113,073 research outputs found
Mott physics in electron dioxygenyl magnet : OF (=Sb, Pt)
We have investigated electronic structures and magnetic properties of
OF (=Sb, Pt), which are composed of two building blocks of
strongly correlated electrons: O dioxygenyls and F
octahedra, by employing the first-principles electronic structure band method.
For OSbF, as a reference system of OPtF, we have shown
that the Coulomb correlation of O(2) electrons drives the Mott insulating
state. For OPtF, we have demonstrated that the Mott insulating
state is induced by the combined effects of the Coulomb correlation of O(2)
and Pt(5) electrons and the spin-orbit (SO) interaction of Pt(5) states.
The role of the SO interaction in forming the Mott insulating state of
OPtF is similar to the case of SrIrO that is a
prototype of a SO induced Mott system with J.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Pressure-induced Phonon Softenings and the Structural and Magnetic Transitions in CrO
To investigate the pressure-induced structural transitions of chromium
dioxide (CrO), phonon dispersions and total energy band structures are
calculated as a function of pressure. The first structural transition has been
confirmed at P 10 GPa from the ground state tetragonal CrO
(t-CrO) of rutile type to orthorhombic CrO (o-CrO) of
CaCl type. The half-metallic property is found to be preserved in
o-CrO. The softening of Raman-active B phonon mode, which is
responsible for this structural transition, is demonstrated. The second
structural transition is found to occur for P 61.1 GPa from ferromagnetic
(FM) o-CrO to nonmagnetic (NM) monoclinic CrO (m-CrO) of
MoO type, which is related to the softening mode at {\bf q} =
R(1/2,0,1/2). The third structural transition has been newly identified at P=
88.8 GPa from m-CrO to cubic CrO of CaF type that is a FM
insulator
Evolution of the Protein Interaction Network of Budding Yeast: Role of the Protein Family Compatibility Constraint
Understanding of how protein interaction networks (PIN) of living organisms
have evolved or are organized can be the first stepping stone in unveiling how
life works on a fundamental ground. Here we introduce a hybrid network model
composed of the yeast PIN and the protein family interaction network. The
essential ingredient of the model includes the protein family identity and its
robustness under evolution, as well as the three previously proposed ones: gene
duplication, divergence, and mutation. We investigate diverse structural
properties of our model with parameter values relevant to yeast, finding that
the model successfully reproduces the empirical data.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. Title changed. Final version published
in JKP
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