6,033 research outputs found
En fremgangsmåde ved bestemmelse af normalområde for haematologiske og klinisk kemiske parametre
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Monte Carlo Study of Short-Range Order and Displacement Effects in Disordered CuAu
The correlation between local chemical environment and atomic displacements
in disordered CuAu alloy has been studied using Monte Carlo simulations based
on the effective medium theory (EMT) of metallic cohesion. These simulations
correctly reproduce the chemically-specific nearest-neighbor distances in the
random alloy across the entire Cu\$_x\$Au\$_{1-x}\$ concentration range. In the
random equiatomic CuAu alloy, the chemically specific pair distances depend
strongly on the local atomic environment (i.e. fraction of like/unlike nearest
neighbors). In CuAu alloy with short-range order, the relationship between
local environment and displacements remains qualitatively similar. However the
increase in short-range order causes the average Cu-Au distance to decrease
below the average Cu-Cu distance, as it does in the ordered CuAuI phase. Many
of these trends can be understood qualitatively from the different neutral
sphere radii and compressibilities of the Cu and Au atoms.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Construction of transferable spherically-averaged electron potentials
A new scheme for constructing approximate effective electron potentials
within density-functional theory is proposed. The scheme consists of
calculating the effective potential for a series of reference systems, and then
using these potentials to construct the potential of a general system. To make
contact to the reference system the neutral-sphere radius of each atom is used.
The scheme can simplify calculations with partial wave methods in the
atomic-sphere or muffin-tin approximation, since potential parameters can be
precalculated and then for a general system obtained through simple
interpolation formulas. We have applied the scheme to construct electron
potentials of phonons, surfaces, and different crystal structures of silicon
and aluminum atoms, and found excellent agreement with the self-consistent
effective potential. By using an approximate total electron density obtained
from a superposition of atom-based densities, the energy zero of the
corresponding effective potential can be found and the energy shifts in the
mean potential between inequivalent atoms can therefore be directly estimated.
This approach is shown to work well for surfaces and phonons of silicon.Comment: 8 pages (3 uuencoded Postscript figures appended), LaTeX,
CAMP-090594-
Are the renormalized band widths in TTF-TCNQ of structural or electronic origin? - An angular dependent NEXAFS study
We have performed angle-dependent near-edge x-ray absorption fine structure
measurements in the Auger electron yield mode on the correlated
quasi-one-dimensional organic conductor TTF-TCNQ in order to determine the
orientation of the molecules in the topmost surface layer. We find that the
tilt angles of the molecules with respect to the one-dimensional axis are
essentially the same as in the bulk. Thus we can rule out surface relaxation as
the origin of the renormalized band widths which were inferred from the
analysis of photoemission data within the one-dimensional Hubbard model.
Thereby recent theoretical results are corroborated which invoke long-range
Coulomb repulsion as alternative explanation to understand the spectral
dispersions of TTF-TCNQ quantitatively within an extended Hubbard model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Distinct nature of static and dynamic magnetic stripes in cuprate superconductors
We present detailed neutron scattering studies of the static and dynamic
stripes in an optimally doped high-temperature superconductor,
LaCuO. We find that the dynamic stripes do not disperse towards the
static stripes in the limit of vanishing energy transfer. We conclude that the
dynamic stripes observed in neutron scattering experiments are not the
Goldstone modes associated with the broken symmetry of the simultaneously
observed static stripes, but rather that the signals originate from different
domains in the sample. These domains may be related by structural twinning, or
may be entirely different phases, where the static stripes in one phase are
pinned versions of the dynamic stripes in the other. Our results explain
earlier observations of unusual dispersions in underdoped
LaSrCuO () and LaBaCuO ().
Our findings are relevant for all compounds exhibiting magnetic stripes, and
may thus be a vital part in unveiling the nature of high temperature
superconductivity
Dislocation Kinks in Copper: Widths, Barriers, Effective Masses, and Quantum Tunneling
We calculate the widths, migration barriers, effective masses, and quantum
tunneling rates of kinks and jogs in extended screw dislocations in copper,
using an effective medium theory interatomic potential. The energy barriers and
effective masses for moving a unit jog one lattice constant are close to
typical atomic energies and masses: tunneling will be rare. The energy barriers
and effective masses for the motion of kinks are unexpectedly small due to the
spreading of the kinks over a large number of atoms. The effective masses of
the kinks are so small that quantum fluctuations will be important. We discuss
implications for quantum creep, kink--based tunneling centers, and Kondo
resonances
An Effective-Medium Tight-Binding Model for Silicon
A new method for calculating the total energy of Si systems is presented. The
method is based on the effective-medium theory concept of a reference system.
Instead of calculating the energy of an atom in the system of interest a
reference system is introduced where the local surroundings are similar. The
energy of the reference system can be calculated selfconsistently once and for
all while the energy difference to the reference system can be obtained
approximately. We propose to calculate it using the tight-binding LMTO scheme
with the Atomic-Sphere Approximation(ASA) for the potential, and by using the
ASA with charge-conserving spheres we are able to treat open system without
introducing empty spheres. All steps in the calculational method is {\em ab
initio} in the sense that all quantities entering are calculated from first
principles without any fitting to experiment. A complete and detailed
description of the method is given together with test calculations of the
energies of phonons, elastic constants, different structures, surfaces and
surface reconstructions. We compare the results to calculations using an
empirical tight-binding scheme.Comment: 26 pages (11 uuencoded Postscript figures appended), LaTeX,
CAMP-090594-
The Random-bond Potts model in the large-q limit
We study the critical behavior of the q-state Potts model with random
ferromagnetic couplings. Working with the cluster representation the partition
sum of the model in the large-q limit is dominated by a single graph, the
fractal properties of which are related to the critical singularities of the
random Potts model. The optimization problem of finding the dominant graph, is
studied on the square lattice by simulated annealing and by a combinatorial
algorithm. Critical exponents of the magnetization and the correlation length
are estimated and conformal predictions are compared with numerical results.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
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