137 research outputs found

    ÜBER DIE ULTRAVIOLETTEN ABSORPTIONSSPEKTREN DER NUKLEOTIDBASEN

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    Electrons in Dry DNA from Density Functional Calculations

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    The electronic structure of an infinite poly-guanine - poly-cytosine DNA molecule in its dry A-helix structure is studied by means of density-functional calculations. An extensive study of 30 nucleic base pairs is performed to validate the method. The electronic energy bands of DNA close to the Fermi level are then analyzed in order to clarify the electron transport properties in this particularly simple DNA realization, probably the best suited candidate for conduction. The energy scale found for the relevant band widths, as compared with the energy fluctuations of vibrational or genetic-sequence origin, makes highly implausible the coherent transport of electrons in this system. The possibility of diffusive transport with sub-nanometer mean free paths is, however, still open. Information for model Hamiltonians for conduction is provided.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Quasiparticle band structure of infinite hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chloride chains

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    We study the quasiparticle band structure of isolated, infinite HF and HCl bent (zigzag) chains and examine the effect of the crystal field on the energy levels of the constituent monomers. The chains are one of the simplest but realistic models of the corresponding three-dimensional crystalline solids. To describe the isolated monomers and the chains, we set out from the Hartree-Fock approximation, harnessing the advanced Green's function methods "local molecular orbital algebraic diagrammatic construction" (ADC) scheme and "local crystal orbital ADC" (CO-ADC) in a strict second order approximation, ADC(2,2) and CO-ADC(2,2), respectively, to account for electron correlations. The configuration space of the periodic correlation calculations is found to converge rapidly only requiring nearest-neighbor contributions to be regarded. Although electron correlations cause a pronounced shift of the quasiparticle band structure of the chains with respect to the Hartree-Fock result, the bandwidth essentially remains unaltered in contrast to, e.g., covalently bound compounds.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 6 tables, RevTeX4, corrected typoe

    Ab initio Green's function formalism for band structures

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    Using the Green's function formalism, an ab initio theory for band structures of crystals is derived starting from the Hartree-Fock approximation. It is based on the algebraic diagrammatic construction scheme for the self-energy which is formulated for crystal orbitals (CO-ADC). In this approach, the poles of the Green's function are determined by solving a suitable Hermitian eigenvalue problem. The method is not only applicable to the outer valence and conduction bands, it is also stable for inner valence bands where strong electron correlations are effective. The key to the proposed scheme is to evaluate the self-energy in terms of Wannier orbitals before transforming it to a crystal momentum representation. Exploiting the fact that electron correlations are mainly local, one can truncate the lattice summations by an appropriate configuration selection scheme. This yields a flat configuration space; i.e., its size scales only linearly with the number of atoms per unit cell for large systems and, under certain conditions, the computational effort to determine band structures also scales linearly. As a first application of the new formalism, a lithium fluoride crystal has been chosen. A minimal basis set description is studied, and a satisfactory agreement with previous theoretical and experimental results for the fundamental band gap and the width of the F 2p valence band complex is obtained.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, RevTeX4, new section on lithium fluorid

    What one can expect from the research performed on highly conducting polymers

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    449-452In this introductory paper the practical importance of the experimental and theoretical research on highly conducting polymers is considered. Further, the results of ab initio Hartree-Fock crystal orbital calculations (in some cases corrected also for correlation) on doped and on highly conducting polymers with small gaps (possibility of intrinsic conduction) are reviewed. The theoretical possibilities of improving these band structure calculations to a great extent (good basis set + correlation corrections) due to recent developments in programming are outlined. Finally, the possibilities of using these improved band structures for calculation of electron-phonon interactions (mobility) for soliton and bipolaron studies in these systems and for computing their Auger- and exciton spectra are pointed out. It is concluded that these theoretical developments will lead, within a few years, to the design of new highly conducting polymers with other optimal physical properties ("tailor made polymers") which are necessary to increase their practical applicability to a large extent
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