113 research outputs found
Ferroelectricity in spiral magnets
It was recently observed that materials showing most striking multiferroic
phenomena are frustrated spin-density-wave magnets. We present a simple
phenomenological theory, which describes the orientation of the induced
electric polarization for various incommensurate magnetic states, its
dependence on temperature and magnetic field, and anomalies of dielectric
susceptibility at magnetic transitions. We show that electric polarization can
be induced at domain walls and that magnetic vortices carry electric charge.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Instanton calculation of the density of states of disordered Peierls chains
We use the optimal fluctuation method to find the density of electron states
inside the pseudogap in disordered Peierls chains. The electrons are described
by the one-dimensional Dirac Hamiltonian with randomly varying mass (the
Fluctuating Gap Model). We establish a relation between the disorder average in
this model and the quantum-mechanical average for a certain double-well
problem. We show that the optimal disorder fluctuation, which has the form of a
soliton-antisoliton pair, corresponds to the instanton trajectory in the
double-well problem. We use the instanton method developed for the double-well
problem to find the contribution to the density of states from disorder
realizations close to the optimal fluctuation.Comment: 14 pages, revtex, epsf, 3 Postscript figure
Optical excitation of interacting electron-hole pairs in disordered one-dimensional semiconductors
We apply the optimal fluctuation method to the calculation of the optical
absorption in disordered one-dimensional semiconductors below the fundamental
optical gap. We find that a photon energy exists at which the shape of the
optimal fluctuation undergoes a dramatic change, resulting in a different
energy dependence of the absorption rate above and below this energy. In the
limit when the interaction of an electron and a hole with disorder is stronger
than their interaction with each other, we obtain an analytical expression for
the optical conductivity. We show that to calculate the absorption rate, it is,
in general, necessary to consider a manifold of optimal fluctuations, rather
than just a single fluctuation. For an arbitrary ratio of the Coulomb
interaction and disorder, the optimal fluctuation is found numerically.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figure
Magnetic Susceptibility Due to Disorder-Induced Neutral Solitons in Interacting Polymer Chains
We study the magnetic response due to neutral solitons induced by disorder in
polymer materials. We account for interchain interactions, which, if
sufficiently strong, result in a bond-ordered phase, in which the neutral
solitons are bound into pairs. We analytically calculate the corresponding pair
size distribution. As the spins of the solitons have a distance dependent
antiferromagnetic coupling, this allows us to calculate the magnetic
susceptibility in the ordered phase. At low temperatures, the result deviates
from the usual Curie behavior in a way that depends on the relative strength of
the disorder and the interchain interactions. We compare our results to the
observed magnetic susceptibility of trans-polyacetylene and we suggest new
experiments extending towards lower temperatures.Comment: 23 pages, 5 Postscript figures included; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Disorder-induced solitons in conjugated polymers
We show that weak off-diagonal disorder in degenerate ground state conjugated
polymers results in a finite density of randomly positioned kinks (solitons and
antisolitons) in the lattice dimerization. For realistic values of the
disorder, these kinks should clearly show up in the optical and magnetic
properties.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, 2 Postscript figure
Peierls transition with acoustic phonons and twist deformation in carbon nanotubes
We consider the Peierls instability due to the interaction of electrons with
both acoustic and optical phonons. We suggest that such a transition takes
place in carbon nanotubes with small radius. The topological excitations and
the temperature dependence of the conductivity resulting from the
electron-lattice interactions are considered.Comment: 5 pages, 3 PostScript figures included; submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
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