528 research outputs found
Important Roles of Te 5p and Ir 5d Spin-orbit Interactions on the Multi-band Electronic Structure of Triangular Lattice Superconductor Ir1-xPtxTe2
We report an angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study on a
triangular lattice superconductor IrPtTe in which the Ir-Ir
or Te-Te bond formation, the band Jahn-Teller effect, and the spin-orbit
interaction are cooperating and competing with one another. The Fermi surfaces
of the substituted system are qualitatively similar to the band structure
calculations for the undistorted IrTe with an upward chemical potential
shift due to electron doping. A combination of the ARPES and the band structure
calculations indicates that the Te spin-orbit interaction removes the
orbital degeneracy and induces type spin-orbit
coupling near the A point. The inner and outer Fermi surfaces are entangled by
the Te and Ir spin-orbit interactions which may provide exotic
superconductivity with singlet-triplet mixing.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Te 5p orbitals bring three-dimensional electronic structure to two-dimensional Ir0.95Pt0.05Te2
We have studied the nature of the three-dimensional multi-band electronic
structure in the twodimensional triangular lattice Ir1-xPtxTe2 (x=0.05)
superconductor using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), x-ray
photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) and band structure calculation. ARPES results
clearly show a cylindrical (almost two-dimensional) Fermi surface around the
zone center. Near the zone boundary, the cylindrical Fermi surface is truncated
into several pieces in a complicated manner with strong three-dimensionality.
The XPS result and the band structure calculation indicate that the strong Te
5p-Te 5p hybridization between the IrTe2 triangular lattice layers is
responsible for the three-dimensionality of the Fermi surfaces and the
intervening of the Fermi surfaces observed by ARPES.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Peierls Mechanism of the Metal-Insulator Transition in Ferromagnetic Hollandite K2Cr8O16
Synchrotron X-ray diffraction experiment shows that the metal-insulator
transition occurring in a ferromagnetic state of a hollandite
KCrO is accompanied by a structural distortion from the
tetragonal to monoclinic phase with a
supercell. Detailed electronic structure
calculations demonstrate that the metal-insulator transition is caused by a
Peierls instability in the quasi-one-dimensional column structure made of four
coupled Cr-O chains running in the -direction, leading to the formation of
tetramers of Cr ions below the transition temperature. This furnishes a rare
example of the Peierls transition of fully spin-polarized electron systems.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett., in press, 5 pages, 3 figure
Comparison of the tetrahedron method to smearing methods for the electronic density of states
The electronic density of states (DOS) highlights fundamental properties of materials that oftentimes dictate their properties, such as the band gap and Van Hove singularities. In this short note, we discuss how sharp features of the density of states can be obscured by smearing methods (such as the Gaussian and Fermi smearing methods) when calculating the DOS. While the common approach to reach a "converged" density of states of a material is to increase the discrete k-point mesh density, we show that the DOS calculated by smearing methods can appear to converge but not to the correct DOS. Employing the tetrahedron method for Brillouin zone integration resolves key features of the density of states far better than smearing methods
Synchronous Symmetry Breaking in Neurons with Different Neurite Counts
As neurons develop, several immature processes (i.e., neurites) grow out of the cell body. Over time, each neuron breaks symmetry when only one of its neurites grows much longer than the rest, becoming an axon. This symmetry breaking is an important step in neurodevelopment, and aberrant symmetry breaking is associated with several neuropsychiatric diseases, including schizophrenia and autism. However, the effects of neurite count in neuronal symmetry breaking have never been studied. Existing models for neuronal polarization disagree: some predict that neurons with more neurites polarize up to several days later than neurons with fewer neurites, while others predict that neurons with different neurite counts polarize synchronously. We experimentally find that neurons with different neurite counts polarize synchronously. We also show that despite the significant differences among the previously proposed models, they all agree with our experimental findings when the expression levels of the proteins responsible for symmetry breaking increase with neurite count. Consistent with these results, we observe that the expression levels of two of these proteins, HRas and shootin1, significantly correlate with neurite count. This coordinated symmetry breaking we observed among neurons with different neurite counts may be important for synchronized polarization of neurons in developing organisms
Excitonic Bose-Einstein condensation in Ta2NiSe5 above room temperature
We show that finite temperature variational cluster approximation (VCA)
calculations on an extended Falicov-Kimball model can reproduce angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) results on Ta2NiSe5 across a
semiconductor-to-semiconductor structural phase transition at 325 K. We
demonstrate that the characteristic temperature dependence of the flat-top
valence band observed by ARPES is reproduced by the VCA calculation on the
realistic model for an excitonic insulator only when the strong excitonic
fluctuation is taken into account. The present calculations indicate that
Ta2NiSe5 falls in the Bose-Einstein condensation regime of the excitonic
insulator state.Comment: 21 pages(5 figures
Estimating spatial variation in the effects of climate change on the net primary production of Japanese cedar plantations based on modeled carbon dynamics
Spatiotemporal prediction of the response of planted forests to a changing climate is increasingly important for the sustainable management of forest ecosystems. In this study, we present a methodology for estimating spatially varying productivity in a planted forest and changes in productivity with a changing climate in Japan, with a focus on Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica D. Don) as a representative tree species of this region. The process-based model Biome-BGC was parameterized using a plant trait database for Japanese cedar and a Bayesian optimization scheme. To compare productivity under historical (1996–2000) and future (2096–2100) climatic conditions, the climate scenarios of two representative concentration pathways (i.e., RCP2.6 and RCP8.5) were used in five global climate models (GCMs) with approximately 1-km resolution. The seasonality of modeled fluxes, namely gross primary production, ecosystem respiration, net ecosystem exchange, and soil respiration, improved after two steps of parameterization. The estimated net primary production (NPP) of stands aged 36–40 years under the historical climatic conditions of the five GCMs was 0.77 ± 0.10 kgC m-2 year-1 (mean ± standard deviation), in accordance with the geographical distribution of forest NPP estimated in previous studies. Under the RCP2.6 and RCP8.5 scenarios, the mean NPP of the five GCMs increased by 0.04 ± 0.07 and 0.14 ± 0.11 kgC m-2 year-1, respectively. The increases in annual NPP were small in the southwestern region because of the decreases in summer NPP and the small increases in winter NPP under the RCP2.6 and RCP8.5 scenarios, respectively. Under the RCP2.6 scenario, Japanese cedar was at risk in the southwestern region, in accordance with previous studies, and monitoring and silvicultural practices should be modified accordingly
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