12,562 research outputs found
Forces and conductances in a single-molecule bipyridine junction
Inspired by recent measurements of forces and conductances of bipyridine
nano-junctions, we have performed density functional theory calculations of
structure and electron transport in a bipyridine molecule attached between gold
electrodes for seven different contact geometries. The calculations show that
both the bonding force and the conductance are sensitive to the surface
structure, and that both properties are in good agreement with experiment for
contact geometries characterized by intermediate coordination of the metal
atoms corresponding to a stepped surface. The conductance is mediated by the
lowest unoccupied molecular orbital, which can be illustrated by a quantitative
comparison with a one-level model. Implications for the interpretation of the
experimentally determined force and conductance distributions are discussed
Conduction Mechanism in a Molecular Hydrogen Contact
We present first principles calculations for the conductance of a hydrogen
molecule bridging a pair of Pt electrodes. The transmission function has a wide
plateau with T~1 which extends across the Fermi level and indicates the
existence of a single, robust conductance channel with nearly perfect
transmission. Through a detailed Wannier function analysis we show that the H2
bonding state is not involved in the transport and that the plateau forms due
to strong hybridization between the H2 anti-bonding state and states on the
adjacent Pt atoms. The Wannier functions furthermore allow us to derive a
resonant-level model for the system with all parameters determined from the
fully self-consistent Kohn-Sham Hamiltonian.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Dynamic rotor mode in antiferromagnetic nanoparticles
We present experimental, numerical, and theoretical evidence for a new mode
of antiferromagnetic dynamics in nanoparticles. Elastic neutron scattering
experiments on 8 nm particles of hematite display a loss of diffraction
intensity with temperature, the intensity vanishing around 150 K. However, the
signal from inelastic neutron scattering remains above that temperature,
indicating a magnetic system in constant motion. In addition, the precession
frequency of the inelastic magnetic signal shows an increase above 100 K.
Numerical Langevin simulations of spin dynamics reproduce all measured neutron
data and reveal that thermally activated spin canting gives rise to a new type
of coherent magnetic precession mode. This "rotor" mode can be seen as a
high-temperature version of superparamagnetism and is driven by exchange
interactions between the two magnetic sublattices. The frequency of the rotor
mode behaves in fair agreement with a simple analytical model, based on a high
temperature approximation of the generally accepted Hamiltonian of the system.
The extracted model parameters, as the magnetic interaction and the axial
anisotropy, are in excellent agreement with results from Mossbauer
spectroscopy
Rate theory for correlated processes: Double-jumps in adatom diffusion
We study the rate of activated motion over multiple barriers, in particular
the correlated double-jump of an adatom diffusing on a missing-row
reconstructed Platinum (110) surface. We develop a Transition Path Theory,
showing that the activation energy is given by the minimum-energy trajectory
which succeeds in the double-jump. We explicitly calculate this trajectory
within an effective-medium molecular dynamics simulation. A cusp in the
acceptance region leads to a sqrt{T} prefactor for the activated rate of
double-jumps. Theory and numerical results agree
On the universality of compact polymers
Fully packed loop models on the square and the honeycomb lattice constitute
new classes of critical behaviour, distinct from those of the low-temperature
O(n) model. A simple symmetry argument suggests that such compact phases are
only possible when the underlying lattice is bipartite. Motivated by the hope
of identifying further compact universality classes we therefore study the
fully packed loop model on the square-octagon lattice. Surprisingly, this model
is only critical for loop weights n < 1.88, and its scaling limit coincides
with the dense phase of the O(n) model. For n=2 it is exactly equivalent to the
selfdual 9-state Potts model. These analytical predictions are confirmed by
numerical transfer matrix results. Our conclusions extend to a large class of
bipartite decorated lattices.Comment: 13 pages including 4 figure
Tethered balloon-based measurements of meteorological variables and aerosols
Tethered balloon based measurements of the vertical distributions of temperature, humidity, wind speed, and aerosol concentrations were taken over a 4-hour period beginning at sunrise on June 29, 1976, at Wallops Island, Virginia. Twelve consecutive profiles of each variable were obtained from ground to about 500 meters. These measurements were in conjuction with a noise propagation study on remotely arrayed acoustic range (ROMAAR) at Wallops Flight Center. An organized listing of these vertical soundings is presented. The tethered balloon system configuration utilized for these measurements is described
Partly Occupied Wannier Functions
We introduce a scheme for constructing partly occupied, maximally localized
Wannier functions (WFs) for both molecular and periodic systems. Compared to
the traditional occupied WFs the partly occupied WFs posses improved symmetry
and localization properties achieved through a bonding-antibonding closing
procedure. We demonstrate the equivalence between bonding-antibonding closure
and the minimization of the average spread of the WFs in the case of a benzene
molecule and a linear chain of Pt atoms. The general applicability of the
method is demonstrated through the calculation of WFs for a metallic system
with an impurity: a Pt wire with a hydrogen molecular bridge.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
The packing of two species of polygons on the square lattice
We decorate the square lattice with two species of polygons under the
constraint that every lattice edge is covered by only one polygon and every
vertex is visited by both types of polygons. We end up with a 24 vertex model
which is known in the literature as the fully packed double loop model. In the
particular case in which the fugacities of the polygons are the same, the model
admits an exact solution. The solution is obtained using coordinate Bethe
ansatz and provides a closed expression for the free energy. In particular we
find the free energy of the four colorings model and the double Hamiltonian
walk and recover the known entropy of the Ice model. When both fugacities are
set equal to two the model undergoes an infinite order phase transition.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure
Calculation of Elastic Green's Functions for Lattices with Cavities
In this Brief Report, we present an algorithm for calculating the elastic
Lattice Greens Function of a regular lattice, in which defects are created by
removing lattice points. The method is computationally efficient, since the
required matrix operations are on matrices that scale with the size of the
defect subspace, and not with the size of the full lattice. This method allows
the treatment of force fields with multi-atom interactions.Comment: 3 pages. RevTeX, using epsfig.sty. One figur
Inelastic Scattering in Metal-H2-Metal Junctions
We present first-principles calculations of the dI/dV characteristics of an
H2 molecule sandwiched between Au and Pt electrodes in the presence of
electron-phonon interactions. The conductance is found to decrease by a few
percentage at threshold voltages corresponding to the excitation energy of
longitudinal vibrations of the H2 molecule. In the case of Pt electrodes, the
transverse vibrations can mediate transport through otherwise non-transmitting
Pt -channels leading to an increase in the differential conductance even
though the hydrogen junction is characterized predominately by a single almost
fully open transport channel. In the case of Au, the transverse modes do not
affect the dI/dV because the Au d-states are too far below the Fermi level. A
simple explanation of the first-principles results is given using scattering
theory. Finally, we compare and discuss our results in relation to experimental
data.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev.
- …