3,391 research outputs found
Antiferromagnetic and structural transitions in the superoxide KO2 from first principles: A 2p-electron system with spin-orbital-lattice coupling
KO2 exhibits concomitant antiferromagnetic (AFM) and structural transitions,
both of which originate from the open-shell 2p electrons of O
molecules. The structural transition is accompanied by the coherent tilting of
O molecular axes. The interplay among the spin-orbital-lattice
degrees of freedom in KO2 is investigated by employing the first-principles
electronic structure theory and the kinetic-exchange interaction scheme. We
have shown that the insulating nature of the high symmetry phase of KO2 at high
temperature (T) arises from the combined effect of the spin-orbit coupling and
the strong Coulomb correlation of O 2p electrons. In contrast, for the low
symmetry phase of KO2 at low T with the tilted O molecular axes, the
band gap and the orbital ordering are driven by the combined effects of the
crystal-field and the strong Coulomb correlation. We have verified that the
emergence of the O 2p ferro-orbital ordering is essential to achieve the
observed AFM structure for KO2
Inelastic scattering in a monolayer graphene sheet; a weak-localization study
Charge carriers in a graphene sheet, a single layer of graphite, exhibit much
distinctive characteristics to those in other two-dimensional electronic
systems because of their chiral nature. In this report, we focus on the
observation of weak localization in a graphene sheet exfoliated from a piece of
natural graphite and nano-patterned into a Hall-bar geometry. Much stronger
chiral-symmetry-breaking elastic intervalley scattering in our graphene sheet
restores the conventional weak localization. The resulting carrier-density and
temperature dependence of the phase coherence length reveal that the
electron-electron interaction including a direct Coulomb interaction is the
main inelastic scattering factor while electron-hole puddles enhance the
inelastic scattering near the Dirac point.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
Slave-boson approach to the infinite-U Anderson-Holstein impurity model
The infinite- Anderson-Holstein impurity model is studied with a focus on
the interplay between the strong electron correlation and the weak
electron-phonon interaction. The slave boson method has been employed in
combination with the large degeneracy expansion (1/N) technique. The charge and
spin susceptibilities and the phonon propagator are obtained in the
approximation scheme where the saddle point configuration and the Gaussian 1/N
fluctuations are taken into account. The spin susceptibility is found not to be
renormalized by electron-phonon interaction, while the charge susceptibility is
renormalized.
From the renormalized charge susceptibility the Kondo temperature is found to
increase by the electron-phonon interaction. It turns out that the bosonic 1/N
Gaussian fluctuations play a very crucial role, in particular, for the phonon
propagator.Comment: 12pages, 3 figures. Published in Physical Review
Anomalous microwave conductivity coherence peak in c-axis MgB2 thin film
The temperature dependence of the real part of the microwave complex
conductivity at 17.9 GHz obtained from surface impedance measurements of two
c-axis oriented MgB2 thin films reveals a pronounced maximum at a temperature
around 0.6 times the critical temperature. Calculations in the frame of a
two-band model based on Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory suggest that
this maximum corresponds to an anomalous coherence peak resembling the two-gap
nature of MgB2. Our model assumes there is no interband impurity scattering and
a weak interband pairing interaction, as suggested by bandstructure
calculations. In addition, the observation of a coherence peak indicates that
the pi-band is in the dirty limit and dominates the total conductivity of our
filmsComment: 10 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Behavior of NiTiNb SMA wires under recovery stress or prestressing
The recovery stress of martensitic shape-memory alloy [SMA] wires can be used to confine concrete, and the confining effectiveness of the SMA wires was previously proved through experimental tests. However, the behavior of SMA wires under recovery stress has not been seriously investigated. Thus, this study conducted a series of tests of NiTiNb martensitic SMA wires under recovery stress with varying degrees of prestrain on the wires and compared the behavior under recovery stress with that under prestressing of the wires. The remaining stress was reduced by the procedure of additional strain loading and unloading. More additional strains reduced more remaining stresses. When the SMA wires were heated up to the transformation temperature under prestress, the stress on the wires increased due to the state transformation. Furthermore, the stress decreased with a decreasing temperature of the wires down to room temperature. The stress of the NiTiNb wires was higher than the prestress, and the developed stress seemed to depend on the composition of the SMAs. When an additional strain was subsequently loaded and unloaded on the prestressed SMA wires, the remaining stress decreased. Finally, the remaining stress becomes zero when loading and unloading a specific large strain
The role of the Cucumber mosaic virus 2b protein in viral movement and symptom induction
The Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) 2b protein is a counter-defense factor and symptom determinant. Conserved domains in the 2b protein sequence were mutated in the 2b gene of strain Fny-CMV. The effects of these mutations were assessed by infection of Nicotiana tabacum, N. benthamiana, and Arabidopsis thaliana (ecotype Col-0) with mutant viruses and by expression of mutant 2b transgenes in A. thaliana. We confirmed that two nuclear localization signals were required for symptom induction and found that the N-terminal domain was essential for symptom induction. The C-terminal domain and two serine residues within a putative phosphorylation domain modulated symptom severity. Further infection studies were conducted using Fny-CMVΔ2b, a mutant that cannot express the 2b protein and that induces no symptoms in N. tabacum, N. benthamiana, or A. thaliana ecotype Col-0. Surprisingly, in plants of A. thaliana ecotype C24, Fny-CMVΔ2b induced severe symptoms similar to those induced by the wild-type virus. However, C24 plants infected with the mutant virus recovered from disease while those infected with the wild-type virus did not. Expression of 2b transgenes from either Fny-CMV or from LS-CMV (a mild strain) in Col-0 plants enhanced systemic movement of Fny-CMVΔ2b and permitted symptom induction by Fny-CMVΔ2b. Taken together, the results indicate that the 2b protein itself is an important symptom determinant in certain hosts. However, they also suggest that the protein may somehow synergize symptom induction by other CMV-encoded factors
Phonon structure in I-V characteristic of MgB point-contacts
The search of the phonon structure at the above-gap energies was carried out
for spectra of MgB point contacts with a normal metal.
The two-band model is assumed not only for the gap structure in
-characteristics, but also for phonons in
point-contact spectra, with up to the maximum lattice vibration energy. Since
the current is carried mostly by charges of 3D-band, whereas the strong
electron-phonon interaction occurs in 2D-band, we observe the phonon
peculiarities due to ''proximity'' effect in {\it k}-space, which depends on
the variation of interband coupling through the elastic scattering.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, revtex4, reported in International Conference
"Modern Problems in Superconductivity", 9-13 September, Yalta, Ukrain
Effective chiral lagrangian in the chiral limit from the instanton vacuum
We study the effective chiral Lagrangian in the chiral limit from the
instanton vacuum. Starting from the nonlocal effective chiral action, we derive
the effective chiral Lagrangian, using the derivative expansion to order
in the chiral limit. The low energy constants, , , and
are determined and compared with various models and the corresponding empirical
data. The results are in a good agreement with the data. We also discuss about
the upper limit of the sigma meson, based on the present results.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.
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