99 research outputs found

    Emergence of a Kondo singlet state with the Kondo temperature well beyond 1,000K in the proton-embedded electron gas: Possible route to high-Tc superconductivity

    Get PDF
    Hydrogen in metals has attracted much attention for a long time from both basic scientific and technological points of view. Its electronic state has been investigated in terms of a proton embedded in the electron gas mostly by the local density approximation (LDA) to the density functional theory. At high electronic densities, it is well described by a bare proton H^+ screened by metallic electrons (charge resonance), while at low densities two electrons are localized at the proton site to form a closed-shell negative ion H^- protected from surrounding metallic electrons by the Pauli exclusion principle. However, no details are known about the transition from H^+ to H^- in the intermediate-density region. Here, by accurately determining the ground-state electron distribution n(r) by the combination of LDA and diffusion Monte Carlo simulations with the total electron number up to 170, we obtain a complete picture of the transition, in particular, a sharp transition from short-range H^+ screening charge resonance to long-range Kondo-like spin-singlet resonance, the emergence of which is confirmed by the presence of an anomalous Friedel oscillation characteristic to the Kondo singlet state with the Kondo temperature T_K well beyond 1,000K. This study not only reveals interesting competition between charge and spin resonances, enriching the century-old paradigm of metallic screening to a point charge, but also discovers a long-sought novel high-T_K system, opening an unexpected route to room-temperature superconductivity in a Kondo lattice made of protons.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure

    Excitons and biexcitons in symmetric electron-hole bilayers

    Get PDF
    Symmetric electron-hole bilayer systems have been studied at zero temperature using the diffusion quantum Monte Carlo method. A flexible trial wave function is used that can describe fluid, excitonic and biexcitonic phases. We calculate condensate fractions and pair correlation functions for a large number of densities rs and layer separations d. At small d we find a one-component fluid phase, an excitonic fluid phase, and a biexcitonic fluid phase, and the transitions among them appear to be continuous. At d = 0, excitons appear to survive down to about rs = 0.5 a.u., and biexcitons form at rs > 2.5 a.u.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Electrochemical Properties and Crystal Structure of Li+ / H+ Cation-exchanged LiNiO2

    Full text link
    LiNiO2 has high energy density but easily reacts with moisture in the atmosphere and deteriorates. We performed qualitative and quantitative evaluations of the degraded phase of LiNiO2 and the influence of the structural change on the electrochemical properties of the phase. Li1-xHxNiO2 phase with cation exchange between Li+ and H+ was confirmed by thermogravimetric analysis and Karl Fischer titration measurement. As the H concentration in LiNiO2 increased, the rate capability deteriorated, especially in the low-temperature range and under low state of charge. Experimental and density functional theory (DFT) calculation results suggested that this outcome was due to increased activation energy of Li+ diffusion owing to cation exchange. Rietveld analysis of X-ray diffraction and DFT calculation confirmed that the c lattice parameter and Li-O layer reduced because of the Li+/H+ cation exchange. These results indicate that LiNiO2 modified in the atmosphere has a narrowed Li-O layer, which is the Li diffusion path, and the rate characteristics are degraded.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figure
    • …
    corecore