14,376 research outputs found
Antiferromagnetic spin chain behavior and a transition to 3D magnetic order in Cu(D,L-alanine)2: Roles of H-bonds
We study the spin chain behavior, a transition to 3D magnetic order and the
magnitudes of the exchange interactions for the metal-amino acid complex
Cu(D,L-alanine)2.H2O, a model compound to investigate exchange couplings
supported by chemical paths characteristic of biomolecules. Thermal and
magnetic data were obtained as a function of temperature (T) and magnetic field
(B0). The magnetic contribution to the specific heat, measured between 0.48 and
30 K, displays above 1.8 K a 1D spin-chain behavior that can be fitted with an
intrachain antiferromagnetic (AFM) exchange coupling constant 2J0 = (-2.12
0.08) cm, between neighbor coppers at 4.49 {\AA} along chains
connected by non-covalent and H-bonds. We also observe a narrow specific heat
peak at 0.89 K indicating a phase transition to a 3D magnetically ordered
phase. Magnetization curves at fixed T = 2, 4 and 7 K with B0 between 0 and 9
T, and at T between 2 and 300 K with several fixed values of B0 were globally
fitted by an intrachain AFM exchange coupling constant 2J0 = (-2.27 0.02)
cm and g = 2.091 0.005. Interchain interactions J1 between coppers
in neighbor chains connected through long chemical paths with total length of
9.51 {\AA} are estimated within the range 0.1 < |2J1| < 0.4 cm, covering
the predictions of various approximations. We analyze the magnitudes of 2J0 and
2J1 in terms of the structure of the corresponding chemical paths. The main
contribution in supporting the intrachain interaction is assigned to H-bonds
while the interchain interactions are supported by paths containing H-bonds and
carboxylate bridges, with the role of the H-bonds being predominant. We compare
the obtained intrachain coupling with studies of compounds showing similar
behavior and discuss the validity of the approximations allowing to calculate
the interchain interactions.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Enhancing single-parameter quantum charge pumping in carbon-based devices
We present a theoretical study of quantum charge pumping with a single ac
gate applied to graphene nanoribbons and carbon nanotubes operating with low
resistance contacts. By combining Floquet theory with Green's function
formalism, we show that the pumped current can be tuned and enhanced by up to
two orders of magnitude by an appropriate choice of device length, gate voltage
intensity and driving frequency and amplitude. These results offer a promising
alternative for enhancing the pumped currents in these carbon-based devices.Comment: 3.5 pages, 2 figure
Phase changes in 38 atom Lennard-Jones clusters. II: A parallel tempering study of equilibrium and dynamic properties in the molecular dynamics and microcanonical
We study the 38-atom Lennard-Jones cluster with parallel tempering Monte
Carlo methods in the microcanonical and molecular dynamics ensembles. A new
Monte Carlo algorithm is presented that samples rigorously the molecular
dynamics ensemble for a system at constant total energy, linear and angular
momenta. By combining the parallel tempering technique with molecular dynamics
methods, we develop a hybrid method to overcome quasi-ergodicity and to extract
both equilibrium and dynamical properties from Monte Carlo and molecular
dynamics simulations. Several thermodynamic, structural and dynamical
properties are investigated for LJ, including the caloric curve, the
diffusion constant and the largest Lyapunov exponent. The importance of
insuring ergodicity in molecular dynamics simulations is illustrated by
comparing the results of ergodic simulations with earlier molecular dynamics
simulations.Comment: Journal of Chemical Physics, accepte
Manipulation of single-photon states encoded in transverse spatial modes: possible and impossible tasks
Controlled generation and manipulation of photon states encoded in their
spatial degrees of freedom is a crucial ingredient in many quantum information
tasks exploiting higher-than-two dimensional encoding. Here, we prove the
impossibility to arbitrarily modify -level state superpositions (quits)
for , encoded in the transverse modes of light, with optical components
associated to the group of symplectic transforms (Gaussian operations).
Surprisingly, we also provide an explicit construction of how non-Gaussian
operations acting on mode subspaces do enable to overcome the limit . In
addition, this set of operations realizes the full SU(3) algebra.Comment: Published in PR
Floquet interface states in illuminated three-dimensional topological insulators
Recent experiments showed that the surface of a three dimensional topological
insulator develops gaps in the Floquet-Bloch band spectrum when illuminated
with a circularly polarized laser. These Floquet-Bloch bands are characterized
by non-trivial Chern numbers which only depend on the helicity of the
polarization of the radiation field. Here we propose a setup consisting of a
pair of counter-rotating lasers, and show that one-dimensional chiral states
emerge at the interface between the two lasers. These interface states turn out
to be spin-polarized and may trigger interesting applications in the field of
optoelectronics and spintronics.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures + supplemental materia
Laser-induced effects on the electronic features of graphene nanoribbons
We study the interplay between lateral confinement and photon-induced
processes on the electronic properties of illuminated graphene nanoribbons. We
find that by tuning the device setup (edges geometries, ribbon width and
polarization direction), a laser with frequency {\Omega} may either not affect
the electronic structure, or induce bandgaps or depletions at \hbar {\Omega}/2,
and/or at other energies not commensurate with half the photon energy. Similar
features are also observed in the dc conductance, suggesting the use of the
polarization direction to switch on and off the graphene device. Our results
could guide the design of novel types of optoelectronic nano-devices.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Measuring two-photon orbital angular momentum entanglement
We put forward an approach to estimate the amount of bipartite spatial
entanglement of down-converted photon states correlated in orbital angular
momentum and the magnitude of the transverse (radial) wave vectors. Both
degrees of freedom are properly considered in our framework, which only
requires azimuthal local linear optical transformations and mode selection
analysis with two fiber detectors. The coincidence distributions predicted by
our approach give an excellent fit to the distributions measured in a recent
experiment aimed to show the very high-dimensional transverse entanglement of
twin photons from a down-conversion source. Our estimate for the Schmidt number
is substantially lower but still confirms the presence of high-dimensional
entanglement.Comment: Extended paper of a published version in PRA, with some extra
appendice
Tuning laser-induced bandgaps in graphene
Could a laser field lead to the much sought-after tunable bandgaps in
graphene? By using Floquet theory combined with Green's functions techniques,
we predict that a laser field in the mid-infrared range can produce observable
bandgaps in the electronic structure of graphene. Furthermore, we show how they
can be tuned by using the laser polarization. Our results could serve as a
guidance to design opto-electronic nano-devices.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Applied Physics Letter
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