394 research outputs found
Relevance of nonadiabatic effects in TiOCl
We analyze the effect of the phonon dynamics on a recently proposed model for
the uniform-incommensurate transition seen in TiOX compounds. The study is
based on a recently developed formalism for nonadiabatic spin-Peierls systems
based on bosonization and a mean field RPA approximation for the interchain
coupling. To reproduce the measured low temperature spin gap, a spin-phonon
coupling quite bigger than the one predicted from an adiabatic approach is
required. This high value is compatible with the renormalization of the phonons
in the high temperature phase seen in inelastic x-ray experiments. Our theory
accounts for the temperature of the incommensurate transition and the value of
the incommensurate wave vector at the transition point.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Magnetic end-states in a strongly-interacting one-dimensional topological Kondo insulator
Topological Kondo insulators are strongly correlated materials, where
itinerant electrons hybridize with localized spins giving rise to a
topologically non-trivial band structure. Here we use non-perturbative
bosonization and renormalization group techniques to study theoretically a
one-dimensional topological Kondo insulator. It is described as a
Kondo-Heisenberg model where the Heisenberg spin-1/2 chain is coupled to a
Hubbard chain through a Kondo exchange interaction in the p-wave channel - a
strongly correlated version of the prototypical Tamm-Shockley model. We derive
and solve renormalization group equations at two-loop order in the Kondo
parameter, and find that, at half-filling, the charge degrees of freedom in the
Hubbard chain acquire a Mott gap, even in the case of a non-interacting
conduction band (Hubbard parameter ). Furthermore, at low enough
temperatures, the system maps onto a spin-1/2 ladder with local ferromagnetic
interactions along the rungs, effectively locking the spin degrees of freedom
into a spin- chain with frozen charge degrees of freedom. This structure
behaves as a spin-1 Haldane chain, a prototypical interacting topological spin
model, and features two magnetic spin- end states for chains with open
boundary conditions. Our analysis allows to derive an insightful connection
between topological Kondo insulators in one spatial dimension and the
well-known physics of the Haldane chain, showing that the ground state of the
former is qualitatively different from the predictions of the naive mean-field
theory.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, 1 appendix. New version with typos correcte
The role of atomic vacancies and boundary conditions on ballistic thermal transport in graphene nanoribbons
Quantum thermal transport in armchair and zig-zag graphene nanoribbons are
investigated in the presence of single atomic vacancies and subject to
different boundary conditions. We start with a full comparison of the phonon
polarizations and energy dispersions as given by a fifth-nearest-neighbor
force-constant model (5NNFCM) and by elasticity theory of continuum membranes
(ETCM). For free-edges ribbons we discuss the behavior of an additional
acoustic edge-localized flexural mode, known as fourth acoustic branch (4ZA),
which has a small gap when it is obtained by the 5NNFCM. Then, we show that
ribbons with supported-edges have a sample-size dependent energy gap in the
phonon spectrum which is particularly large for in-plane modes. Irrespective to
the calculation method and the boundary condition, the dependence of the energy
gap for the low-energy optical phonon modes against the ribbon width W is found
to be proportional to 1/W for in-plane, and 1/W for out-of-plane phonon
modes. Using the 5NNFCM, the ballistic thermal conductance and its
contributions from every single phonon mode are then obtained by the non
equilibrium Green's function technique. We found that, while edge and central
localized single atomic vacancies do not affect the low-energy transmission
function of in-plane phonon modes, they reduce considerably the contributions
of the flexural modes. On the other hand, in-plane modes contributions are
strongly dependent on the boundary conditions and at low temperatures can be
highly reduced in supported-edges samples. These findings could open a route to
engineer graphene based devices where it is possible to discriminate the
relative contribution of polarized phonons and to tune the thermal transport on
the nanoscale
Haldane phase in one-dimensional topological Kondo insulators
We investigate the groundstate properties of a recently proposed model for a
topological Kondo insulator in one dimension (i.e., the -wave
Kondo-Heisenberg lattice model) by means of the Density Matrix Renormalization
Group method. The non-standard Kondo interaction in this model is different
from the usual (i.e., local) Kondo interaction in that the localized spins
couple to the "-wave" spin density of conduction electrons, inducing a
topologically non-trivial insulating groundstate. Based on the analysis of the
charge- and spin-excitation gaps, the string order parameter, and the spin
profile in the groundstate, we show that, at half-filling and low energies, the
system is in the Haldane phase and hosts topologically protected spin-1/2
end-states. Beyond its intrinsic interest as a useful "toy-model" to understand
the effects of strong correlations on topological insulators, we show that the
-wave Kondo-Heisenberg model can be implemented in band optical lattices
loaded with ultra-cold Fermi gases.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 appendi
From spinons to magnons in explicit and spontaneously dimerized antiferromagnetic chains
We reconsider the excitation spectra of a dimerized and frustrated
antiferromagnetic Heisenberg chain. This model is taken as the simpler example
of compiting spontaneous and explicit dimerization relevant for Spin-Peierls
compounds. The bosonized theory is a two frequency Sine-Gordon field theory. We
analize the excitation spectrum by semiclassical methods. The elementary
triplet excitation corresponds to an extended magnon whose radius diverge for
vanishing dimerization. The internal oscilations of the magnon give rise to a
series of excited state until another magnon is emited and a two magnon
continuum is reached. We discuss, for weak dimerization, in which way the
magnon forms as a result of a spinon-spinon interaction potential.Comment: 5 pages, latex, 3 figures embedded in the tex
Pressure dependence of the melting mechanism at the limit of overheating in Lennard-Jones crystals
We study the pressure dependence of the melting mechanism of a surface free
Lennard-Jones crystal by constant pressure Monte Carlo simulation. The
difference between the overheating temperature() and the
thermodynamical melting point() increase for increasing pressure. When
particles move into the repulsive part of the potential the properties at
change. There is a crossover pressure where the volume jump becomes
pressure-independent. The overheating limit is pre-announced by thermal
excitation of big clusters of defects. The temperature zone where the system is
dominated by these big clusters of defects increases with increasing pressure.
Beyond the crossover pressure we find that excitation of defects and clusters
of them start at the same temperature scale related with .Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Domain excitations in spin-Peierls systems
We study a model of a Spin-Peierls material consisting of a set of
antiferromagnetic Heisenberg chains coupled with phonons and interacting among
them via an inter-chain elastic coupling. The excitation spectrum is analyzed
by bosonization techniques and the self-harmonic approximation. The elementary
excitation is the creation of a localized domain structure where the dimerized
order is the opposite to the one of the surroundings. It is a triplet
excitation whose formation energy is smaller than the magnon gap. Magnetic
internal excitations of the domain are possible and give the further
excitations of the system. We discuss these results in the context of recent
experimental measurements on the inorganic Spin-Peierls compound CuGeOComment: 5 pages, 2 figures, corrected version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Mixing of magnetic and phononic excitations in incommensurate Spin-Peierls systems
We analyze the excitation spectra of a spin-phonon coupled chain in the
presence of a soliton. This is taken as a microscopic model of a Spin-Peierls
material placed in a high magnetic field. We show, by using a semiclassical
approximation in the bosonized representation of the spins that a trapped
magnetic state obtained in the adiabatic approximation is destroyed by
dynamical phonons. Low energy states are phonons trapped by the soliton. When
the magnetic gap is smaller than the phonon frequencies the only low energy
state is a mixed magneto-phonon state with the energy of the gap. We emphasize
that our results are relevant for the Raman spectra of the inorganic
Spin-Peierls material CuGeO.Comment: 5 pages, latex, 2 figures embedded in the tex
On the Path Integral Representation for Spin Systems
We propose a classical constrained Hamiltonian theory for the spin. After the
Dirac treatment we show that due to the existence of second class constraints
the Dirac brackets of the proposed theory represent the commutation relations
for the spin. We show that the corresponding partition function, obtained via
the Fadeev-Senjanovic procedure, coincides with the one obtained using coherent
states. We also evaluate this partition function for the case of a single spin
in a magnetic field.Comment: To be published in J.Phys. A: Math. and Gen. Latex file, 12 page
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