15,101 research outputs found
Determination of biaxial creep strength of T-111 tantalum alloy
Biaxial creep strength of T-111 tantalum alloy tubing in high temperature, high vacuum environmen
Random-phase-approximation-based correlation energy functionals: Benchmark results for atoms
The random phase approximation (RPA) for the correlation energy functional of
density functional theory has recently attracted renewed interest. Formulated
in terms of the Kohn-Sham (KS) orbitals and eigenvalues, it promises to resolve
some of the fundamental limitations of the local density and generalized
gradient approximations, as for instance their inability to account for
dispersion forces. First results for atoms, however, indicate that the RPA
overestimates correlation effects as much as the orbital-dependent functional
obtained by a second order perturbation expansion on the basis of the KS
Hamiltonian. In this contribution, three simple extensions of the RPA are
examined, (a) its augmentation by an LDA for short-range correlation, (b) its
combination with the second order exchange term, and (c) its combination with a
partial resummation of the perturbation series including the second order
exchange. It is found that the ground state and correlation energies as well as
the ionization potentials resulting from the extensions (a) and (c) for closed
sub-shell atoms are clearly superior to those obtained with the unmodified RPA.
Quite some effort is made to ensure highly converged RPA data, so that the
results may serve as benchmark data. The numerical techniques developed in this
context, in particular for the inherent frequency integration, should also be
useful for applications of RPA-type functionals to more complex systems.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Mesoscopic Spin-Hall Effect in 2D electron systems with smooth boundaries
Spin-Hall effect in ballistic 2D electron gas with Rashba-type spin-orbit
coupling and smooth edge confinement is studied. We predict that the interplay
of semiclassical electron motion and quantum dynamics of spins leads to several
distinct features in spin density along the edge that originate from
accumulation of turning points from many classical trajectories. Strong peak is
found near a point of the vanishing of electron Fermi velocity in the lower
spin-split subband. It is followed by a strip of negative spin density that
extends until the crossing of the local Fermi energy with the degeneracy point
where the two spin subbands intersect. Beyond this crossing there is a wide
region of a smooth positive spin density. The total amount of spin accumulated
in each of these features exceeds greatly the net spin across the entire edge.
The features become more pronounced for shallower boundary potentials,
controlled by gating in typical experimental setups.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, published versio
Competition Between Fractional Quantum Hall Liquid, Bubble and Wigner Crystal Phases in the Third Landau Level
Magnetotransport measurements were performed in a ultra-high mobility
GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well of density . The
temperature dependence of the magnetoresistance was studied in detail
in the vicinity of . In particular, we discovered new minima in
at filling factor and , but only at
intermediate temperatures mK. We interpret these as
evidence for a fractional quantum Hall liquid forming in the N=2 Landau level
and competing with bubble and Wigner crystal phases favored at lower
temperatures. Our data suggest that a magnetically driven insulator-insulator
quantum phase transition occurs between the bubble and Wigner crystal phases at
T=0.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett.93 266804 (2004
Giant microwave photoresistance of two-dimensional electron gas
We measure microwave frequency (4-40 GHz) photoresistance at low magnetic
field B, in high mobility 2D electron gas samples, excited by signals applied
to a transmission line fabricated on the sample surface. Oscillatory
photoresistance vs B is observed. For excitation at the cyclotron resonance
frequency, we find an unprecedented, giant relative photoresistance (\Delta
R)/R of up to 250 percent. The photoresistance is apparently proportional to
the square root of applied power, and disappears as the temperature is
increased.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Colossal magnetoresistance in an ultra-clean weakly interacting 2D Fermi liquid
We report the observation of a new phenomenon of colossal magnetoresistance
in a 40 nm wide GaAs quantum well in the presence of an external magnetic field
applied parallel to the high-mobility 2D electron layer. In a strong magnetic
field, the magnetoresistance is observed to increase by a factor of ~300 from 0
to 45T without the system undergoing any metal-insulator transition. We discuss
how this colossal magnetoresistance effect cannot be attributed to the spin
degree-of-freedom or localization physics, but most likely emanates from strong
magneto-orbital coupling between the two-dimensional electron gas and the
magnetic field. Our observation is consistent with a field-induced 2D-to-3D
transition in the confined electronic system
On the violation of a local form of the Lieb-Oxford bound
In the framework of density-functional theory, several popular density
functionals for exchange and correlation have been constructed to satisfy a
local form of the Lieb-Oxford bound. In its original global expression, the
bound represents a rigorous lower limit for the indirect Coulomb interaction
energy. Here we employ exact-exchange calculations for the G2 test set to show
that the local form of the bound is violated in an extensive range of both the
dimensionless gradient and the average electron density. Hence, the results
demonstrate the severity in the usage of the local form of the bound in
functional development. On the other hand, our results suggest alternative ways
to construct accurate density functionals for the exchange energy.Comment: (Submitted on 27 April 2012
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