1,722 research outputs found
A Tight-Binding Investigation of the NaxCoO2 Fermi Surface
We perform an orthogonal basis tight binding fit to an LAPW calculation of
paramagnetic NaCoO for several dopings. The optimal position of the
apical oxygen at each doping is resolved, revealing a non-trivial dependence of
the band structure and Fermi surface on oxygen height. We find that the small
e hole pockets are preserved throughout all investigated dopings and
discuss some possible reasons for the lack of experimental evidence for these
Fermi sheets
Precise Tight-binding Description of the Band Structure of MgB2
We present a careful recasting of first-principles band structure
calculations for MgB2 in a non-orthogonal sp-tight-binding (TB) basis. Our TB
results almost exactly reproduce our full potential linearized augmented plane
wave results for the energy bands, the densities of states and the total
energies. Our procedure generates transferable Slater-Koster parameters which
should be useful for other studies of this important material.Comment: REVTEX, 2 Encapsulated PostScript Figure
Origin of Superconductivity in Boron-doped Diamond
Superconductivity of boron-doped diamond, reported recently at T_c=4 K, is
investigated exploiting its electronic and vibrational analogies to MgB2. The
deformation potential of the hole states arising from the C-C bond stretch mode
is 60% larger than the corresponding quantity in MgB2 that drives its high Tc,
leading to very large electron-phonon matrix elements. The calculated coupling
strength \lambda ~ 0.5 leads to T_c in the 5-10 K range and makes phonon
coupling the likely mechanism. Higher doping should increase T_c somewhat, but
effects of three dimensionality primarily on the density of states keep doped
diamond from having a T_c closer to that of MgB2.Comment: Four pages with two embedded figures, corrected fig1. (To appear in
Physical Review Letters(2004)
Tight-binding study of structure and vibrations of amorphous silicon
We present a tight-binding calculation that, for the first time, accurately
describes the structural, vibrational and elastic properties of amorphous
silicon. We compute the interatomic force constants and find an unphysical
feature of the Stillinger-Weber empirical potential that correlates with a much
noted error in the radial distribution function associated with that potential.
We also find that the intrinsic first peak of the radial distribution function
is asymmetric, contrary to usual assumptions made in the analysis of
diffraction data. We use our results for the normal mode frequencies and
polarization vectors to obtain the zero-point broadening effect on the radial
distribution function, enabling us to directly compare theory and a high
resolution x-ray diffraction experiment
Tight-binding study of high-pressure phase transitions in titanium: alpha to omega and beyond
We use a tight-binding total energy method, with parameters determined from a
fit to first-principles calculations, to examine the newly discovered gamma
phase of titanium. Our parameters were adjusted to accurately describe the
alpha Ti-omega Ti phase transition, which is misplaced by density functional
calculations. We find a transition from omega Ti to gamma Ti at 102 GPa, in
good agreement with the experimental value of 116 GPa. Our results suggest that
current density functional calculations will not reproduce the omega Ti-gamma
Ti phase transition, but will instead predict a transition from omega Ti to the
bcc beta Ti phase.Comment: 3 encapsulated Postscript figures, submitted to Phyical Review
Letter
Dynamical properties of Au from tight-binding molecular-dynamics simulations
We studied the dynamical properties of Au using our previously developed
tight-binding method. Phonon-dispersion and density-of-states curves at T=0 K
were determined by computing the dynamical-matrix using a supercell approach.
In addition, we performed molecular-dynamics simulations at various
temperatures to obtain the temperature dependence of the lattice constant and
of the atomic mean-square-displacement, as well as the phonon density-of-states
and phonon-dispersion curves at finite temperature. We further tested the
transferability of the model to different atomic environments by simulating
liquid gold. Whenever possible we compared these results to experimental
values.Comment: 7 pages, 9 encapsulated Postscript figures, submitted to Physical
Review
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