23,048 research outputs found
Optimal energy quanta to current conversion
We present a microscopic discussion of a nano-sized structure which uses the
quantization of energy levels and the physics of single charge Coulomb
interaction to achieve an optimal conversion of heat flow to directed current.
In our structure the quantization of energy levels and the Coulomb blockade
lead to the transfer of quantized packets of energy from a hot source into an
electric conductor to which it is capacitively coupled. The fluctuation
generated transfer of a single energy quantum translates into the directed
motion of a single electron. Thus in our structure the ratio of the charge
current to the heat current is determined by the ratio of the charge quantum to
the energy quantum. An important novel aspect of our approach is that the
direction of energy flow and the direction of electron motion are decoupled.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Inter- and intra-layer excitons in MoS/WS and MoSe/WSe heterobilayers
Accurately described excitonic properties of transition metal dichalcogenide
heterobilayers (HBLs) are crucial to comprehend the optical response and the
charge carrier dynamics of them. Excitons in multilayer systems posses inter or
intralayer character whose spectral positions depend on their binding energy
and the band alignment of the constituent single-layers. In this study, we
report the electronic structure and the absorption spectra of MoS/WS
and MoSe/WSe HBLs from first-principles calculations. We explore the
spectral positions, binding energies and the origins of inter and intralayer
excitons and compare our results with experimental observations. The absorption
spectra of the systems are obtained by solving the Bethe-Salpeter equation on
top of a GW calculation which corrects the independent particle
eigenvalues obtained from density functional theory calculations. Our
calculations reveal that the lowest energy exciton in both HBLs possesses
interlayer character which is decisive regarding their possible device
applications. Due to the spatially separated nature of the charge carriers, the
binding energy of inter-layer excitons might be expected to be considerably
smaller than that of intra-layer ones. However, according to our calculations
the binding energy of lowest energy interlayer excitons is only 20\%
lower due to the weaker screening of the Coulomb interaction between layers of
the HBLs. Therefore, it can be deduced that the spectral positions of the
interlayer excitons with respect to intralayer ones are mostly determined by
the band offset of the constituent single-layers. By comparing oscillator
strengths and thermal occupation factors, we show that in luminescence at low
temperature, the interlayer exciton peak becomes dominant, while in absorption
it is almost invisible.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Magnetoasymmetric transport in a mesoscopic interferometer: From the weak to the strong coupling regime
The microreversibility principle implies that the conductance of a
two-terminal Aharonov-Bohm interferometer is an even function of the applied
magnetic flux. Away from linear response, however, this symmetry is not
fulfilled and the conductance phase of the interferometer when a quantum dot is
inserted in one of its arms can be a continuous function of the bias voltage.
Such magnetoasymmetries have been investigated in related mesoscopic systems
and arise as a consequence of the asymetric response of the internal potential
of the conductor out of equilibrium. Here we discuss magnetoasymmetries in
quantum-dot Aharonov-Bohm interferometers when strong electron-electron
interactions are taken into account beyond the mean-field approach. We find
that at very low temperatures the asymmetric element of the differential
conductance shows an abrupt change for voltages around the Fermi level. At
higher temperatures we recover a smooth variation of the magnetoasymmetry as a
function of the bias. We illustrate our results with the aid of the electron
occupation at the dot, demonstrating that its nonequilibrium component is an
asymmetric function of the flux even to lowest order in voltage. We also
calculate the magnetoasymmetry of the current-current correlations (the noise)
and find that it is given, to a good extent, by the magnetoasymmetry of the
weakly nonlinear conductance term. Therefore, both magnetoasymmetries (noise
and conductance) are related to each other via a higher-order
fluctuation-dissipation relation. This result appears to be true even in the
low temperature regime, where Kondo physics and many-body effects dominate the
transport properties.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Ring-shaped exact Hopf solitons
The existence of ring-like structures in exact hopfion solutions is shown.Comment: version accepted for publication in JMP, includes symmetry
transformation for finite paramete
Recent ASDEX Upgrade research in support of ITER and DEMO
Recent experiments on the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak aim at improving the physics base for ITER and DEMO to aid the machine
design and prepare efficient operation. Type I edge localized mode (ELM) mitigation using resonant magnetic perturbations
(RMPs) has been shown at low pedestal collisionality (
ν
∗
ped
<
0
.
4
)
. In contrast to the previous high
ν
∗
regime, suppression only
occurs in a narrow RMP spectral window, indicating a resonant process, and a concomitant confinement drop is observed due
to a reduction of pedestal top density and electron temperature. Strong evidence is found for the ion heat flux to be the decisive
element for the L–H power threshold. A physics based scaling of the density at which the minimum
P
LH
occurs indicates that
ITER could take advantage of it to initiate H-mode at lower density than that of the final
Q
=
10 operational point. Core density
fluctuation measurements resolved in radius and wave number show that an increase of
R/L
T
e
introduced by off-axis electron
cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH) mainly increases the large scale fluctuations. The radial variation of the fluctuation level
is in agreement with simulations using the GENE code. Fast particles are shown to undergo classical slowing down in the
absence of large scale magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) events and for low heating power, but show signs of anomalous radial
redistribution at large heating power, consistent with a broadened off-axis neutral beam current drive current profile under these
conditions. Neoclassical tearing mode (NTM) suppression experiments using electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD) with
feedback controlled deposition have allowed to test several control strategies for ITER, including automated control of (3,2) and
(2,1) NTMs during a single discharge. Disruption mitigation studies using massive gas injection (MGI) can show an increased
fuelling efficiency with high field side injection, but a saturation of the fuelling efficiency is observed at high injected mass as
needed for runaway electron suppression. Large locked modes can significantly decrease the fuelling efficiency and increase
the asymmetry of radiated power during MGI mitigation. Concerning power exhaust, the partially detached ITER divertor
scenario has been demonstrated at
P
sep
/R
=
10 MW m
−
1
in ASDEX Upgrade, with a peak time averaged target load around
5MWm
−
2
, well consistent with the component limits for ITER. Developing this towards DEMO, full detachment was achieved
at
P
sep
/R
=
7MWm
−
1
and stationary discharges with core radiation fraction of the order of DEMO requirements (70% instead
of the 30% needed for ITER) were demonstrated. Finally, it remains difficult to establish the standard ITER
Q
=
10 scenario at
low
q
95
=
3 in the all-tungsten (all-W) ASDEX Upgrade due to the observed poor confinement at low
β
N
. This is mainly due to
a degraded pedestal performance and hence investigations at shifting the operational point to higher
β
N
by lowering the current
have been started. At higher
q
95
, pedestal performance can be recovered by seeding N
2
as well as CD
4
, which is interpreted as
improved pedestal stability due to the decrease of bootstrap current with increasing
Z
eff
. Concerning advanced scenarios, the
upgrade of ECRH power has allowed experiments with central ctr-ECCD to modify the
q
-profile in improved H-mode scenarios,
showing an increase in confinement at still good MHD stability with flat elevated
q
-profiles at values between 1.5 and 2.European Commission (EUROfusion 633053
Dark matter from the scalar sector of 3-3-1 models without exotic electric charges
We show that three SU(2) singlet neutral scalars (two CP-even and one CP-odd)
in the spectrum of models based on the gauge symmetry SU(3)_c X SU(3)_L X
U(1)_X, which do not contain exotic electric charges, are realistic candidates
for thermally generated self-interacting dark matter in the Universe, a type of
dark matter that has been recently proposed in order to overcome some
difficulties of collisionless cold dark matter models at the galactic scale.
These candidates arise without introducing a new mass scale in the model and/or
without the need for a discrete symmetry to stabilize them, but at the expense
of tuning several combinations of parameters of the scalar potential.Comment: RevTeX, 11 pages. v2: typos corrected, one reference added. v3:
clarifications added, four more references added. To appear in Europhys. Let
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