard P 2010 J. Phys.: Condens. Matter
22 015004] found that use of equilibrium thermodynamics leads to predictions of
a non-binding TiC/alumina interface, despite the industrial use as a
wear-resistant coating. This discrepancy between equilibrium theory and
experiment is resolved by the AIT-DG method which predicts interfaces with
strong adhesion. The AIT-DG method combines density functional theory
calculations, rate-equation modelling of the pressure evolution of the
deposition environment and thermochemical data. The AIT-DG method was
previously used to predict prevalent terminations of growing or as-deposited
surfaces of binary materials. Here we extent the method to predict surface and
interface compositions of growing or as-deposited thin films on a substrate and
find that inclusion of the nonequilibrium deposition environment has important
implications for the nature of buried interfaces.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted to J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Benchmarking van der Waals Density Functionals with Experimental Data: Potential Energy Curves for H2 Molecules on Cu(111), (100), and (110) Surfaces
Detailed physisorption data from experiment for the H_2 molecule on low-index
Cu surfaces challenge theory. Recently, density-functional theory (DFT) has
been developed to account for nonlocal correlation effects, including van der
Waals (dispersion) forces. We show that the functional vdW-DF2 gives a
potential-energy curve, potential-well energy levels, and difference in lateral
corrugation promisingly close to the results obtained by resonant elastic
backscattering-diffraction experiments. The backscattering barrier is found
selective for choice of exchange-functional approximation. Further, the DFT-D3
and TS-vdW corrections to traditional DFT formulations are also benchmarked,
and deviations are analyzed.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
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