62 research outputs found
Lanczos-adapted time evolution for open boundary quantum transport
We increase the efficiency of a recently proposed time integration scheme for
time dependent quantum transport by using the Lanczos method for time
evolution. We illustrate our modified scheme in terms of a simple one
dimensional model. Our results show that the Lanczos-adapted scheme gives a
large increase in numerical efficiency, and is an advantageous route for
numerical time integration in ab-initio treatment of open boundary quantum
transport phenomena.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Theory of Auger core-valence-valence processes in simple metals. II. Dynamical and surface effects on Auger line shapes
ABSTRACT: Auger CVV spectra of simple metals are generally believed to be well described by one-electronlike theories in the bulk which account for matrix elements and, in some cases, also static core-hole screening effects. We present here detailed calculations on Li, Be, Na, Mg, and Al using selfconsistent bulk wave functions and proper matrix elements. The resulting spectra differ markedly from experiment and peak at too low energies. To explain this discrepancy we investigate effects of the surface and dynamical effects of the sudden disappearance of the core hole in the final state. To study core-hole effects we solve Mahan —Nozieres —De Dominicis (MND) model numerically over the entire band. The core-hole potential and other parameters in the MND model are determined by self-consistent calculations of the core-hole impurity. The results are compared with simpler approximations based on the final-state rule due to von Barth and Grossmann. To study surface and mean-free-path effects we perform slab calculations for Al but use a simpler infinite-barrier model in the remaining cases. The model reproduces the slab spectra for Al with very good accuracy. .In all cases investigated either the effects of the surface or the effects of the core hole give important modifications and a much improved agreement with experiment
Theory of auger core-valence-valence processes in simple metals. I. Total yields and core-level lifetime widths
ABSTRACT: There is a considerable disagreement in the literature on the description of lifetime effects arising from core-valence transitions in solids. We calculate here Auger and radiative widths of shallow core levels in Li, Be, Na, Mg, and Al with use of principles consistent with dynamical theories of secondary-emission processes developed earlier. The lifetime has no simple relation to the usual self-energy but is instead directly related to emission yields. The problem of choosing reliable approximations for Auger rates and matrix elements is analyzed theoretically and computationally. We also comment on some earlier approaches. Much of our discussion pertains also to calculations of Auger line shapes from first principles. For long hole lifetimes the total and partial level widths obey an initial-state rule and follow from wave functions perturbed by a static core hole. To obtain these impurity wave .functions we perform self-consistent supercell calculations. The core-hole
screening increases the Auger rates by factors of the order 2—4 compared with results from ground-state orbitals but has never been properly included before. The width of the 1s level in Li is rather accurately known because it monitors large effects of incomplete lattice relaxation. For Li we obtain here a width 17 meV in excellent agreement with the value 16 meV deduced earlier from measurements by Callcott et al
Classical Nuclear Motion in Quantum Transport
An ab initio quantum-classical mixed scheme for the time evolution of
electrode-device-electrode systems is introduced to study nuclear dynamics in
quantum transport. Two model systems are discussed to illustrate the method.
Our results provide the first example of current-induced molecular desorption
as obtained from a full time-dependent approach and suggest the use of ac
biases as a way to tailor electromigration. They also show the importance of
non-adiabatic effects for ultrafast phenomena in nanodevices.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Zeno-clocking the Auger decay
A tenet of time-resolved spectroscopy is -faster laser pulses for shorter
timescales- . Here we suggest turning this paradigm around, and slow down the
system dynamics via repeated measurements, to do spectroscopy on longer
timescales. This is the principle of the quantum Zeno effect. We exemplify our
approach with the Auger process, and find that repeated measurements increase
the core-hole lifetime, redistribute the kinetic energy of Auger electrons, and
alter entanglement formation. We further provide an explicit experimental
protocol for atomic Li, to make our proposal concrete.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, supplemental material provide
Photoemission Beyond the Sudden Approximation
The many-body theory of photoemission in solids is reviewed with emphasis on
methods based on response theory. The classification of diagrams into loss and
no-loss diagrams is discussed and related to Keldysh path-ordering
book-keeping. Some new results on energy losses in valence-electron
photoemission from free-electron-like metal surfaces are presented. A way to
group diagrams is presented in which spectral intensities acquire a
Golden-Rule-like form which guarantees positiveness. This way of regrouping
should be useful also in other problems involving spectral intensities, such as
the problem of improving the one-electron spectral function away from the
quasiparticle peak.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
Time-Dependent Partition-Free Approach in Resonant Tunneling Systems
An extended Keldysh formalism, well suited to properly take into account the
initial correlations, is used in order to deal with the time-dependent current
response of a resonant tunneling system. We use a \textit{partition-free}
approach by Cini in which the whole system is in equilibrium before an external
bias is switched on. No fictitious partitions are used. Besides the
steady-state responses one can also calculate physical dynamical responses. In
the noninteracting case we clarify under what circumstances a steady-state
current develops and compare our result with the one obtained in the
partitioned scheme. We prove a Theorem of asymptotic Equivalence between the
two schemes for arbitrary time-dependent disturbances. We also show that the
steady-state current is independent of the history of the external perturbation
(Memory Loss Theorem). In the so called wide-band limit an analytic result for
the time-dependent current is obtained. In the interacting case we propose an
exact non-equilibrium Green function approach based on Time Dependent Density
Functional Theory. The equations are no more difficult than an ordinary Mean
Field treatment. We show how the scattering-state scheme by Lang follows from
our formulation. An exact formula for the steady-state current of an arbitrary
interacting resonant tunneling system is obtained. As an example the
time-dependent current response is calculated in the Random Phase
Approximation.Comment: final version, 18 pages, 9 figure
Importance of vertex corrections for obtaining correct selection rules in the theory of photoemission
It is shown that the commonly used approximation for the no-loss angle-resolved photocurrent from solids in general violates the optical selection rules if the final-state inverse low-energy electron diffraction orbital is taken to be damped. The violations occur in the velocity formula, which is inconsistent with the corresponding and commonly used acceleration formula in which the matrix elements are evaluated with respect to the gradient of the one-electron potential. It has recently been shown that, in a correct description of the no-loss photocurrent, the bare matrix elements should be replaced by the appropriate vector-coupling vertex function. We demonstrate that this modification is needed in order to have correct selection rules and consistency between the velocity and acceleration formulas for photoemission and photoabsorption. Our formalism further allows us to interpret the commonly used acceleration formula in terms of a well-defined approximation which leaves out local-field effects, and to give approximations which obey the selection rules
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