14,923 research outputs found
Low work function of the (1000) Ca2N surface
Polymer diodes require cathodes that do not corrode the polymer but do have
low work function to minimize the electron injection barrier. First-principles
calculations demonstrate that the work function of the (1000) surface of the
compound Ca2N is half an eV lower than that of the elemental metal Ca (2.35 vs.
2.87 eV). Moreover its reactivity is expected to be smaller. This makes Ca2N an
interesting candidate to replace calcium as cathode material for polymer light
emitting diode devices.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, accepted by J. Appl. Phy
Interrelation of work function and surface stability: the case of BaAl4
The relationship between the work function (Phi) and the surface stability of
compounds is, to our knowledge, unknown, but very important for applications
such as organic light-emitting diodes. This relation is studied using
first-principles calculations on various surfaces of BaAl4. The most stable
surface [Ba terminated (001)] has the lowest Phi (1.95 eV), which is lower than
that of any elemental metal including Ba. Adding barium to this surface neither
increases its stability nor lowers its work function. BaAl4 is also strongly
bound. These results run counter to the common perception that stability and a
low Phi are incompatible. Furthermore, a large anisotropy and a stable
low-work-function surface are predicted for intermetallic compounds with polar
surfaces.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Chem. Ma
Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions: Zone of Reactions and Space-Time Structure of a Fireball
A zone of reactions is determined and then exploited as a tool in studying
the space-time structure of an interacting system formed in a collision of
relativistic nuclei. The time dependence of the reaction rates integrated over
spatial coordinates is also considered. Evaluations are made with the help of
the microscopic transport model UrQMD. The relation of the boundaries of
different zones of reactions and the hypersurfaces of sharp chemical and
kinetic freeze-outs is discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
A Physical Realization of the Generalized PT-, C-, and CPT-Symmetries and the Position Operator for Klein-Gordon Fields
Generalized parity (P), time-reversal (T), and charge-conjugation
(C)operators were initially definedin the study of the pseudo-Hermitian
Hamiltonians. We construct a concrete realization of these operators for
Klein-Gordon fields and show that in this realization PT and C operators
respectively correspond to the ordinary time-reversal and charge-grading
operations. Furthermore, we present a complete description of the quantum
mechanics of Klein-Gordon fields that is based on the construction of a Hilbert
space with a relativistically invariant, positive-definite, and conserved inner
product. In particular we offer a natural construction of a position operator
and the corresponding localized and coherent states. The restriction of this
position operator to the positive-frequency fields coincides with the
Newton-Wigner operator. Our approach does not rely on the conventional
restriction to positive-frequency fields. Yet it provides a consistent quantum
mechanical description of Klein-Gordon fields with a genuine probabilistic
interpretation.Comment: 20 pages, published versio
Non-equilibrium fluctuations in a driven stochastic Lorentz gas
We study the stationary state of a one-dimensional kinetic model where a
probe particle is driven by an external field E and collides, elastically or
inelastically, with a bath of particles at temperature T. We focus on the
stationary distribution of the velocity of the particle, and of two estimates
of the total entropy production \Delta s_tot. One is the entropy production of
the medium \Delta s_m, which is equal to the energy exchanged with the
scatterers, divided by a parameter \theta, coinciding with the particle
temperature at E=0. The other is the work W done by the external field, again
rescaled by \theta. At small E, a good collapse of the two distributions is
found: in this case the two quantities also verify the Fluctuation Relation
(FR), indicating that both are good approximations of \Delta s_tot.
Differently, for large values of E, the fluctuations of W violate the FR, while
\Delta s_m still verifies it.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
On the origin dependence of multipole moments in electromagnetism
The standard description of material media in electromagnetism is based on
multipoles. It is well known that these moments depend on the point of
reference chosen, except for the lowest order. It is shown that this "origin
dependence" is not unphysical as has been claimed in the literature but forms
only part of the effect of moving the point of reference. When also the
complementary part is taken into account then different points of reference
lead to different but equivalent descriptions of the same physical reality.
This is shown at the microscopic as well as at the macroscopic level. A similar
interpretation is valid regarding the "origin dependence" of the reflection
coefficients for reflection on a semi infinite medium. We show that the
"transformation theory" which has been proposed to remedy this situation (and
which is thus not needed) is unphysical since the transformation considered
does not leave the boundary conditions invariant.Comment: 14 pages, 0 figure
Half-metallic ferromagnets: From band structure to many-body effects
A review of new developments in theoretical and experimental electronic
structure investigations of half-metallic ferromagnets (HMF) is presented.
Being semiconductors for one spin projection and metals for another ones, these
substances are promising magnetic materials for applications in spintronics
(i.e., spin-dependent electronics). Classification of HMF by the peculiarities
of their electronic structure and chemical bonding is discussed. Effects of
electron-magnon interaction in HMF and their manifestations in magnetic,
spectral, thermodynamic, and transport properties are considered. Especial
attention is paid to appearance of non-quasiparticle states in the energy gap,
which provide an instructive example of essentially many-body features in the
electronic structure. State-of-art electronic calculations for correlated
-systems is discussed, and results for specific HMF (Heusler alloys,
zinc-blende structure compounds, CrO FeO) are reviewed.Comment: to be published in Reviews of Modern Physics, vol 80, issue
Momentum of an electromagnetic wave in dielectric media
Almost a hundred years ago, two different expressions were proposed for the
energy--momentum tensor of an electromagnetic wave in a dielectric. Minkowski's
tensor predicted an increase in the linear momentum of the wave on entering a
dielectric medium, whereas Abraham's tensor predicted its decrease. Theoretical
arguments were advanced in favour of both sides, and experiments proved
incapable of distinguishing between the two. Yet more forms were proposed, each
with their advocates who considered the form that they were proposing to be the
one true tensor. This paper reviews the debate and its eventual conclusion:
that no electromagnetic wave energy--momentum tensor is complete on its own.
When the appropriate accompanying energy--momentum tensor for the material
medium is also considered, experimental predictions of all the various proposed
tensors will always be the same, and the preferred form is therefore
effectively a matter of personal choice.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX 4. Removed erroneous factor of mu/mu_0
from Eq.(44
Kinetic cross coupling between non-conserved and conserved fields in phase field models
We present a phase field model for isothermal transformations of two
component alloys that includes Onsager kinetic cross coupling between the
non-conserved phase field and the conserved concentration field. We also
provide the reduction of the phase field model to the corresponding macroscopic
description of the free boundary problem. The reduction is given in a general
form. Additionally we use an explicit example of a phase field model and check
that the reduced macroscopic description, in the range of its applicability, is
in excellent agreement with direct phase field simulations. The relevance of
the newly introduced terms to solute trapping is also discussed
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