1,591 research outputs found
Enhanced Ferromagnetic Stability in Cu Doped Passivated GaN Nanowires
Density functional calculations are performed to investigate the room
temperature ferromagnetism in GaN:Cu nanowires (NWs). Our results indicate that
two Cu dopants are most stable when they are near each other. Compared to bulk
GaN:Cu, we find that magnetization and ferromagnetism in Cu doped NWs is
strongly enhanced because the band width of the Cu td band is reduced due to
the 1D nature of the NW. The surface passivation is shown to be crucial to
sustain the ferromagnetism in GaN:Cu NWs. These findings are in good agreement
with experimental observations and indicate that ferromagnetism in this type of
systems can be tuned by controlling the size or shape of the host materials.Comment: Nano Lett., ASAP Article, 10.1021/nl080261
Controlling doping in graphene through a SiC substrate: A first-principles study
Controlling the type and density of charge carriers by doping is the key step
for developing graphene electronics. However, direct doping of graphene is
rather a challenge. Based on first-principles calculations, a concept of
overcoming doping difficulty in graphene via substrate is reported.We find that
doping could be strongly enhanced in epitaxial graphene grown on silicon
carbide substrate. Compared to free-standing graphene, the formation energies
of the dopants can decrease by as much as 8 eV. The type and density of the
charge carriers of epitaxial graphene layer can be effectively manipulated by
suitable dopants and surface passivation. More importantly, contrasting to the
direct doping of graphene, the charge carriers in epitaxial graphene layer are
weakly scattered by dopants due to the spatial separation between dopants and
the conducting channel. Finally, we show that a similar idea can also be used
to control magnetic properties, for example, induce a half-metallic state in
the epitaxial graphene without magnetic impurity doping
Many-body Green's function theory of ferromagnetic Heisenberg systems with single-ion anisotropies in more than one direction
The behaviour of ferromagnetic systems with single-ion anisotropies in more
than one direction is investigated with many-body Green's function theory
generalizing earlier work with uniaxial anisotropies only. It turns out to be
of advantage to construct Green's functions in terms of the spin operators S^x,
S^y and S^z, instead of the commonly used S^+,S^- and S^z operators. The
exchange energy terms are decoupled by RPA and the single-ion anisotropy terms
by a generalization of the Anderson-Callen decoupling. We stress that in the
derivation of the formalism none of the three spatial axes is special, so that
one is always able to select a reference direction along which a magnetization
component is not zero. Analytical expressions are obtained for all three
components of the magnetization and the expectation values ,
and for any spin quantum number S. The formalism considers both
in-plane and out-of-plane anisotropies. Numerical calculations illustrate the
behaviour of the magnetization for 3-dimensional and 2-dimensional systems for
various parameters. In the 2-dimensional case, the magnetic dipole-dipole
coupling is included, and a comparison is made between in-plane and
out-of-plane anisotropies.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, missing figures adde
Charge Ordered RVB States in the Doped Cuprates
We study charge ordered d-wave resonating valence bond states (dRVB) in the
doped cuprates, and estimate the energies of these states in a generalized model by using a renormalized mean field theory. The long range Coulomb
potential tends to modulate the charge density in favor of the charge ordered
RVB state. The possible relevance to the recently observed
checkerboard patterns in tunnelling conductance in high cuprates is
discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
First-principles study on the effective masses of zinc-blend-derived Cu_2Zn-IV-VI_4 (IV = Sn, Ge, Si and VI = S, Se)
The electron and hole effective masses of kesterite (KS) and stannite (ST)
structured Cu_2Zn-IV-VI_4 (IV = Sn, Ge, Si and VI = S, Se) semiconductors are
systematically studied using first-principles calculations. We find that the
electron effective masses are almost isotropic, while strong anisotropy is
observed for the hole effective mass. The electron effective masses are
typically much smaller than the hole effective masses for all studied
compounds. The ordering of the topmost three valence bands and the
corresponding hole effective masses of the KS and ST structures are different
due to the different sign of the crystal-field splitting. The electron and hole
effective masses of Se-based compounds are significantly smaller compared to
the corresponding S-based compounds. They also decrease as the atomic number of
the group IV elements (Si, Ge, Sn) increases, but the decrease is less notable
than that caused by the substitution of S by Se.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
Spin-Orbit Coupling and Ion Displacements in Multiferroic TbMnO3
The electronic and magnetic properties of TbMnO3 leading to its ferroelectric
(FE) polarization were investigated on the basis of relativistic density
functional theory (DFT) calculations. In agreement with experiment, we show
that the spin-spiral plane of TbMnO3 can be either the bc- or ab-plane, but not
the ac-plane. As for the mechanism of FE polarization, our work reveals that
the "pure electronic" model by Katsura, Nagaosa and Balatsky (KNB) is
inadequate in predicting the absolute direction of FE polarization. For the
ab-plane spin-spiral state of TbMnO3, the direction of FE polarization
predicted by the KNB model is opposite to that predicted by DFT calculations.
In determining the magnitude and the absolute direction of FE polarization in
spin-spiral states, it is found crucial to consider the displacements of the
ions from their ecntrosymmetric positions
PROCOV: maximum likelihood estimation of protein phylogeny under covarion models and site-specific covarion pattern analysis
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The covarion hypothesis of molecular evolution holds that selective pressures on a given amino acid or nucleotide site are dependent on the identity of other sites in the molecule that change throughout time, resulting in changes of evolutionary rates of sites along the branches of a phylogenetic tree. At the sequence level, covarion-like evolution at a site manifests as conservation of nucleotide or amino acid states among some homologs where the states are not conserved in other homologs (or groups of homologs). Covarion-like evolution has been shown to relate to changes in functions at sites in different clades, and, if ignored, can adversely affect the accuracy of phylogenetic inference.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>PROCOV (protein covarion analysis) is a software tool that implements a number of previously proposed covarion models of protein evolution for phylogenetic inference in a maximum likelihood framework. Several algorithmic and implementation improvements in this tool over previous versions make computationally expensive tree searches with covarion models more efficient and analyses of large phylogenomic data sets tractable. PROCOV can be used to identify covarion sites by comparing the site likelihoods under the covarion process to the corresponding site likelihoods under a rates-across-sites (RAS) process. Those sites with the greatest log-likelihood difference between a 'covarion' and an RAS process were found to be of functional or structural significance in a dataset of bacterial and eukaryotic elongation factors.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Covarion models implemented in PROCOV may be especially useful for phylogenetic estimation when ancient divergences between sequences have occurred and rates of evolution at sites are likely to have changed over the tree. It can also be used to study lineage-specific functional shifts in protein families that result in changes in the patterns of site variability among subtrees.</p
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