775 research outputs found

    Transient model of hydrogen/oxygen reactor

    Get PDF
    Numerical analysis of effects of transient response in catalytic ignition system to promote hydrogen-oxygen combustio

    Study of hydrazine reactor vacuum start characteristics Quarterly progress report, 1 May - 31 Jul. 1969

    Get PDF
    Liquid hydrazine penetration into catalyst particles upon immersion and decomposition of hydrazine ga

    Polaron Crossover and Bipolaronic Metal-Insulator Transition in the Holstein model at half-filling

    Full text link
    The evolution of the properties of a finite density electronic system as the electron-phonon coupling is increased are investigated in the Holstein model using the Dynamical Mean-Field Theory (DMFT). We compare the spinless fermion case, in which only isolated polarons can be formed, with the spinful model in which the polarons can bind and form bipolarons. In the latter case, the bipolaronic binding occurs through a metal-insulator transition. In the adiabatic regime in which the phonon energy is small with respect to the electron hopping we compare numerically exact DMFT results with an analytical scheme inspired by the Born-Oppenheimer procedure. Within the latter approach,a truncation of the phononic Hilbert space leads to a mapping of the original model onto an Anderson spin-fermion model. In the anti-adiabatic regime (where the phonon energy exceeds the electronic scales) the standard treatment based on Lang-Firsov canonical transformation allows to map the original model on to an attractive Hubbard model in the spinful case. The separate analysis of the two regimes supports the numerical evidence that polaron formation is not necessarily associated to a metal-insulator transition, which is instead due to pairing between the carriers. At the polaron crossover the Born-Oppenheimer approximation is shown to break down due to the entanglement of the electron-phonon state.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figure

    Bands, resonances, edge singularities and excitons in core level spectroscopy investigated within the dynamical mean field theory

    Full text link
    Using a recently developed impurity solver we exemplify how dynamical mean field theory captures band excitations, resonances, edge singularities and excitons in core level x-ray absorption (XAS) and core level photo electron spectroscopy (cPES) on metals, correlated metals and Mott insulators. Comparing XAS at different values of the core-valence interaction shows how the quasiparticle peak in the absence of core-valence interactions evolves into a resonance of similar shape, but different origin. Whereas XAS is rather insensitive to the metal insulator transition, cPES can be used, due to nonlocal screening, to measure the amount of local charge fluctuation
    corecore