1,759 research outputs found
Spin Polarization and Transport of Surface States in the Topological Insulators Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3 from First Principles
We investigate the band dispersion and the spin texture of topologically
protected surface states in the bulk topological insulators Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3
by first-principles methods. Strong spin-orbit entanglement in these materials
reduces the spin-polarization of the surface states to ~50% in both cases; this
reduction is absent in simple models but of important implications to
essentially any spintronic application. We propose a way of controlling the
magnitude of spin polarization associated with a charge current in thin films
of topological insulators by means of an external electric field. The proposed
dual-gate device configuration provides new possibilities for electrical
control of spin.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figure
Many-body interactions in quasi-freestanding graphene
The Landau-Fermi liquid picture for quasiparticles assumes that charge
carriers are dressed by many-body interactions, forming one of the fundamental
theories of solids. Whether this picture still holds for a semimetal like
graphene at the neutrality point, i.e., when the chemical potential coincides
with the Dirac point energy, is one of the long-standing puzzles in this field.
Here we present such a study in quasi-freestanding graphene by using
high-resolution angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We see the
electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions go through substantial
changes when the semimetallic regime is approached, including renormalizations
due to strong electron-electron interactions with similarities to marginal
Fermi liquid behavior. These findings set a new benchmark in our understanding
of many-body physics in graphene and a variety of novel materials with Dirac
fermions.Comment: PNAS 2011 ; published ahead of print June 27, 201
Doping effects on the electronic and structural properties of CoO2: An LSDA+U study
A systematic LSDA+U study of doping effects on the electronic and structural
properties of single layer CoO2 is presented. Undoped CoO2 is a charge transfer
insulator within LSDA+U and a metal with a high density of states (DOS) at the
Fermi level within LSDA. (CoO2), on the other hand, is a band
insulator with a gap of 2.2 eV. Systems with fractional doping are metals if no
charge orderings are present. Due to the strong interaction between the doped
electron and other correlated Co d electrons, the calculated electronic
structure of (CoO2) depends sensitively on the doping level x. Zone
center optical phonon energies are calculated under the frozen phonon
approximation and are in good agreement with measured values. Softening of the
phonon at doping x ~0.25 seems to indicate a strong electron-phonon
coupling in this system. Possible intemediate spin states of Co ions, Na
ordering, as well as magnetic and charge orderings in this system are also
discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure
Magnetic susceptibility of insulators from first principles
We present an {\it ab initio} approach for the computation of the magnetic
susceptibility of insulators. The approach is applied to compute
in diamond and in solid neon using density functional theory in the local
density approximation, obtaining good agreement with experimental data. In
solid neon, we predict an observable dependence of upon pressure.Comment: Revtex, to appear in Physical Review Lette
Ab-initio theory of NMR chemical shifts in solids and liquids
We present a theory for the ab-initio computation of NMR chemical shifts
(sigma) in condensed matter systems, using periodic boundary conditions. Our
approach can be applied to periodic systems such as crystals, surfaces, or
polymers and, with a super-cell technique, to non-periodic systems such as
amorphous materials, liquids, or solids with defects. We have computed the
hydrogen sigma for a set of free molecules, for an ionic crystal, LiH, and for
a H-bonded crystal, HF, using density functional theory in the local density
approximation. The results are in excellent agreement with experimental data.Comment: to appear in Physical Review Letter
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