740 research outputs found

    Ultrafast Insulator-Metal Phase Transition in VO2 Studied by Multiterahertz Spectroscopy

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    The ultrafast photoinduced insulator-metal transition in VO2 is studied at different temperatures and excitation fluences using multi-THz probe pulses. The spectrally resolved mid-infrared response allows us to trace separately the dynamics of lattice and electronic degrees of freedom with a time resolution of 40 fs. The critical fluence of the optical pump pulse which drives the system into a long-lived metallic state is found to increase with decreasing temperature. Under all measurement conditions we observe a modulation of the eigenfrequencies of the optical phonon modes induced by their anharmonic coupling to the coherent wave packet motion of V-V dimers at 6.1 THz. Furthermore, we find a weak quadratic coupling of the electronic response to the coherent dimer oscillation resulting in a modulation of the electronic conductivity at twice the frequency of the wave packet motion. The findings are discussed in the framework of a qualitative model based on an approximation of local photoexcitation of the vanadium dimers from the insulating state.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures submitted to Physical Review

    Finite-temperature magnetism of Fex_xPd1−x_{1-x} and Cox_xPt1−x_{1-x} alloys

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    The finite-temperature magnetic properties of Fex_xPd1−x_{1-x} and Cox_xPt1−x_{1-x} alloys have been investigated. It is shown that the temperature-dependent magnetic behaviour of alloys, composed of originally magnetic and non-magnetic elements, cannot be described properly unless the coupling between magnetic moments at magnetic atoms (Fe,Co) mediated through the interactions with induced magnetic moments of non-magnetic atoms (Pd,Pt) is included. A scheme for the calculation of the Curie temperature (TCT_C) for this type of systems is presented which is based on the extended Heisenberg Hamiltonian with the appropriate exchange parameters JijJ_{ij} obtained from {\em ab-initio} electronic structure calculations. Within the present study the KKR Green's function method has been used to calculate the JijJ_{ij} parameters. A comparison of the obtained Curie temperatures for Fex_xPd1−x_{1-x} and Cox_xPt1−x_{1-x} alloys with experimental data shows rather good agreement.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figure

    Self-stresses and Crack Formation by Particle Swelling in Cohesive Granular Media

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    We present a molecular dynamics study of force patterns, tensile strength and crack formation in a cohesive granular model where the particles are subjected to swelling or shrinkage gradients. Non-uniform particle size change generates self-equilibrated forces that lead to crack initiation as soon as strongest tensile contacts begin to fail. We find that the coarse-grained stresses are correctly predicted by an elastic model that incorporates particle size change as metric evolution. The tensile strength is found to be well below the theoretical strength as a result of inhomogeneous force transmission in granular media. The cracks propagate either inward from the edge upon shrinkage and outward from the center upon swelling

    Decoherence of a Pointer by a Gas Reservoir

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    We study the effect of the environment on the process of the measurement of a state of a microscopic spin half system. The measuring apparatus is a heavy particle, whose center of mass coordinates can be considered at the end of the measurement as approximately classical, and thus can be used as a pointer. The state of the pointer, which is the result of its interaction with the spin, is transformed into a mixed state by the coupling of the pointer to the environment. The environment is considered to be a gas reservoir, whose particles interact with the pointer. This results in a Fokker-Planck equation for the reduced density matrix of the pointer. The solution of the equation shows that the quantum coherences, which are characteristic to the entangled state between the probabilities to find the pointer in one of two positions, decays exponentially fast in time. We calculate the exponential decay function of this decoherence effect, and express it in terms of the parameters of the model.Comment: 41 pages, 1 figur

    Substituting the main group element in cobalt - iron based Heusler alloys: Co2_2FeAl1−x_{1-x}Six_x

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    This work reports about electronic structure calculations for the Heusler compound Co2_2FeAl1−x_{1-x}Six_x. Particular emphasis was put on the role of the main group element in this compound. The substitution of Al by Si leads to an increase of the number of valence electrons with increasing Si content and may be seen as electron-doping. Self-consistent electronic structure calculations were performed to investigate the consequences of the electron doping for the magnetic properties. The series Co2_2FeAl1−x_{1-x}Six_x is found to exhibit half-metallic ferromagnetism and the magnetic moment follows the Slater-Pauling rule. It is shown that the electron-doping stabilises the gap in the minority states for x=0.5x=0.5.Comment: J. Phys. D (accepted

    Surface Half-Metallicity of CrAs in the Zinc-Blende Structure

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    The development of new techniques such as the molecular beam epitaxy have enabled the growth of thin films of materials presenting novel properties. Recently it was made possible to grow a CrAs thin-film in the zinc-blende structure. In this contribution, the full-potential screened KKR method is used to study the electronic and magnetic properties of bulk CrAs in this novel phase as well as the Cr and As terminated (001) surfaces. Bulk CrAs is found to be half-ferromagnetic for all three GaAs, AlAs and InAs experimental lattice constants with a total spin magnetic moment of 3 μB\mu_B. The Cr-terminated surface retains the half-ferromagnetic character of the bulk, while in the case of the As-termination the surface states destroy the gap in the minority-spin band.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, new text, new titl

    Robustness and diffusion of pointer states

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    Classical properties of an open quantum system emerge through its interaction with other degrees of freedom (decoherence). We treat the case where this interaction produces a Markovian master equation for the system. We derive the corresponding distinguished local basis (pointer basis) by three methods. The first demands that the pointer states mimic as close as possible the local non-unitary evolution. The second demands that the local entropy production be minimal. The third imposes robustness on the inherent quantum and emerging classical uncertainties. All three methods lead to localized Gaussian pointer states, their formation and diffusion being governed by well-defined quantum Langevin equations.Comment: 5 pages, final versio

    First-principles scattering matrices for spin-transport

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    Details are presented of an efficient formalism for calculating transmission and reflection matrices from first principles in layered materials. Within the framework of spin density functional theory and using tight-binding muffin-tin orbitals, scattering matrices are determined by matching the wave-functions at the boundaries between leads which support well-defined scattering states and the scattering region. The calculation scales linearly with the number of principal layers N in the scattering region and as the cube of the number of atoms H in the lateral supercell. For metallic systems for which the required Brillouin zone sampling decreases as H increases, the final scaling goes as H^2*N. In practice, the efficient basis set allows scattering regions for which H^{2}*N ~ 10^6 to be handled. The method is illustrated for Co/Cu multilayers and single interfaces using large lateral supercells (up to 20x20) to model interface disorder. Because the scattering states are explicitly found, ``channel decomposition'' of the interface scattering for clean and disordered interfaces can be performed.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figure
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