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Density Functional Study of Excess Fe in FeTe: Magnetism and Doping
The electronic and magnetic properties of the excess Fe in iron telluride
FeTe are investigated by density functional calculations. We find
that the excess Fe occurs with valence near Fe, and therefore provides
electron doping with approximately one carrier per Fe, and furthermore that the
excess Fe is strongly magnetic. Thus it will provide local moments that
interact with the plane Fe magnetism, and these are expected to persist in
phases where the magnetism of the planes is destroyed for example by pressure
or doping. These results are discussed in the context of superconductivity
First principles study of the graphene/Ru(0001) interface
Annealing the Ru metal that typically contains residual carbon impurities
offers a facile way to grow graphene on Ru(0001) at the macroscopic scale. Two
superstructures of the graphene/Ru(0001) interface with periodicities of 3.0-nm
and 2.7-nm, respectively, have been previously observed by scanning tunneling
microscopy. Using first-principles density functional theory, we optimized the
observed superstructures and found interfacial C-Ru bonding of C atoms atop Ru
atoms for both superstructures, which causes the graphene sheet to buckle and
form periodic humps of ~1.7 A in height within the graphene sheet. The flat
region of the graphene sheet, which is 2.2-2.3 A above the top Ru layer and has
more C atoms occupying the atop sites, interacts more strongly with the
substrate than does the hump region. We found that interfacial adhesion is much
stronger for the 3.0-nm superstructure than for the 2.7-nm superstructure,
suggesting that the former is the thermodynamically more stable phase. We
explained the 3.0-nm superstructure's stability in terms of the interplay
between C-Ru bonding and lattice matching.Comment: 16 pages; 5 figure
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