1,746 research outputs found
Structural and dynamical heterogeneities in two-dimensional melting
Using molecular dynamics simulation, we study structural and dynamical
heterogeneities at melting in two-dimensional one-component systems with 36000
particles. Between crystal and liquid we find intermediate hexatic states,
where the density fluctuations are enhanced at small wave number k as well as
those of the six-fold orientational order parameter. Their structure factors
both grow up to the smallest wave number equal to the inverse system length.
The intermediate scattering function of the density S(k,t) is found to relax
exponentially with decay rate Gamma_k ~ k^z with z~2.6 at small k in the
hexatic phase.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
Intermediate states at structural phase transition: Model with a one-component order parameter coupled to strains
We study a Ginzburg-Landau model of structural phase transition in two
dimensions, in which a single order parameter is coupled to the tetragonal and
dilational strains. Such elastic coupling terms in the free energy much affect
the phase transition behavior particularly near the tricriticality. A
characteristic feature is appearance of intermediate states, where the ordered
and disordered regions coexist on mesoscopic scales in nearly steady states in
a temperature window. The window width increases with increasing the strength
of the dilational coupling. It arises from freezing of phase ordering in
inhomogeneous strains. No impurity mechanism is involved. We present a simple
theory of the intermediate states to produce phase diagrams consistent with
simulation results.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
Magnetic properties of PrCu at high pressure
We report a study of the low-temperature high-pressure phase diagram of the
intermetallic compound PrCu, by means of molecular-field calculations and
Cu nuclear-quadrupole-resonance (NQR) measurements under pressure.
The pressure-induced magnetically-ordered phase can be accounted for by
considering the influence of the crystal electric field on the electron
orbitals of the Pr ions and by introducing a pressure-dependent exchange
interaction between the corresponding local magnetic moments. Our experimental
data suggest that the order in the induced antiferromagnetic phase is
incommensurate. The role of magnetic fluctuations both at high and low
pressures is also discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
Dynamics of Binary Mixtures with Ions: Dynamic Structure Factor and Mesophase Formation
Dynamic equations are presented for polar binary mixtures containing ions in
the presence of the preferential solvation. In one-phase states, we calculate
the dynamic structure factor of the composition accounting for the ion motions.
Microphase separation can take place for sufficiently large solvation asymmetry
of the cations and the anions. We show two-dimensional simulation results of
the mesophase formation with an antagonistic salt, where the cations are
hydrophilic and the anions are hydrophobic. The structure factor S(q) in the
resultant mesophase has a sharp peak at an intermediate wave number on the
order of the Debye-Huckel wave number. As the quench depth is increased, the
surface tension nearly vanishes in mesophases due to an electric double layer.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, to appear in Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matte
Strong Coupling between Antiferromagnetic and Superconducting Order Parameters in CeRhIn Studied by In-NQR Spectroscopy
We report on a novel pressure ()-induced evolution of magnetism and
superconductivity (SC) in a helical magnet CeRhIn with an incommensurate
wave vector through the In nuclear quadrupole
resonance (NQR) measurements under . Systematic measurements of the
In-NQR spectrum reveal that the commensurate antiferromagnetism (AFM)
with is realized above 1.7 GPa. An
important finding is that the size of SC gap and increase as the
magnitude of the AFM moment decreases in the region, where SC uniformly
coexists with the commensurate AFM. This result provides evidence of strong
coupling between the commensurate AFM order parameter (OP) and SC OP.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Viscoelastic Effect on Hydrodynamic Relaxation in Polymer Solutions
The viscoelastic effect on the hydrodynamic relaxation in semidilute polymer
solutions is investigated. From the linearized two-fluid model equations, we
predict that the dynamical asymmetry coupling between the velocity fluctuations
and the viscoelastic stress influences on the hydrodynamic relaxation process,
resulting in a wave-number-dependent shear viscosity.Comment: 7pages; To be published in Journal of the Physical Society of
Japan,Vol 72,No2,(2003
Novel phase diagram for antiferromagnetism and superconductivity in pressure-induced heavy-fermion superconductor CeRhIn probed by In-NQR
We present a novel phase diagram for the antiferromagnetism and
superconductivity in CeRhIn probed by In-NQR studies under pressure
(). The quasi-2D character of antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations in the
paramagnetic state at = 0 evolves into a 3D character because of the
suppression of antiferromagnetic order for 1.36 GPa (QCP:
antiferromagnetic quantum critical point). Nuclear-spin-lattice-relaxation rate
measurements revealed that the superconducting order occurs in the
range 1.36 -- 1.84 GPa, with maximum 0.9 K around
1.36 GPa.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
Defect structures in nematic liquid crystals around charged particles
We numerically study the orientation deformations in nematic liquid crystals
around charged particles. We set up a Ginzburg-Landau theory with inhomogeneous
electric field. If the dielectric anisotropy varepsilon_1 is positive, Saturn
ring defects are formed around the particles. For varepsilon_1<0, novel "ansa"
defects appear, which are disclination lines with their ends on the particle
surface. We find unique defect structures around two charged particles. To
lower the free energy, oppositely charged particle pairs tend to be aligned in
the parallel direction for varepsilon_1>0 and in the perpendicular plane for
varepsilon_1<0 with respect to the background director . For identically
charged pairs the preferred directions for varepsilon_1>0 and varepsilon_1<0
are exchanged. We also examie competition between the charge-induced anchoring
and the short-range anchoring. If the short-range anchoring is sufficiently
strong, it can be effective in the vicinity of the surface, while the director
orientation is governed by the long-range electrostatic interaction far from
the surface.Comment: 10 papes, 12 figures, to appear in European Physical Journal
Amorphous silica between confining walls and under shear: a computer simulation study
Molecular dynamics computer simulations are used to investigate a silica melt
confined between walls at equilibrium and in a steady-state Poisseuille flow.
The walls consist of point particles forming a rigid face-centered cubic
lattice and the interaction of the walls with the melt atoms is modelled such
that the wall particles have only a weak bonding to those in the melt, i.e.
much weaker than the covalent bonding of a Si-O unit. We observe a pronounced
layering of the melt near the walls. This layering, as seen in the total
density profile, has a very irregular character which can be attributed to a
preferred orientational ordering of SiO4 tetrahedra near the wall. On
intermediate length scales, the structure of the melt at the walls can be well
distinguished from that of the bulk by means of the ring size distribution.
Whereas essentially no structural changes occur in the bulk under the influence
of the shear fields considered, strong structural rearrangements in the ring
size distribution are present at the walls as far as there is a slip motion.
For the sheared system, parabolic velocity profiles are found in the bulk
region as expected from hydrodynamics and the values for the shear viscosity as
extracted from those profiles are in good agreement with those obtained in pure
bulk simulations from the appropriate Green-Kubo formula.Comment: 23 pages of Late
Probing the extended non-Fermi liquid regimes of MnSi and Fe
Recent studies show that the non-Fermi liquid (NFL) behavior of MnSi and Fe
spans over an unexpectedly broad pressure range, between the critical pressure
p_c and around 2p_c. In order to determine the extension of their NFL regions,
we analyze the evolution of the resistivity rho(T) A(p)T^n at higher pressures.
We find that in MnSi the n=3/2 exponent holds below 4.8 GPa=3 p_c, but it
increases above that pressure. At 7.2 GPa we observe the low temperature Fermi
liquid exponent n=2 whereas for T>1.5 K, n=5/3. Our measurements in Fe show
that the NFL behavior rho T^{5/3} extends at least up to 30.5 GPa, above the
entire superconducting (SC) region. In the studied pressure range, the onset of
the SC transition reduces by a factor 10 down to T_c^onset(30.5 GPa)=0.23 K,
while the A-coefficient diminishes monotonically by around 50%.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings SCES 200
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