124 research outputs found
Atomistic mechanisms for the ordered growth of Co nano-dots on Au(788): comparison of VT-STM experiments and multi-scaled calculations
Hetero-epitaxial growth on a strain-relief vicinal patterned substrate has
revealed unprecedented 2D long range ordered growth of uniform cobalt
nanostructures. The morphology of a Co sub-monolayer deposit on a Au(111)
reconstructed vicinal surface is analyzed by Variable Temperature Scanning
Tunneling Microscopy (VT-STM) experiments. A rectangular array of nano-dots
(3.8 nm x 7.2 nm) is found for a particularly large deposit temperature range
lying from 60 K to 300 K. Although the nanodot lattice is stable at room
temperature, this paper focus on the early stage of ordered nucleation and
growth at temperatures between 35 K and 480 K. The atomistic mechanisms leading
to the nanodots array are elucidated by comparing statistical analysis of
VT-STM images with multi-scaled numerical calculations combining both Molecular
Dynamics for the quantitative determination of the activation energies for the
atomic motion and the Kinetic Monte Carlo method for the simulations of the
mesoscopic time and scale evolution of the Co submonolayer
Transfer matrix solution of the Wako-Sait\^o-Mu\~noz-Eaton model augmented by arbitrary short range interactions
The Wako-Sait{\^o}-Mu\~noz-Eaton (WSME) model, initially introduced in the
theory of protein folding, has also been used in modeling the RNA folding and
some epitaxial phenomena. The advantage of this model is that it admits exact
solution in the general inhomogeneous case (Bruscolini and Pelizzola, 2002)
which facilitates the study of realistic systems. However, a shortcoming of the
model is that it accounts only for interactions within continuous stretches of
native bonds or atomic chains while neglecting interstretch (interchain)
interactions. But due to the biopolymer (atomic chain) flexibility, the
monomers (atoms) separated by several non-native bonds along the sequence can
become closely spaced. This produces their strong interaction. The inclusion of
non-WSME interactions into the model makes the model more realistic and
improves its performance. In this study we add arbitrary interactions of finite
range and solve the new model by means of the transfer matrix technique. We can
therefore exactly account for the interactions which in proteomics are
classified as medium- and moderately long-range ones.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
Imaging the symmetry breaking of molecular orbitals in carbon nanotubes
Carbon nanotubes have attracted considerable interest for their unique
electronic properties. They are fascinating candidates for fundamental studies
of one dimensional materials as well as for future molecular electronics
applications. The molecular orbitals of nanotubes are of particular importance
as they govern the transport properties and the chemical reactivity of the
system. Here we show for the first time a complete experimental investigation
of molecular orbitals of single wall carbon nanotubes using atomically resolved
scanning tunneling spectroscopy. Local conductance measurements show
spectacular carbon-carbon bond asymmetry at the Van Hove singularities for both
semiconducting and metallic tubes, demonstrating the symmetry breaking of
molecular orbitals in nanotubes. Whatever the tube, only two types of
complementary orbitals are alternatively observed. An analytical tight-binding
model describing the interference patterns of ? orbitals confirmed by ab initio
calculations, perfectly reproduces the experimental results
Distribution of velocities in an avalanche
For a driven elastic object near depinning, we derive from first principles
the distribution of instantaneous velocities in an avalanche. We prove that
above the upper critical dimension, d >= d_uc, the n-times distribution of the
center-of-mass velocity is equivalent to the prediction from the ABBM
stochastic equation. Our method allows to compute space and time dependence
from an instanton equation. We extend the calculation beyond mean field, to
lowest order in epsilon=d_uc-d.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Field cooling memory effect in Bi2212 and Bi2223 single crystals
A memory effect in the Josephson vortex system created by magnetic field in
the highly anisotropic superconductors Bi2212 and Bi2223 is demonstrated using
microwave power absorption. This surprising effect appears despite a very low
viscosity of Josephson vortices compared to Abrikosov vortices. The
superconductor is field cooled in DC magnetic field H_{m} oriented parallel to
the CuO planes through the critical temperature T_{c} down to 4K, with
subsequent reduction of the field to zero and again above H_{m}. Large
microwave power absorption signal is observed at a magnetic field just above
the cooling field clearly indicating a memory effect. The dependence of the
signal on deviation of magnetic field from H_{m} is the same for a wide range
of H_{m} from 0.15T to 1.7T
Spin-Wave-Assisted Thermal Reversal of Epitaxial Perpendicular Magnetic Nanodots
The magnetic susceptibility of self-organized two-dimensional Co nanodots on
Au(111) has been measured as a function of their size in the 2-7~nm diameter
range. We show that the activation energy for the thermal reversal displays a
power law behavior with the dot volume. Atomic scale simulations based on the
Heisenberg hamiltonian show that this behavior is due to a deviation from the
macrospin model for dot size as small as 3~nm in diameter. This discrepancy is
attributed to finite temperature effects through the thermal excitation of
spin-wave modes inside the particlesComment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Aging dynamics of non-linear elastic interfaces: the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation
In this work, the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang
equation in (1+1) dimensions is studied by means of numerical simulations,
focussing on the two-times evolution of an interface in the absence of any
disordered environment. This work shows that even in this simple case, a rich
aging behavior develops. A multiplicative aging scenario for the two-times
roughness of the system is observed, characterized by the same growth exponent
as in the stationary regime. The analysis permits the identification of the
relevant growing correlation length, accounting for the important scaling
variables in the system. The distribution function of the two-times roughness
is also computed and described in terms of a generalized scaling relation.
These results give good insight into the glassy dynamics of the important case
of a non-linear elastic line in a disordered medium.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Self-organization of (001) cubic crystal surfaces
Self-organization on crystal surface is studied as a two dimensional spinodal
decomposition in presence of a surface stress. The elastic Green function is
calculated for a cubic crystal surface taking into account the crystal
anisotropy. Numerical calculations show that the phase separation is driven by
the interplay between domain boundary energy and long range elastic
interactions. At late stage of the phase separation process, a steady state
appears with different nanometric patterns according to the surface coverage
and the crystal elastic constants
Ageing memory and glassiness of a driven vortex system
Many systems in nature, glasses, interfaces and fractures being some
examples, cannot equilibrate with their environment, which gives rise to novel
and surprising behaviour such as memory effects, ageing and nonlinear dynamics.
Unlike their equilibrated counterparts, the dynamics of out-of- equilibrium
systems is generally too complex to be captured by simple macroscopic laws.
Here we investigate a system that straddles the boundary between glass and
crystal: a Bragg glass formed by vortices in a superconductor. We find that the
response to an applied force evolves according to a stretched exponential, with
the exponent reflecting the deviation from equilibrium. After the force is
removed, the system ages with time and its subsequent response time scales
linearly with its age (simple ageing), meaning that older systems are slower
than younger ones. We show that simple ageing can occur naturally in the
presence of sufficient quenched disorder. Moreover, the hierarchical
distribution of timescales, arising when chunks of loose vortices cannot move
before trapped ones become dislodged, leads to a stretched-exponential
response.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
Avalanches in mean-field models and the Barkhausen noise in spin-glasses
We obtain a general formula for the distribution of sizes of "static
avalanches", or shocks, in generic mean-field glasses with
replica-symmetry-breaking saddle points. For the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick (SK)
spin-glass it yields the density rho(S) of the sizes of magnetization jumps S
along the equilibrium magnetization curve at zero temperature. Continuous
replica-symmetry breaking allows for a power-law behavior rho(S) ~ 1/(S)^tau
with exponent tau=1 for SK, related to the criticality (marginal stability) of
the spin-glass phase. All scales of the ultrametric phase space are implicated
in jump events. Similar results are obtained for the sizes S of static jumps of
pinned elastic systems, or of shocks in Burgers turbulence in large dimension.
In all cases with a one-step solution, rho(S) ~ S exp(-A S^2). A simple
interpretation relating droplets to shocks, and a scaling theory for the
equilibrium analog of Barkhausen noise in finite-dimensional spin glasses are
discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
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