906 research outputs found
Thermal dissociation of dipositronium: path integral Monte Carlo approach
Path integral Monte Carlo simulation of the dipositronium "molecule" Ps
reveals its surprising thermal instability. Although, the binding energy is
eV, due to the strong temperature dependence of its free energy
Ps dissociates, or does not form, above K, except for high
densities where a small fraction of molecules are in equilibrium with Ps atoms.
This prediction is consistent with the recently reported first observation of
stable Ps molecules by Cassidy & Mills Jr., Nature {\bf 449}, 195 (07), and
Phys.Rev.Lett. {\bf 100}, 013401 (08); at temperatures below 1000 K. The
relatively sharp transition from molecular to atomic equilibrium, that we find,
remains to be experimentally verified. To shed light on the origin of the large
entropy factor in free energy we analyze the nature of interatomic interactions
of these strongly correlated quantum particles. The conventional diatomic
potential curve is given by the van der Waals interaction at large distances,
but due to the correlations and high delocalization of constituent particles
the concept of potential curve becomes ambiguous at short atomic distances.Comment: Submitted to the Physical Review Letter
Finite temperature quantum statistics of H molecular ion
Full quantum statistical simulation of the five-particle system H
has been carried out using the path integral Monte Carlo method. Structure and
energetics is evaluated as a function of temperature up to the thermal
dissociation limit. The weakly density dependent dissociation temperature is
found to be around K. Contributions from the quantum dynamics and
thermal motion are sorted out by comparing differences between simulations with
quantum and classical nuclei. The essential role of the quantum description of
the protons is established.Comment: submitted to the Journal of Chemical Physic
Kohn-Sham potential with discontinuity for band gap materials
We model a Kohn-Sham potential with a discontinuity at integer particle
numbers derived from the GLLB approximation of Gritsenko et al. We evaluate the
Kohn-Sham gap and the discontinuity to obtain the quasiparticle gap. This
allows us to compare the Kohn-Sham gaps to those obtained by accurate many-body
perturbation theory based optimized potential methods. In addition, the
resulting quasiparticle band gap is compared to experimental gaps. In the GLLB
model potential, the exchange-correlation hole is modeled using a GGA energy
density and the response of the hole to density variations is evaluated by
using the common-denominator approximation and homogeneous electron gas based
assumptions. In our modification, we have chosen the PBEsol potential as the
GGA to model the exchange hole, and add a consistent correlation potential. The
method is implemented in the GPAW code, which allows efficient parallelization
to study large systems. A fair agreement for Kohn-Sham and the quasiparticle
band gaps with semiconductors and other band gap materials is obtained with a
potential which is as fast as GGA to calculate.Comment: submitted to Physical Review
Few-body reference data for multicomponent formalisms: Light nuclei molecules
We present full quantum statistical energetics of some electron-light nuclei
systems. This is accomplished with the path integral Monte Carlo method. The
effects on energetics arising from the change in the nuclear mass are studied.
The obtained results may serve as reference data for the multicomponent density
functional theory calculations of light nuclei system. In addition, the results
reported here will enable better fitting of todays electron-nuclear energy
functionals, for which the description of light nuclei is most challenging, in
particular
The quantum phase slip phenomenon in superconducting nanowires with high-impedance environment
Quantum phase slip (QPS) is the particular manifestation of quantum
fluctuations of the order parameter of a current-biased quasi-1D
superconductor. The QPS event(s) can be considered a dynamic equivalent of
tunneling through conventional Josephson junction containing static in space
and time weak link(s). At low temperatures T<<Tc the QPS effect leads to finite
resistivity of narrow superconducting channels and suppresses persistent
currents in tiny nanorings. Here we demonstrate that the quantum tunneling of
phase may result in Coulomb blockade: superconducting nanowire, imbedded in
high-Ohmic environment, below a certain bias voltage behaves as an insulator.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
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