718 research outputs found
Structure and correlation effects in semiconducting SrTiO₃
We have investigated the effects of structure change and electron correlation on SrTiO₃ single crystals using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We show that the cubic to tetragonal phase transition at 105 K is manifested by a charge transfer from in-plane (dyz and dzx) bands to out-of-plane (dxy) band, which is opposite to the theoretical predictions. Along this second-order phase transition, we find a smooth evolution of the quasiparticle strength and effective masses. The in-plane band exhibits a peak-dip-hump lineshape, indicating a high degree of correlation on a relatively large (170 meV) energy scale, which is attributed to the polaron formation
Evidence for Weyl fermions in a canonical heavy-fermion semimetal YbPtBi
The manifestation of Weyl fermions in strongly correlated electron systems is
of particular interest. We report evidence for Weyl fermions in the heavy
fermion semimetal YbPtBi from electronic structure calculations, angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy, magnetotransport and calorimetric measurements. At
elevated temperatures where -electrons are localized, there are triply
degenerate points, yielding Weyl nodes in applied magnetic fields. These are
revealed by a contribution from the chiral anomaly in the magnetotransport,
which at low temperatures becomes negligible due to the influence of electronic
correlations. Instead, Weyl fermions are inferred from the topological Hall
effect, which provides evidence for a Berry curvature, and a cubic temperature
dependence of the specific heat, as expected from the linear dispersion near
the Weyl nodes. The results suggest that YbPtBi is a Weyl heavy fermion
semimetal, where the Kondo interaction renormalizes the bands hosting Weyl
points. These findings open up an opportunity to explore the interplay between
topology and strong electronic correlations.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, Supplementary Information available with open
access at https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-06782-
The formation of an energy gap in graphene on ruthenium by controlling the interface
In this work, we have investigated the spectral function of graphene on a monolayer of intercalated gold on Ru(0001) using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). The intercalation leads to a decoupling of the graphene film, as documented by emergence of the characteristic linear π-bands near the Fermi level. However, a band gap at the band crossing is observed. We relate this gap opening to the broken symmetry of the two carbon sublattices, induced by the special lattice mismatch of the graphene and the intercalated gold monolayer
Field-dependent ionic conductivities from generalized fluctuation-dissipation relations
We derive a relationship for the electric field dependent ionic conductivity
in terms of fluctuations of time integrated microscopic variables. We
demonstrate this formalism with molecular dynamics simulations of solutions of
differing ionic strength with implicit solvent conditions and molten salts.
These calculations are aided by a novel nonequilibrium statistical reweighting
scheme that allows for the conductivity to be computed as a continuous function
of the applied field. In strong electrolytes, we find the fluctuations of the
ionic current are Gaussian and subsequently the conductivity is constant with
applied field. In weaker electrolytes and molten salts, we find the
fluctuations of the ionic current are strongly non-Gaussian and the
conductivity increases with applied field. This nonlinear behavior, known
phenomenologically for dilute electrolytes as the Onsager-Wien effect, is
general and results from the suppression of ionic correlations at large applied
fields, as we elucidate through both dynamic and static correlations within
nonequilibrium steady-states.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Intrinsic Insulating Ground State in Transition Metal Dichalcogenide TiSe2
The transition metal dichalcogenide TiSe has received significant
research attention over the past four decades. Different studies have presented
ways to suppress the 200~K charge density wave transition, vary low temperature
resistivity by several orders of magnitude, and stabilize magnetism or
superconductivity. Here we give the results of a new synthesis technique
whereby samples were grown in a high pressure environment with up to 180~bar of
argon gas. Above 100~K, properties are nearly unchanged from previous reports,
but a hysteretic resistance region that begins around 80~K, accompanied by
insulating low temperature behavior, is distinct from anything previously
observed. An accompanying decrease in carrier concentration is seen in Hall
effect measurements, and photoemission data show a removal of an electron
pocket from the Fermi surface in an insulating sample. We conclude that high
inert gas pressure synthesis accesses an underlying nonmetallic ground state in
a material long speculated to be an excitonic insulator.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Anisotropy effects in a mixed quantum-classical Heisenberg model in two dimensions
We analyse a specific two dimensional mixed spin Heisenberg model with
exchange anisotropy, by means of high temperature expansions and Monte Carlo
simulations. The goal is to describe the magnetic properties of the compound
(NBu_{4})_{2}Mn_{2}[Cu(opba)]_{3}\cdot 6DMSO\cdot H_{2}O which exhibits a
ferromagnetic transition at . Extrapolating our analysis on the
basis of renormalisation group arguments, we find that this transition may
result from a very weak anisotropy effect.Comment: 8 pages, 10 Postscript figure
Giant ambipolar Rashba effect in a semiconductor: BiTeI
We observe a giant spin-orbit splitting in bulk and surface states of the
non-centrosymmetric semiconductor BiTeI. We show that the Fermi level can be
placed in the valence or in the conduction band by controlling the surface
termination. In both cases it intersects spin-polarized bands, in the
corresponding surface depletion and accumulation layers. The momentum splitting
of these bands is not affected by adsorbate-induced changes in the surface
potential. These findings demonstrate that two properties crucial for enabling
semiconductor-based spin electronics -- a large, robust spin splitting and
ambipolar conduction -- are present in this material.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Effective range function below threshold
We demonstrate that the kernel of the Lippmann-Schwinger equation, associated
with interactions consisting of a sum of the Coulomb plus a short range nuclear
potential, below threshold becomes degenerate. Taking advantage of this fact,
we present a simple method of calculating the effective range function for
negative energies. This may be useful in practice since the effective range
expansion extrapolated to threshold allows to extract low-energy scattering
parameters: the Coulomb-modified scattering length and the effective range.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
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