20,790 research outputs found
Designer Topological Insulators in Superlattices
Gapless Dirac surface states are protected at the interface of topological
and normal band insulators. In a binary superlattice bearing such interfaces,
we establish that valley-dependent dimerization of symmetry-unrelated Dirac
surface states can be exploited to induce topological quantum phase
transitions. This mechanism leads to a rich phase diagram that allows us to
design strong, weak, and crystalline topological insulators. Our ab initio
simulations further demonstrate this mechanism in [111] and [110] superlattices
of calcium and tin tellurides.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Giant and tunable valley degeneracy splitting in MoTe2
Monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenides possess a pair of degenerate
helical valleys in the band structure that exhibit fascinating optical valley
polarization. Optical valley polarization, however, is limited by carrier
lifetimes of these materials. Lifting the valley degeneracy is therefore an
attractive route for achieving valley polarization. It is very challenging to
achieve appreciable valley degeneracy splitting with applied magnetic field. We
propose a strategy to create giant splitting of the valley degeneracy by
proximity-induced Zeeman effect. As a demonstration, our first principles
calculations of monolayer MoTe on a EuO substrate show that valley
splitting over 300 meV can be generated. The proximity coupling also makes
interband transition energies valley dependent, enabling valley selection by
optical frequency tuning in addition to circular polarization. The valley
splitting in the heterostructure is also continuously tunable by rotating
substrate magnetization. The giant and tunable valley splitting adds a readily
accessible dimension to the valley-spin physics with rich and interesting
experimental consequences, and offers a practical avenue for exploring device
paradigms based on the intrinsic degrees of freedom of electrons.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Coupling the valley degree of freedom to antiferromagnetic order
Conventional electronics are based invariably on the intrinsic degrees of
freedom of an electron, namely, its charge and spin. The exploration of novel
electronic degrees of freedom has important implications in both basic quantum
physics and advanced information technology. Valley as a new electronic degree
of freedom has received considerable attention in recent years. In this paper,
we develop the theory of spin and valley physics of an antiferromagnetic
honeycomb lattice. We show that by coupling the valley degree of freedom to
antiferromagnetic order, there is an emergent electronic degree of freedom
characterized by the product of spin and valley indices, which leads to
spin-valley dependent optical selection rule and Berry curvature-induced
topological quantum transport. These properties will enable optical
polarization in the spin-valley space, and electrical detection/manipulation
through the induced spin, valley and charge fluxes. The domain walls of an
antiferromagnetic honeycomb lattice harbors valley-protected edge states that
support spin-dependent transport. Finally, we employ first principles
calculations to show that the proposed optoelectronic properties can be
realized in antiferromagnetic manganese chalcogenophosphates (MnPX_3, X = S,
Se) in monolayer form.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
A review on one dimensional perovskite nanocrystals for piezoelectric applications
AbstractIn recent years, one-dimensional piezoelectric nanomaterials have become a research topic of interest because of their special morphology and excellent piezoelectric properties. This article presents a short review on one dimensional perovskite piezoelectric materials in different systems including Pb(Zr,Ti)O3, BaTiO3 and (K,Na)NbO3 (KNN). We emphasize KNN as a promising lead-free piezoelectric compound with a high Curie temperature and high piezoelectric properties and describe its synthesis and characterization. In particular, details are presented for nanoscale piezoelectricity characterization of a single KNN nanocrystal by piezoresponse force microscopy. Finally, this review describes recent progress in applications based on one dimensional piezoelectric nanostructures with a focus on energy harvesting composite materials
Mixing among the neutral Higgs bosons and rare B decays in the CP violating MSSM
Considering corrections from two-loop Feynman diagrams which involve gluino
at large , we analyze the effects of possible CP phases on the rare
B decays: and in the CP
violating minimal supersymmetric extension of the standard model. It is shown
that the results of exact two loop calculations obviously differ from that
including one-loop contributions plus threshold radiative corrections. The
numerical analysis indicates that the possibly large CP phases strongly affect
the theoretical estimation of the branching ratios, and this results coincide
with the conclusion of some other works appearing in recent literature.Comment: revtex, 53 pages, including 19 figure
Quantum State Transfer Characterized by Mode Entanglement
We study the quantum state transfer (QST) of a class of tight-bonding Bloch
electron systems with mirror symmetry by considering the mode entanglement.
Some rigorous results are obtained to reveal the intrinsic relationship between
the fidelity of QST and the mirror mode concurrence (MMC), which is defined to
measure the mode entanglement with a certain spatial symmetry and is just the
overlap of a proper wave function with its mirror image. A complementarity is
discovered as the maximum fidelity is accompanied by a minimum of MMC. And at
the instant, which is just half of the characteristic time required to
accomplish a perfect QST, the MMC can reach its maximum value one. A large
class of perfect QST models with a certain spectrum structure are discovered to
support our analytical results.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. to appear in PR
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