244 research outputs found
Nature of proton transport in a water-filled carbon nanotube and in liquid water
Proton transport (PT) in bulk liquid water and within a thin water-filled
carbon nanotube has been examined with ab initio pathintegral molecular
dynamics (PIMD). Barrierless proton transfer is observed in each case when
quantum nuclear effects (QNEs) are accounted for. The key difference between
the two systems is that in the nanotube facile PT is facilitated by a favorable
prealignment of water molecules, whereas in bulk liquid water solvent
reorganization is required prior to PT. Configurations where the quantum excess
proton is delocalized over several adjacent water molecules along with
continuous interconversion between different hydration states reveals that, as
in liquid water, the hydrated proton under confinement is best described as a
fluxional defect, rather than any individual idealized hydration state such as
Zundel, Eigen, or the so-called linear H7O3+ complex along the water chain.
These findings highlight the importance of QNEs in intermediate strength
hydrogen bonds (HBs) and explain why H+ diffusion through nanochannels is
impeded much less than other cations.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Systematic Determination of Absolute Absorption Cross-section of Individual Carbon Nanotubes
Determination of optical absorption cross-section is always among the central
importance of understanding a material. However its realization on individual
nanostructures, such as carbon nanotubes, is experimentally challenging due to
the small extinction signal using conventional transmission measurements. Here
we develop a technique based on polarization manipulation to enhance the
sensitivity of single-nanotube absorption spectroscopy by two-orders of
magnitude. We systematically determine absorption cross-section over broad
spectral range at single-tube level for more than 50 chirality-defined
single-walled nanotubes. Our data reveals chirality-dependent one-dimensional
photo-physics through the behaviours of exciton oscillator strength and
lifetime. We also establish an empirical formula to predict absorption spectrum
of any nanotube, which provides the foundation to determine quantum
efficiencies in important photoluminescence and photovoltaic processes
Magnetoelectric Coupling and Electric Control of Magnetization in Ferromagnet-Ferroelectric-Metal Superlattices
Ferromagnet-ferroelectric-metal superlattices are proposed to realize the
large room-temperature magnetoelectric effect. Spin dependent electron
screening is the fundamental mechanism at the microscopic level. We also
predict an electric control of magnetization in this structure. The naturally
broken inversion symmetry in our tri-component structure introduces a
magnetoelectric coupling energy of . Such a magnetoelectric coupling
effect is general in ferromagnet-ferroelectric heterostructures, independent of
particular chemical or physical bonding, and will play an important role in the
field of multiferroics.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures and 1 tabl
Direct observation of ordered configurations of hydrogen adatoms on graphene
Ordered configurations of hydrogen adatoms on graphene have long been
proposed, calculated and searched for. Here we report direct observation of
several ordered configurations of H adatoms on graphene by scanning tunneling
microscopy. On the top side of the graphene plane, H atoms in the
configurations appear to stick to carbon atoms in the same sublattice. A gap
larger than 0.6 eV in the local density of states of the configurations was
revealed by scanning tunneling spectroscopy measurements. These findings can be
well explained by density functional theory calculations based on double sided
H configurations. In addition, factors that may influence H ordering are
discussed
Path Integral Treatment of Proton Transport Processes in BaZrO3
Nuclear quantum effects on proton transfer and reorientation in BaZrO3 is investigated theoretically using the ab initio path-integral molecular-dynamics simulation technique. The result demonstrates that adding quantum fluctuations has a large effect on, in particular, the transfer barrier. The corresponding rates and diffusion coefficient are evaluated using the path-centroid transition state theory. In contrast with what is found assuming classical mechanics for the nuclear motion, the reorientation step becomes rate limiting below 600 K
First Principles Calculation of Anomalous Hall Conductivity in Ferromagnetic bcc Fe
We perform a first principles calculation of the anomalous Hall effect in
ferromagnetic bcc Fe. Our theory identifies an intrinsic contribution to the
anomalous Hall conductivity and relates it to the k-space Berry phase of
occupied Bloch states. The theory is able to account for both dc and
magneto-optical Hall conductivities with no adjustable parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, author list correcte
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