30,369 research outputs found

    Phosphorene analogues: isoelectronic two-dimensional group-IV monochalcogenides with orthorhombic structure

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    The group-IV monochalcogenides SnS, GeS, SnSe and GeSe form a family within the wider group of semiconductor `phosphorene analogues'. Here, we used first principles calculations to investigate systematically their structural, electronic and optical properties, analysing the changes associated with the reduction of dimensionality, from bulk to monolayer or bilayer form. We show that all those binary phosphorene analogues are semiconducting, with bandgap energies covering part of the infra-red and visible range, and in most cases higher than phosphorene. Further, we found that they have multiple valleys in the valence and conduction band, with spin-orbit splitting of the order of 19-86 meV

    Scattering of spin 1/2 particles by the 2+1 dimensional noncommutative Aharonov-Bohm potential

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    In this work we study modifications in the Aharonov-Bohm effect for relativistic spin 1/2 particles due to the noncommutativity of spacetime in 2+12 + 1 dimensions. The noncommutativity gives rise to a correction to the Aharonov-Bohm potential which is highly singular at the origin, producing divergences in a perturbative expansion around the usual solution of the free Dirac equation. This problem is surmounted by using a perturbative expansion around the exact solution of the \textit{commutative} Aharonov-Bohm problem. We calculate, in this setting, the scattering amplitude and the corrections to the differential and total cross sections for a spin 1/2 particle, in the small-flux limit.Comment: 11 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Mott Insulator to Superfluid Phase Transition in Bravais Lattices via the Jaynes-Cummings-Hubbard Model

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    The Properties of the Mott insulator to superfluid phase transition are obtained through the fermionic approximation in the Jaynes-Cummings-Hubbard model on linear, square, SC, FCC, and BCC Bravais lattices. For varying excitation number and atom-cavity frequency detuning. We find that the Mott lobes and the critical hopping are not scalable only for the FCC lattice. At the large excitation number regime, the critical hopping is scalable for all the lattices and it does not depend on the detuning.Comment: Submitted to European Physical Journal B, Section:Solid State and Materials. 7 pages and 8 figure

    The influence of the Kerr effect in Mott insulator to superfluid transition from the point of view of the Jaynes-Cummings-Hubbard model

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    We have studied the Jaynes-Cummings-Hubbard model for a chain with the Kerr effect (nonlinear optical effect) through fermionic approximation. We have observed that the Kerr effec does not cause major changes in the energy spectrum. However, the phase transition properties from Mott insulator to superfluid undergoes significant changes due to the Kerr effect.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Continuously transforming kinks into compactons in the O(3)-sigma model

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    In this work, we investigate the solutions of vortices in the O(3)-sigma model with the gauge field governed by the Chern-Simons term and subject to a hyperbolic self-dual potential. We show that this model admits both topological and nontopological solitons solutions. By means of numerical analysis, we realize that the topological solutions of the model can be transformed into compacton-like solutions. On the other hand, after modifying the model by the introduction of a dielectric constant, an interesting feature appears; namely, the nontopological solutions can be transformed into kink-like solutions through the numerical variation of the dielectric constant. Finally, we discuss the degeneracy for the topological solitons in a given sector and present the numerical solutions of the first model.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure

    Enhanced piezoelectricity and modified dielectric screening of 2-D group-IV monochalcogenides

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    We use first principles calculations to investigate the lattice properties of group-IV monochalcogenides. These include static dielectric permittivity, elastic and piezoelectric tensors. For the monolayer, it is found that the static permittivity, besides acquiring a dependence on the interlayer distance, is comparatively higher than in the 3D system. In contrast, it is found that elastic properties are little changed by the lower dimensionality. Poisson ratio relating in-plane deformations are close to zero, and the existence of a negative Poisson ratio is also predicted for the GeS compound. Finally, the monolayers shows piezoelectricity, with piezoelectric constants higher than that recently predicted to occur in other 2D-systems, as hexagonal BN and transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers

    Vacancies and oxidation of 2D group-IV monochalcogenides

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    Point defects in the binary group-IV monochalcogenide monolayers of SnS, SnSe, GeS, GeSe are investigated using density-functional-theory calculations. Several stable configurations are found for oxygen defects, however we give evidence that these materials are less prone to oxidation than phosphorene, with which monochalcogenides are isoelectronic and share the same orthorhombic structure. Concurrent oxygen defects are expected to be vacancies and substitutional oxygen. We show that it is energetically favorable oxygen be incorporated into the layers substituting for a chalcogen (O S/Se defects), and different from most of the other defects investigated, this defect preserves the electronic structure of the material. Thus, we suggest that annealing treatments can be useful for the treatment of functional materials where loss mechanisms due to the presence of defects are undesirable

    Trapping Spin-00 particles on p−p-balls in (D,1)(D,1) dimensions

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    p-Balls are topological defects in (D,1)(D,1) dimensions constructed with M≥1\mathcal{M}\ge 1 scalar fields which depend radially on only 2≤p≤D−22 \le p\le D-2 spatial dimensions. Such defects are characterized by an action that breaks translational invariance and are inspired on the physics of a brane with D−pD-p extra dimensions. Here we consider the issue of localization of bosonic states described by a scalar field Φ\Phi sufficiently weak to not disturb sensibly the defect configuration. After describing the general formalism, we consider some specify examples with M=1,2\mathcal{M}=1,2 and 33, looking for some region of parameters where bound and resonant bosonic states can be found. We investigate the way the influence of the defect structure, number of radial dimensions and coupling between the fields are related to the occurrence of bound and resonant states.Comment: 38 pages, 45 figure

    Resonances on deformed thick branes

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    In this work we investigate the issue of gravity and fermion localization and resonances in (4,1)(4,1)-branes constructed with one scalar field coupled with gravity in deformed models. Such models give solutions for the scalar field that is the usual kink solution in the extra dimension for a parameter p=1p=1 and deformations with a two-kink profile for odd p>1p>1. Gravity is localized and resonant modes are found for small values of pp. The coupling between the scalar field and spinors is a necessary condition for fermions to be localized on such branes. After performing a chiral decomposition of the five-dimensional spinor we found resonances with both chiralities for all odd pp's. The correspondence between the spectra for left and right chirality is guaranteed and Dirac fermions are realized on the brane. The increasing of pp characterizes the formation of branes with internal structure that turns the gravitational interaction more effective for fermions aside the brane, increasing their lifetime. The influence of the internal structure of the branes and the presence of resonances for gravity and fermionic modes is addressed.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figure

    Thermodynamics of Schwarzschild-like black holes in modified gravity models

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    Over the last decades, many methods were developed to prove Hawking radiation. Recently, a semiclassical method known as the tunneling method has been proposed as a more straightforward way of derivating black hole thermodynamical properties. This method has been widely applied to a vast sort of spacetimes with satisfactory results. In this work, we obtain the black hole thermodynamics in the presence of a Lorentz symmetry breaking (LSB). We apply the Hamilton-Jacobi method to Schwarzschild-like black holes, and we investigate whether the LSB affects their thermodynamics. The results found show that the LSB not only changes the black hole thermodynamic quantities but also makes it necessary to modify the standard first law of thermodynamics.Comment: Title changed, section VI suppressed. Other slight modifications in order to match the accepted version to appears in Annals of Physics. 17 pages, no figure
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