6,218 research outputs found

    Transport through a vibrating quantum dot: Polaronic effects

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    We present a Green's function based treatment of the effects of electron-phonon coupling on transport through a molecular quantum dot in the quantum limit. Thereby we combine an incomplete variational Lang-Firsov approach with a perturbative calculation of the electron-phonon self energy in the framework of generalised Matsubara Green functions and a Landauer-type transport description. Calculating the ground-state energy, the dot single-particle spectral function and the linear conductance at finite carrier density, we study the low-temperature transport properties of the vibrating quantum dot sandwiched between metallic leads in the whole electron-phonon coupling strength regime. We discuss corrections to the concept of an anti-adiabatic dot polaron and show how a deformable quantum dot can act as a molecular switch.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, Proceedings of "Progress in Nonequilibrium Green's Function IV" Conference, Glasgow 200

    Leading-order behavior of the correlation energy in the uniform electron gas

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    We show that, in the high-density limit, restricted M{\o}ller-Plesset (RMP) perturbation theory yields ERMP(2)=π2(1ln2)lnrs+O(rs0)E_{\text{RMP}}^{(2)} = \pi^{-2}(1-\ln 2) \ln r_s + O(r_s^0) for the correlation energy per electron in the uniform electron gas, where rsr_s is the Seitz radius. This contradicts an earlier derivation which yielded ERMP(2)=O(lnlnrs)E_{\text{RMP}}^{(2)} = O(\ln|\ln r_s|). The reason for the discrepancy is explained.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in Int. J. Quantum Che

    Exact energy of the spin-polarized two-dimensional electron gas at high density

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    We derive the exact expansion, to O(rs)O(r_s), of the energy of the high-density spin-polarized two-dimensional uniform electron gas, where rsr_s is the Seitz radius.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure and 1 table, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    The uniform electron gas

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    The uniform electron gas or UEG (also known as jellium) is one of the most fundamental models in condensed-matter physics and the cornerstone of the most popular approximation --- the local-density approximation --- within density-functional theory. In this article, we provide a detailed review on the energetics of the UEG at high, intermediate and low densities, and in one, two and three dimensions. We also report the best quantum Monte Carlo and symmetry-broken Hartree-Fock calculations available in the literature for the UEG and discuss the phase diagrams of jellium.Comment: 37 pages, 8 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in WIRES Computational Molecular Scienc

    Correlation energy of two electrons in a ball

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    We study the ground-state correlation energy EcE_{\rm c} of two electrons of opposite spin confined within a DD-dimensional ball (D2D \ge 2) of radius RR. In the high-density regime, we report accurate results for the exact and restricted Hartree-Fock energy, using a Hylleraas-type expansion for the former and a simple polynomial basis set for the latter. By investigating the exact limiting correlation energy E_{\rm c}^{(0)} = \lim_{R \to 0} \Ec for various values of DD, we test our recent conjecture [J. Chem. Phys. {\bf 131} (2009) 241101] that, in the large-DD limit, Ec(0)δ2/8E_{\rm c}^{(0)} \sim -\delta^2/8 for any spherically-symmetric confining external potential, where δ=1/(D1)\delta=1/(D-1).Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure

    Carrier-density effects in many-polaron systems

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    Many-polaron systems with finite charge-carrier density are often encountered experimentally. However, until recently, no satisfactory theoretical description of these systems was available even in the framework of simple models such as the one-dimensional spinless Holstein model considered here. In this work, previous results obtained using numerical as well as analytical approaches are reviewed from a unified perspective, focussing on spectral properties which reveal the nature of the quasiparticles in the system. In the adiabatic regime and for intermediate electron-phonon coupling, a carrier-density driven crossover from a polaronic to a rather metallic system takes place. Further insight into the effects due to changes in density is gained by calculating the phonon spectral function, and the fermion-fermion and fermion-lattice correlation functions. Finally, we provide strong evidence against the possibility of phase separation.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter; final versio
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