201 research outputs found
Zener tunneling in the electrical transport of quasi-metallic carbon nanotubes
We study theoretically the impact of Zener tunneling on the charge-transport
properties of quasi-metallic (Qm) carbon nanotubes (characterized by forbidden
band gaps of few tens of meV). We also analyze the interplay between Zener
tunneling and elastic scattering on defects. To this purpose we use a model
based on the master equation for the density matrix, that takes into account
the inter-band Zener transitions induced by the electric field (a quantum
mechanical effect), the electron-defect scattering and the electron-phonon
scattering. In presence of Zener tunnelling the Qm tubes support an electrical
current even when the Fermi energy lies in the forbidden band gap. In absence
of elastic scattering (in high quality samples), the small size of the band gap
of Qm tubes enables Zener tunnelling for realistic values of the the electric
field (above 1 V/\mu m). The presence of a strong elastic scattering (in
low quality samples) further decreases the values of the field required to
observe Zener tunnelling. Indeed, for elastic-scattering lengths of the order
of 50 nm, Zener tunnelling affects the current/voltage characteristic already
in the linear regime. In other words, in quasi-metallic tubes, Zener tunneling
is made more visible by defects.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Anharmonic phonon frequency shift in MgB2
We compute the anharmonic shift of the phonon frequencies in MgB2, using
density functional theory. We explicitly take into account the scattering
between different phonon modes at different q-points in the Brillouin zone. The
shift of the E2g mode at the Gamma point is +5 % of the harmonic frequency.
This result comes from the cancellation between the contributions of the four-
and three-phonon scattering, respectively +10 % and -5 %. A similar shift is
predicted at the A point, in agreement with inelastic X-ray scattering
phonon-dispersion measurements. A smaller shift is observed at the M point.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Anharmonic properties from a generalized third order ab~initio approach: theory and applications to graphite and graphene
We have implemented a generic method, based on the 2n+1 theorem within
density functional perturbation theory, to calculate the anharmonic scattering
coefficients among three phonons with arbitrary wavevectors. The method is used
to study the phonon broadening in graphite and graphene mono- and bi-layer. The
broadening of the high-energy optical branches is highly nonuniform and
presents a series of sudden steps and spikes. At finite temperature, the two
linearly dispersive acoustic branches TA and LA of graphene have nonzero
broadening for small wavevectors. The broadening in graphite and bi-layer
graphene is, overall, very similar to the graphene one, the most remarkable
feature being the broadening of the quasi acoustical ZO' branch. Finally, we
study the intrinsic anharmonic contribution to the thermal conductivity of the
three systems, within the single mode relaxation time approximation. We find
the conductance to be in good agreement with experimental data for the
out-of-plane direction but to underestimate it by a factor 2 in-plane
Non-adiabatic Kohn-anomaly in a doped graphene monolayer
We compute, from first-principles, the frequency of the E2g, Gamma phonon
(Raman G-band) of graphene, as a function of the charge doping. Calculations
are done using i) the adiabatic Born-Oppenheimer approximation and ii)
time-dependent perturbation theory to explore dynamic effects beyond this
approximation. The two approaches provide very different results. While, the
adiabatic phonon frequency weakly depends on the doping, the dynamic one
rapidly varies because of a Kohn anomaly. The adiabatic approximation is
considered valid in most materials. Here, we show that doped graphene is a
spectacular example where this approximation miserably fails.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Accepted by Phys. Rev. Let
Raman spectra of BN-nanotubes: Ab-initio and bond-polarizability model calculations
We present it ab-initio calculations of the non-resonant Raman spectra of
zigzag and armchair BN nanotubes. In comparison, we implement a generalized
bond-polarizability model where the parameters are extracted from
first-principles calculations of the polarizability tensor of a BN sheet. For
light-polarization along the tube-axis, the agreement between model and it
ab-initio spectra is almost perfect. For perpendicular polarization,
depolarization effects have to be included in the model in order to reproduce
the it ab-initio Raman intensities.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev. B rapid com
Phonon anharmonicities in graphite and graphene
We determine from first-principles the finite-temperature
properties--linewidths, line shifts, and lifetimes--of the key vibrational
modes that dominate inelastic losses in graphitic materials. In graphite, the
phonon linewidth of the Raman-active E2g mode is found to decrease with
temperature; such anomalous behavior is driven entirely by electron-phonon
interactions, and does not appear in the nearly-degenerate infrared-active E1u
mode. In graphene, the phonon anharmonic lifetimes and decay channels of the
A'1 mode at K dominate over E2g at G and couple strongly with acoustic phonons,
highlighting how ballistic transport in carbon-based interconnects requires
careful engineering of phonon decays and thermalization.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; typos corrected and reference adde
Ab initio variational approach for evaluating lattice thermal conductivity
We present a first-principles theoretical approach for evaluating the lattice
thermal conductivity based on the exact solution of the Boltzmann transport
equation. We use the variational principle and the conjugate gradient scheme,
which provide us with an algorithm faster than the one previously used in
literature and able to always converge to the exact solution. Three-phonon
normal and umklapp collision, isotope scattering and border effects are
rigorously treated in the calculation. Good agreement with experimental data
for diamond is found. Moreover we show that by growing more enriched diamond
samples it is possible to achieve values of thermal conductivity up to three
times larger than the commonly observed in isotopically enriched diamond
samples with 99.93% C12 and 0.07 C13
Theory of double-resonant Raman spectra in graphene: intensity and line shape of defect-induced and two-phonon bands
We calculate the double resonant (DR) Raman spectrum of graphene, and
determine the lines associated to both phonon-defect processes, and two-phonons
ones. Phonon and electronic dispersions reproduce calculations based on density
functional theory corrected with GW. Electron-light, -phonon, and -defect
scattering matrix elements and the electronic linewidth are explicitly
calculated. Defect-induced processes are simulated by considering different
kind of idealized defects. For an excitation energy of eV, the
agreement with measurements is very good and calculations reproduce: the
relative intensities among phonon-defect or among two-phonon lines; the
measured small widths of the D, , 2D and lines; the line shapes; the
presence of small intensity lines in the 1800, 2000 cm range. We
determine how the spectra depend on the excitation energy, on the light
polarization, on the electronic linewidth, on the kind of defects and on their
concentration. According to the present findings, the intensity ratio between
the and 2D lines can be used to determine experimentally the electronic
linewidth. The intensity ratio between the and lines depends on the
kind of model defect, suggesting that this ratio could possibly be used to
identify the kind of defects present in actual samples. Charged impurities
outside the graphene plane provide an almost undetectable contribution to the
Raman signal
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