2,348 research outputs found
Dielectric screening in doped Fullerides
For conventional superconductors the electron-electron interaction is
strongly reduced by retardation effects, making the formation of Cooper pairs
possible. In the alkali-doped Fullerides, however, there are no strong
retardation effects. But dielectric screening can reduce the electron-electron
interaction sufficiently, if we assume that the random-phase approximation
(RPA) is valid. It is not clear, however, if this assumption holds, since the
alkali-doped Fullerides are strongly correlated systems close to a Mott
transition. To test the validity of the RPA for these systems we have
calculated the screening of a test charge using quantum Monte Carlo.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figure included; to be published in the proceedings of
the International Winterschool on Electronic Properties of Novel Materials,
Kirchberg/Tirol, 1998; additional information is available at
http://www.mpi-stuttgart.mpg.de/docs/ANDERSEN/fullerene
Metal-Insulator transitions in generalized Hubbard models
We study the Mott transition in Hubbard models with a degenerate band on
different 3-dimensional lattices. While for a non-degenerate band only the
half-filled system may exhibit a Mott transition, with degeneracy there can be
a transition for any integer filling. We analyze the filling dependence of the
Mott transition and find that (the Hubbard interaction at which the
transition takes place) decreases away from half-filling. In addition we can
change the lattice structure of the model. This allows us to study the
influence of frustration on the Mott transition. We find that frustration
increases , compared to bipartite systems. The results were obtained from
fixed-node diffusion Monte Carlo calculations using trial functions which allow
us to systematically vary the magnetic character of the system. To gain a
qualitative understanding of the results, we have developed simple hopping
arguments that help to rationalize the doping dependence and the influence of
frustration on the Mott transition. Choosing the model parameters to describe
the doped Fullerides, we can make contact with experiment and understand why
some of the Fullerides are metals, while others, which according to density
functional theory should also be metallic, actually are insulators.Comment: 4 pages LaTeX with 4 eps figures; submitted to Computer Physics
Communications, Proceedings of the CPP'99/Centennial Meeting, Atlanta, GA;
additional material available at
http://www.mpi-stuttgart.mpg.de/docs/ANDERSEN/fullerene
Filling dependence of the Mott transition in the degenerate Hubbard model
Describing the doped Fullerenes using a generalized Hubbard model, we study
the Mott transition for different integer fillings of the t_1u band. We use the
opening of the energy-gap E_g as a criterion for the transition. E_g is
calculated as a function of the on-site Coulomb interaction U using fixed-node
diffusion Monte Carlo. We find that for systems with doping away from
half-filling the Mott transitions occurs at smaller U than for the half-filled
system. We give a simple model for the doping dependence of the Mott
transition.Comment: 7 pages RevTeX with 10 eps figures, additional material available at
http://www.mpi-stuttgart.mpg.de/docs/ANDERSEN/fullerene
The effect of atomic oxygen on polysiloxane-polyimide for spacecraft applications in low Earth orbit
Polysiloxane-polyimide films are of interest as a replacement for polyimide Kapton in the Space Station Freedom solar array blanket. The blanket provides the structural support for the solar cells as well as providing transport of heat away from the back of the cells. Polyimide Kapton would be an ideal material to use; however, its high rate of degradation due to attack by atomic oxygen in low Earth orbit, at the altitudes Space Station Freedom will fly, is of such magnitude that if left unprotected, the blanket will undergo structural failure in much less than the desired 15 year operating life. Polysiloxane-polyimide is of interest as a replacement material because it should from its own protective silicon dioxide coating upon exposure to atomic oxygen. Mass, optical, and photomicrographic data obtained in the evaluation of the durability of polysiloxane-polyimide to an atomic oxygen environment are presented
Full-Potential LMTO: Total Energy and Force Calculations
The essential features of a full potential electronic structure method using
Linear Muffin-Tin Orbitals (LMTOs) are presented. The electron density and
potential in the this method are represented with no inherent geometrical
approximation. This method allows the calculation of total energies and forces
with arbitrary accuracy while sacrificing much of the efficiency and physical
content of approximate methods such as the LMTO-ASA method.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures, Workshop on the TB-LMTO method, Monastery of
Mont St. Odile, October 4-5, 199
Electronic entanglement in late transition metal oxides
Here we present a study of the entanglement in the electronic structure of
the late transition metal monoxides - MnO, FeO, CoO, and NiO - obtained by
means of density-functional theory in the local density approximation combined
with dynamical mean-field theory (LDA+DMFT). The impurity problem is solved
through Exact Diagonalization (ED), which grants full access to the thermally
mixed many-body ground state density operator. The quality of the electronic
structure is affirmed through a direct comparison between the calculated
electronic excitation spectrum and photoemission experiments. Our treatment
allows for a quantitative investigation of the entanglement in the electronic
structure. Two main sources of entanglement are explicitly resolved through the
use of a fidelity based geometrical entanglement measure, and additional
information is gained from a complementary entropic entanglement measure. We
show that the interplay of crystal field effects and Coulomb interaction causes
the entanglement in CoO to take a particularly intricate form.Comment: Minor changes. Journal reference adde
Complex edge effects in zigzag graphene nanoribbons due to hydrogen loading
We have performed density functional calculations as well as employed a
tight-binding theory, to study the effect of passivation of zigzag graphene
nanoribbons (ZGNR) by Hydrogen. We show that each edge C atom bonded with 2 H
atoms open up a gap and destroys magnetism for small widths of the nanoribbon.
However, a re-entrant magnetism accompanied by a metallic electronic structure
is observed from 8 rows and thicker nanoribbons. The electronic structure and
magnetic state are quite complex for this type of termination, with sp
bonded edge atoms being non-magnetic, whereas the nearest neighboring atoms are
metallic and magnetic. We have also evaluated the phase stability of several
thicknesses of ZGNR, and demonstrate that sp bonded edge atoms, with 2 H
atoms at the edge, should be stable at temperatures and pressures which are
reachable in a laboratory environment.Comment: 11 figure
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