42 research outputs found
Effect of a Normal-State Pseudogap on Optical Conductivity in Underdoped Cuprate Superconductors
We calculate the c-axis infrared conductivity in
underdoped cuprate superconductors for spinfluctuation exchange scattering
within the CuO-planes including a phenomenological d-wave pseudogap of
amplitude . For temperatures decreasing below a temperature , a gap for develops in in the
incoherent (diffuse) transmission limit. The resistivity shows 'semiconducting'
behavior, i.e. it increases for low temperatures above the constant behavior
for . We find that the pseudogap structure in the in-plane optical
conductivity is about twice as big as in the interplane conductivity
, in qualitative agreement with experiment. This is a
consequence of the fact that the spinfluctuation exchange interaction is
suppressed at low frequencies as a result of the opening of the pseudogap.
While the c-axis conductivity in the underdoped regime is described best by
incoherent transmission, in the overdoped regime coherent conductance gives a
better description.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev. B (November 1, 1999
Berry phases and pairing symmetry in Holstein-Hubbard polaron systems
We study the tunneling dynamics of dopant-induced hole polarons which are
self-localized by electron-phonon coupling in a two-dimensional antiferro-
magnet. Our treatment is based on a path integral formulation of the adia-
batic approximation, combined with many-body tight-binding, instanton, con-
strained lattice dynamics, and many-body exact diagonalization techniques. Our
results are mainly based on the Holstein- and, for comparison, on the
Holstein-Hubbard model. We also study effects of 2nd neighbor hopping and
long-range electron-electron Coulomb repulsion. The polaron tunneling dynamics
is mapped onto an effective low-energy Hamiltonian which takes the form of a
fermion tight-binding model with occupancy dependent, predominant- ly 2nd and
3rd neighbor tunneling matrix elements, excluded double occupan- cy, and an
effective intersite charge interactions. Antiferromagnetic spin correlations in
the original many-electron Hamiltonian are reflected by an attractive
contribution to the 1st neighbor charge interaction and by Berry phase factors
which determine the signs of effective polaron tunneling ma- trix elements. In
the two-polaron case, these phase factors lead to polaron pair wave functions
of either -wave symmetry or p-wave symme- try with zero and
nonzero total pair momentum, respectively. Implications for the doping
dependent isotope effect, pseudo-gap and Tc of a superconduc- ting polaron pair
condensate are discussed/compared to observed in cuprates.Comment: 23 pages, revtex, 13 ps figure
Ground state of the three-band Hubbard model
The ground state of the two-dimensional three-band Hubbard model in oxide
superconductors is investigated by using the variational Monte Carlo method.
The Gutzwiller-projected BCS and spin- density wave (SDW) functions are
employed in the search for a possible ground state with respect to dependences
on electron density. Antiferromagnetic correlations are considerably enhanced
near half-filling. It is shown that the d-wave state may exist away from
half-filling for both the hole and electron doping cases. The overall structure
of the phase diagram obtained by the calculations qualitatively agrees with
experimental indications. The superconducting condensation energy is in
reasonable agreement with the experimental value obtained from specific heat
and critical magnetic field measurements for optimally doped samples. The
inhomogeneous SDW state is also examined near 1/8-hole doping.Comment: 10 pages, 17 figure
High-speed polynomial multiplication architecture for ring-LWE and SHE cryptosystems
Polynomial multiplication is the basic and most computationally intensive operation in ring-Learning With Errors (ring-LWE) encryption and ``Somewhat Homomorphic Encryption (SHE) cryptosystems. In this paper, the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) with a linearithmic complexity of , is exploited in the design of a high-speed polynomial multiplier. A constant geometry FFT datapath is used in the computation to simplify the control of the architecture. The contribution of this work is three-fold. First, parameter sets which support both an efficient modular reduction design and the security requirements for ring-LWE encryption and SHE are provided. Second, a versatile pipelined architecture accompanied with an improved dataflow are proposed to obtain a high-speed polynomial multiplier. Third, the proposed architecture supports polynomial multiplications for different lengths and moduli . The experimental results on a Spartan-6 FPGA show that the proposed design results in a speedup of 3.5 times on average when compared with the state of the art. It performs a polynomial multiplication in the ring-LWE scheme () and the SHE scheme () in only 6.3s and 33.1s, respectively
The disruption of bacterial membrane integrity through ROS generation induced by nanohybrids of silver and clay
Nanohybrids, synthesized via silver nitrate reduction in the presence of silicate clay, exhibit a high potency against bacterial growth. The plate-like clay, due to its anionic surface charges and a large surface area, serves as the support for the formation of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) similar to 30 nm in diameter. The nano-hybrid consisting of Ag/silicate at a 7/93 weight ratio inhibited the growth of dermal pathogens including Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Streptococcus pyrogens, as well as the methicillin- and oxacillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA and ORSA). Scanning electron microscope revealed that these nanohybrids were adherent on the surface of individual bacteria. The thin silicate plates provide a surface for immobilizing AgNPs in one highly concentrated area but prevent them from entering the cell membrane. Subsequent cytotoxicity studies indicated that surface contact with the reduced AgNPs on clay is sufficient to initiate cell death. This toxicity is related to a loss in membrane integrity due to reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. The hybridization of AgNPs on clay surface is viable for generating a new class of nanohybrids exhibiting mild cytotoxicity but high efficacy for battling drug-resistant bacteria. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved