150,501 research outputs found
Quantum effective force in an expanding infinite square-well potential and Bohmian perspective
The Schr\"{o}dinger equation is solved for the case of a particle confined to
a small region of a box with infinite walls. If walls of the well are moved,
then, due to an effective quantum nonlocal interaction with the boundary, even
though the particle is nowhere near the walls, it will be affected. It is shown
that this force apart from a minus sign is equal to the expectation value of
the gradient of the quantum potential for vanishing at the walls boundary
condition. Variation of this force with time is studied. A selection of Bohmian
trajectories of the confined particle is also computed.Comment: 7 figures, Accepted by Physica Script
Wavepacket scattering on graphene edges in the presence of a (pseudo) magnetic field
The scattering of a Gaussian wavepacket in armchair and zigzag graphene edges
is theoretically investigated by numerically solving the time dependent
Schr\"odinger equation for the tight-binding model Hamiltonian. Our theory
allows to investigate scattering in reciprocal space, and depending on the type
of graphene edge we observe scattering within the same valley, or between
different valleys. In the presence of an external magnetic field, the well know
skipping orbits are observed. However, our results demonstrate that in the case
of a pseudo-magnetic field, induced by non-uniform strain, the scattering by an
armchair edge results in a non-propagating edge state.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Energy shift and conduction-to-valence band transition mediated by a time dependent potential barrier in graphene
We investigate the scattering of a wave packet describing low-energy
electrons in graphene by a time-dependent finite step potential barrier. Our
results demonstrate that, after Klein tunneling through the barrier, the
electron acquires an extra energy which depends on the rate of change the
barrier height in time. If such a rate is negative, the electron loses energy
and ends up as a valence band state after leaving the barrier, which
effectively behaves as a positively charged quasi-particleComment: 5 pages, 5 figures, Fig. 3 selected for the Kaleidoscope section
(Sept. 2015) of Phys. Rev.
All-strain based valley filter in graphene nanoribbons using snake states
A pseudo-magnetic field kink can be realized along a graphene nanoribbon
using strain engineering. Electron transport along this kink is governed by
snake states that are characterized by a single propagation direction. Those
pseudo-magnetic fields point towards opposite directions in the K and K'
valleys, leading to valley polarized snake states. In a graphene nanoribbon
with armchair edges this effect results in a valley filter that is based only
on strain engineering. We discuss how to maximize this valley filtering by
adjusting the parameters that define the stress distribution along the graphene
ribbon.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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