4 research outputs found
Ab-Initio Calculation of the Metal-Insulator Transition in Lithium rings
We study how the Mott metal-insulator transition (MIT) is affected when we
have to deal with electrons with different angular momentum quantum numbers.
For that purpose we apply ab-initio quantum-chemical methods to lithium rings
in order to investigate the analogue of a MIT. By changing the interatomic
distance we analyse the character of the many-body wavefunction and discuss the
importance of the orbital quasi-degeneracy within the metallic regime.
The charge gap (ionization potential minus electron affinity) shows a minimum
and the static electric dipole polarizability has a pronounced maximum at a
lattice constant where the character of the wavefunction changes from
significant to essentially -type. In addition, we examine rings with
bond alternation in order to answer the question under which conditions a
Peierls distortion occurs.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
Metallic bonding due to correlations: A quantum chemical ab-initio calculation of the cohesive energy of mercury
Solid mercury in the rhombohedral structure is unbound within the
self-consistent field (Hartree-Fock) approximation. The metallic binding is
entirely due to electronic correlations. We determine the cohesive energy of
solid mercury within an ab-initio many-body expansion for the correlation part.
Electronic correlations in the shell contribute about half to the cohesive
energy. Relativistic effects are found to be very important. Very good
agreement with the experimental value is obtained.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
The convergence of the ab-initio many-body expansion for the cohesive energy of solid mercury
A many-body expansion for mercury clusters of the form E = \sum_{i<j}\Delta
\epsilon_{ij} + \sum_{i<j<k}\Delta \epsilon_{ijk} + ... \quad, does not
converge smoothly with increasing cluster size towards the solid state. Even
for smaller cluster sizes (up to n=6), where van der Waals forces still
dominate, one observes bad convergence behaviour. For solid mercury the
convergence of the many-body expansion can dramatically be improved by an
incremental procedure within an embedded cluster approach. Here one adds the
coupled cluster many-body electron correlation contributions of the embedded
cluster to the bulk HF energy. In this way we obtain a cohesive energy (not
corrected for zero-point vibration) of 0.79 eV in perfect agreement with the
experimental value.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted PR
The Ant Species Richness and Diversity of a Primary Lowland Rain Forest, the Pasoh Forest Reserve, West-Malaysia
Malsch A, Rosciszewski K, Maschwitz U. The Ant Species Richness and Diversity of a Primary Lowland Rain Forest, the Pasoh Forest Reserve, West-Malaysia. In: Okuda T, Manokaran N, Matsumoto Y, Niiyama K, Thomas SC, Ashton PS, eds. Pasoh: Ecology of a Lowland Rain Forest in South East Asia. Tokyo: Springer Japan; 2003: 347-373