764 research outputs found
Connection between charge transfer and alloying core-level shifts based on density-functional calculations
The measurement of alloying core-level binding energy (CLBE) shifts has been
used to give a precise meaning to the fundamental concept of charge transfer.
Here, ab-initio density-functional calculations for the intermetallic compound
MgAu are used to investigate models which try to make a connection between the
core levels shifts and charge transfer. The calculated CLBE shifts agree well
with experiment, and permit an unambiguous separation into initial-state and
screening contributions. Interestingly, the screening contribution is large and
cannot be neglected in any reasonable description. Comparison of the calculated
results with the predictions of simple models show that these models are not
adequate to describe the realistic situation. On the positive side, the
accuracy of the density-functional calculations indicates that the combination
of experiments with such calculations is a powerful tool to investigate unknown
systems.Comment: RevTeX 10 pages incl 8 figure
Extracting convergent surface energies from slab calculations
The formation energy of a solid surface can be extracted from slab
calculations if the bulk energy per atom is known. It has been pointed out
previously that the resulting surface energy will diverge with slab thickness
if the bulk energy is in error, in the context of calculations which used
different methods to study the bulk and slab systems. We show here that this
result is equally relevant for state-of-the-art computational methods which
carefully treat bulk and slab systems in the same way. Here we compare
different approaches, and present a solution to the problem that eliminates the
divergence and leads to rapidly convergent and accurate surface energies.Comment: 3 revtex pages, 1 figure, in print on J. Phys. Cond. Mat
Reconstruction Mechanism of FCC Transition-Metal (001) Surfaces
The reconstruction mechanism of (001) fcc transition metal surfaces is
investigated using a full-potential all-electron electronic structure method
within density-functional theory. Total-energy supercell calculations confirm
the experimental finding that a close-packed quasi-hexagonal overlayer
reconstruction is possible for the late 5-metals Ir, Pt, and Au, while it is
disfavoured in the isovalent 4 metals (Rh, Pd, Ag). The reconstructive
behaviour is driven by the tensile surface stress of the unreconstructed
surfaces; the stress is significantly larger in the 5 metals than in 4
ones, and only in the former case it overcomes the substrate resistance to the
required geometric rearrangement. It is shown that the surface stress for these
systems is due to charge depletion from the surface layer, and that the
cause of the 4th-to-5th row stress difference is the importance of relativistic
effects in the 5 series.Comment: RevTeX 3.0, 12 pages, 1 PostScript figure available upon request] 23
May 199
Screened Coulomb interaction in the maximally localized Wannier basis
We discuss a maximally localized Wannier function approach for constructing
lattice models from first-principles electronic structure calculations, where
the effective Coulomb interactions are calculated in the constrained
random-phase-approximation. The method is applied to the 3d transition metals
and a perovskite (SrVO_3). We also optimize the Wannier functions by unitary
transformation so that U is maximized. Such Wannier functions unexpectedly
turned out to be very close to the maximally localized ones.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Fingerprints of the Magnetic Polaron in Nonequilibrium Electron Transport through a Quantum Wire Coupled to a Ferromagnetic Spin Chain
We study nonequilibrium quantum transport through a mesoscopic wire coupled
via local exchange to a ferromagnetic spin chain. Using the Keldysh formalism
in the self-consistent Born approximation, we identify fingerprints of the
magnetic polaron state formed by hybridization of electronic and magnon states.
Because of its low decoherence rate, we find coherent transport signals. Both
elastic and inelastic peaks of the differential conductance are discussed as a
function of external magnetic fields, the polarization of the leads and the
electronic level spacing of the wire.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Quasiparticles in the Kondo lattice model at partial fillings of the conduction band
We study the spectral properties of the one-dimensional Kondo lattice model
as function of the exchange coupling, the band filling, and the quasimomentum
in the ferromagnetic and paramagnetic phase. Using the density-matrix
renormalization group method, we compute the dispersion relation of the
quasiparticles, their lifetimes, and the Z-factor. As a main result, we provide
evidence for the existence of the spinpolaron at partial band fillings. We find
that the quasiparticle lifetime differs by orders of magnitude between the
ferromagnetic and paramagnetic phase and depends strongly on the quasimomentum.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Charge redistribution at Pd surfaces: ab initio grounds for tight-binding interatomic potentials
A simplified tight-binding description of the electronic structure is often
necessary for complex studies of surfaces of transition metal compounds. This
requires a self-consistent parametrization of the charge redistribution, which
is not obvious for late transition series elements (such as Pd, Cu, Au), for
which not only d but also s-p electrons have to be taken into account. We show
here, with the help of an ab initio FP-LMTO approach, that for these elements
the electronic charge is unchanged from bulk to the surface, not only per site
but also per orbital. This implies different level shifts for each orbital in
order to achieve this orbital neutrality rule. Our results invalidate any
neutrality rule which would allow charge redistribution between orbitals to
ensure a common rigid shift for all of them. Moreover, in the case of Pd, the
power law which governs the variation of band energy with respect to
coordination number, is found to differ significantly from the usual
tight-binding square root.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, Latex; Phys.Rev. B 56 (1997
Electric excitation of spin resonance in antiferromagnetic conductors
Antiferromagnetism couples electron spin to its orbital motion, thus allowing
excitation of electron-spin transitions by an ac electric rather than magnetic
field - with absorption, exceeding that of common electron spin resonance at
least by four orders of magnitude. In addition to potential applications in
spin electronics, this phenomenon may be used as a spectroscopy to study
antiferromagnetic materials of interest - from chromium to borocarbides,
cuprates, iron pnictides, and organic and heavy fermion conductors.Comment: the journal print versio
Exact results on the Kondo-lattice magnetic polaron
In this work we revise the theory of one electron in a ferromagnetically
saturated local moment system interacting via a Kondo-like exchange
interaction. The complete eigenstates for the finite lattice are derived. It is
then shown, that parts of these states lose their norm in the limit of an
infinite lattice. The correct (scattering) eigenstates are calculated in this
limit. The time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation is solved for arbitrary
initial conditions and the connection to the down-electron Green's function and
the scattering states is worked out. A detailed analysis of the down-electron
decay dynamics is given.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Electronic Structure and Lattice Relaxation Related to Fe in Mgo
The electronic structure of Fe impurity in MgO was calculated by the linear
muffin-tin orbital--full-potential method within the conventional local-density
approximation (LDA) and making use of the LDA+ formalism. The importance of
introducing different potentials, depending on the screened Coulomb integral
, is emphasized for obtaining a physically reasonable ground state of the
Fe ion configuration. The symmetry lowering of the ion electrostatic
field leads to the observed Jahn--Teller effect; related ligand relaxation
confined to tetragonal symmetry has been optimized based on the full-potential
total energy results. The electronic structure of the Fe ion is also
calculated and compared with that of Fe.Comment: 13 pages + 4 PostScript figures, Revtex 3.0, SISSA-CM-94-00
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