259 research outputs found
Electronic structure of unidirectional superlattices in crossed electric and magnetic fields and related terahertz oscillations
We have studied Bloch electrons in a perfect unidirectional superlattice
subject to crossed electric and magnetic fields, where the magnetic field is
oriented ``in-plane'', i.e. in parallel to the sample plane. Two orientation of
the electric field are considered. It is shown that the magnetic field
suppresses the intersubband tunneling of the Zener type, but does not change
the frequency of Bloch oscillations, if the electric field is oriented
perpendicularly to both the sample plane and the magnetic field. The electric
field applied in-plane (but perpendicularly to the magnetic field) yields the
step-like electron energy spectrum, corresponding to the magnetic-field-tunable
oscillations alternative to the Bloch ones.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
LC nanocomposites: induced optical singularities, managed nano/micro structure, and electrical conductivity
Microstructure, phase transitions, electrical conductivity, and optical and
electrooptical properties of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (NTs), dispersed in
the cholesteric liquid crystal (cholesteryl oleyl carbonate, COC), nematic 5CB
and their mixtures, were studied in the temperature range between 255 K and 363
K. The relative concentration X=COC/(COC+5CB)was varied within 0.0-1.0. The
concentration of NTs was varied within 0.01-5% wt. The value of X
affected agglomeration and stability of NTs inside COC+5CB. High-quality
dispersion, exfoliation, and stabilization of the NTs were observed in COC
solvent ("good" solvent). From the other side, the aggregation of NTs was very
pronounced in nematic 5CB solvent ("bad" solvent). The dispersing quality of
solvent influenced the percolation concentration , corresponding to
transition between the low conductive and high conductive states: e.g.,
percolation was observed at and for pure COC and 5CB,
respectively. The effects of thermal pre-history on the heating-cooling
hysteretic behavior of electrical conductivity were studied. The mechanism of
dispersion of NTs in COC+5CB mixtures is discussed. Utilization of the mixtures
of "good" and "bad" solvents allowed fine regulation of the dispersion,
stability and electrical conductivity of LC+NTs composites. The mixtures of COC
and 5CB were found to be promising for application as functional media with
controllable useful chiral and electrophysical properties.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Physical properties of thermoelectric zinc antimonide using first-principles calculations
We report first principles calculations of the structural, electronic,
elastic and vibrational properties of the semiconducting orthorhombic ZnSb
compound. We study also the intrinsic point defects in order to eventually
improve the thermoelectric properties of this already very promising
thermoelectric material. Concerning the electronic properties, in addition to
the band structure, we show that the Zn (Sb) crystallographically equivalent
atoms are not exactly equivalent from the electronic point of view. Lattice
dynamics, elastic and thermodynamic properties are found to be in good
agreement with experiments and they confirm the non equivalency of the zinc and
antimony atoms from the vibrational point of view. The calculated elastic
properties show a relatively weak anisotropy and the hardest direction is the y
direction. We observe the presence of low energy modes involving both Zn and Sb
atoms at about 5-6 meV, similarly to what has been found in Zn4Sb3 and we
suggest that the interactions of these modes with acoustic phonons could
explain the relatively low thermal conductivity of ZnSb. Zinc vacancies are the
most stable defects and this explains the intrinsic p-type conductivity of
ZnSb.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figure
From laterally modulated two-dimensional electron gas towards artificial graphene
Cyclotron resonance has been measured in far-infrared transmission of
GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures with an etched hexagonal lateral
superlattice. Non-linear dependence of the resonance position on magnetic field
was observed as well as its splitting into several modes. Our explanation,
based on a perturbative calculation, describes the observed phenomena as a weak
effect of the lateral potential on the two-dimensional electron gas. Using this
approach, we found a correlation between parameters of the lateral patterning
and the created effective potential and obtain thus insights on how the
electronic miniband structure has been tuned. The miniband dispersion was
calculated using a simplified model and allowed us to formulate four basic
criteria that have to be satisfied to reach graphene-like physics in such
systems
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