96 research outputs found
Emergence of quasi-one-dimensional physics in MoS(dmit), a nearly-isotropic three-dimensional molecular crystal
We report density functional theory calculations for MoS(dmit).
We derive an ab initio tight-binding model from overlaps of Wannier orbitals;
finding a layered model with interlayer hopping terms the size of the
in-plane terms. The in-plane Hamiltonian interpolates the kagom\'e and
honeycomb lattices. It supports states localized to dodecahedral rings within
the plane, which populate one-dimensional (1D) bands and lead to a quasi-1D
spin-one model on a layered honeycomb lattice once interactions are included.
Two lines of Dirac cones also cross the Fermi energy.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Theoretical investigation into the possibility of very large moments in Fe16N2
We examine the mystery of the disputed high-magnetization \alpha"-Fe16N2
phase, employing the Heyd-Scuseria-Ernzerhof screened hybrid functional method,
perturbative many-body corrections through the GW approximation, and onsite
Coulomb correlations through the GGA+U method. We present a first-principles
computation of the effective on-site Coulomb interaction (Hubbard U) between
localized 3d electrons employing the constrained random-phase approximation
(cRPA), finding only somewhat stronger on-site correlations than in bcc Fe. We
find that the hybrid functional method, the GW approximation, and the GGA+U
method (using parameters computed from cRPA) yield an average spin moment of
2.9, 2.6 - 2.7, and 2.7 \mu_B per Fe, respectively.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Optical Study of LaO_0.9F_0.1FeAs: Evidence for a Weakly Coupled Superconducting State
We have studied the reflectance of the recently discovered superconductor
LaO_0.9F0.FeAs in a wide energy range from the far infrared to the visible
regime. We report on the observation of infrared active phonons, the plasma
edge (PE) and possible interband transitions. On the basis of this data and the
reported in-plane penetration depth lambda_L(0) about 254 nm [H. Luetkens et
al., Phys. Rev. Lett. v. 101, 0970009 (2008)] a disorder sensitive relatively
small value of the total electron electron-boson coupling constant
lambda_tot=lambda_e-ph+lambda_e-sp ~ 0.6 +- 0.35 can be estimated adopting an
effective single-band picture.Comment: Changed title, updated references, final published versio
Mott Transition of MnO under Pressure: Comparison of Correlated Band Theories
The electronic structure, magnetic moment, and volume collapse of MnO under
pressure are obtained from four different correlated band theory methods; local
density approximation + Hubbard U (LDA+U), pseudopotential self-interaction
correction (pseudo-SIC), the hybrid functional (combined local exchange plus
Hartree-Fock exchange), and the local spin density SIC (SIC-LSD) method. Each
method treats correlation among the five Mn 3d orbitals (per spin), including
their hybridization with three O orbitals in the valence bands and their
changes with pressure. The focus is on comparison of the methods for rocksalt
MnO (neglecting the observed transition to the NiAs structure in the 90-100 GPa
range). Each method predicts a first-order volume collapse, but with variation
in the predicted volume and critical pressure. Accompanying the volume collapse
is a moment collapse, which for all methods is from high-spin to low-spin (5/2
to 1/2), not to nonmagnetic as the simplest scenario would have. The specific
manner in which the transition occurs varies considerably among the methods:
pseudo-SIC and SIC-LSD give insulator-to-metal, while LDA+U gives
insulator-to-insulator and the hybrid method gives an insulator-to-semimetal
transition. Projected densities of states above and below the transition are
presented for each of the methods and used to analyze the character of each
transition. In some cases the rhombohedral symmetry of the
antiferromagnetically ordered phase clearly influences the character of the
transition.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. A 7 institute collaboration, Updated versio
Orbital textures and charge density waves in transition metal dichalcogenides
Low-dimensional electron systems, as realized naturally in graphene or
created artificially at the interfaces of heterostructures, exhibit a variety
of fascinating quantum phenomena with great prospects for future applications.
Once electrons are confined to low dimensions, they also tend to spontaneously
break the symmetry of the underlying nuclear lattice by forming so-called
density waves; a state of matter that currently attracts enormous attention
because of its relation to various unconventional electronic properties. In
this study we reveal a remarkable and surprising feature of charge density
waves (CDWs), namely their intimate relation to orbital order. For the
prototypical material 1T-TaS2 we not only show that the CDW within the
two-dimensional TaS2-layers involves previously unidentified orbital textures
of great complexity. We also demonstrate that two metastable stackings of the
orbitally ordered layers allow to manipulate salient features of the electronic
structure. Indeed, these orbital effects enable to switch the properties of
1T-TaS2 nanostructures from metallic to semiconducting with technologically
pertinent gaps of the order of 200 meV. This new type of orbitronics is
especially relevant for the ongoing development of novel, miniaturized and
ultra-fast devices based on layered transition metal dichalcogenides
Sixfold fermion near the Fermi level in cubic PtBi2
We show that the cubic compound PtBi2, is a topological semimetal hosting a
sixfold band touching point in close proximity to the Fermi level. Using
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we map the bandstructure of the
system, which is in good agreement with results from density functional theory.
Further, by employing a low energy effective Hamiltonian valid close to the
crossing point, we study the effect of a magnetic field on the sixfold fermion.
The latter splits into a total of twenty Weyl cones for a Zeeman field oriented
in the diagonal, [111] direction. Our results mark cubic PtBi2, as an ideal
candidate to study the transport properties of gapless topological systems
beyond Dirac and Weyl semimetals.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures; this is the final, published versio
Electron penetration in the nucleus and its effect on the quadrupole interaction
A series expansion of the interaction between a nucleus and its surrounding
electron distribution provides terms that are well-known in the study of
hyperfine interactions: the familiar quadrupole interaction and the less
familiar hexadecapole interaction. If the penetration of electrons into the
nucleus is taken into account, various corrections to these multipole
interactions appear. The best known one is a scalar correction related to the
isotope shift and the isomer shift. This paper discusses a related tensor
correction, which modifies the quadrupole interaction if electrons penetrate
the nucleus: the quadrupole shift. We describe the mathematical formalism and
provide first-principles calculations of the quadrupole shift for a large set
of solids. Fully relativistic calculations that explicitly take a finite
nucleus into account turn out to be mandatory. Our analysis shows that the
quadrupole shift becomes appreciably large for heavy elements. Implications for
experimental high-precision studies of quadrupole interactions and quadrupole
moment ratios are discussed. A literature review of other small quadrupole-like
effects is presented as well
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From Colossal to Zero: Controlling the Anomalous Hall Effect in Magnetic Heusler Compounds via Berry Curvature Design
Since the discovery of the anomalous Hall effect (AHE), the anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) has been thought to be zero when there is no net magnetization. However, the recently found relation between the intrinsic AHE and the Berry curvature predicts other possibilities, such as a large AHC in noncolinear antiferromagnets with no net magnetization but net Berry curvature. Vice versa, the AHE in principle could be tuned to zero, irrespective of a finite magnetization. Here, we experimentally investigate this possibility and demonstrate that the symmetry elements of Heusler magnets can be changed such that the Berry curvature and all the associated properties are switched while leaving the magnetization unaffected. This enables us to tune the AHC from 0 Ω-1 cm-1 up to 1600 Ω-1 cm-1 with an exceptionally high anomalous Hall angle up to 12%, while keeping the magnetization the same. Our study shows that the AHC can be controlled by selectively changing the Berry curvature distribution, independent of the magnetization
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