382 research outputs found
First-principles calculation method for electron transport based on grid Lippmann-Schwinger equation
We develop a first-principles electron-transport simulator based on the
Lippmann--Schwinger (LS) equation within the framework of the real-space
finite-difference scheme. In our fully real-space based LS (grid LS) method,
the ratio expression technique for the scattering wave functions and the
Green's function elements of the reference system is employed to avoid
numerical collapse. Furthermore, we present analytical expressions and/or
prominent calculation procedures for the retarded Green's function, which are
utilized in the grid LS approach. In order to demonstrate the performance of
the grid LS method, we simulate the electron-transport properties of the
semiconductor/oxide interfaces sandwiched between semi-infinite metal
electrodes. The results confirm that the leakage current through the
(001)Si/SiO model becomes much larger when the dangling-bond (DB) state is
induced by a defect in the oxygen layer while that through the (001)Ge/GeO
model is insensitive to the DB state
Magnetic orderings in Al nanowires suspended between electrodes
A theoretical analysis of a relation between atomic and spin-electronic
structures for the ground state of single-row aluminum nanowires suspended
between Al(001) electrodes is demonstrated using first-principles
molecular-dynamics simulations. We obtain a unusual result that a
3-aluminum-atom nanowire sandwiched between the electrodes does not manifest
magnetic ordering although an isolated aluminum trimer molecule in a straight
line is spin-polarized. On the other hand, a 5-atom nanowire exhibits
ferromagnetic ordering, where three central atoms form a spin-polarized trimer.
Moreover, in the case of an 8-atom nanowire, the middle atoms in the nanowire
form two spin-polarized trimers with antiferromagnetic ordering.Comment: 9 page
Improvement of accuracy of wave-function-matching method for transport calculation
The wave-function-matching (WFM) technique for first-principles
transport-property calculations was modified by S\o{}rensen {\it et al.} so as
to exclude rapidly decreasing evanescent waves [S\o{}rensen {\it et al.}, Phys.
Rev. B {\bf 77}, 155301 (2008)]. However, this method lacks translational
invariance of the transmission probability with respect to insertion of
matching planes and consistency between the sum of the transmission and
reflection probabilities and the number of channels in the transition region.
We reformulate the WFM method since the original methods are formulated to
include all the generalized Bloch waves. It is found that the translational
invariance is destroyed by the overlap of the layers between the electrode and
transition regions and by the pseudoinverses used to exclude the rapidly
decreasing evanescent waves. We then devise a method that removes the overlap
and calculates the transmission probability without the pseudoinverses. As a
result, we find that the translational invariance of the transmission
probability with respect to insertion of the extra layers is properly retained
and the sum of the transmission and reflection probabilities exactly agrees
with the number of channels. In addition, we prove that the accuracy in the
transmission probability of this WFM technique is comparable with that obtained
by the nonequilibrium Green's function method. Furthermore, we carry out the
electron transport calculations on two-dimensional graphene sheets embedded
with B--N line defects sandwiched between a pair of semi-infinite graphene
electrodes and find the dependence of the electron transmission on the
transverse momentum perpendicular to the direction of transport
Contour integral method for obtaining the self-energy matrices of electrodes in electron transport calculations
We propose an efficient computational method for evaluating the self-energy
matrices of electrodes to study ballistic electron transport properties in
nanoscale systems. To reduce the high computational cost incurred in large
systems, a contour integral eigensolver based on the Sakurai-Sugiura method
combined with the shifted biconjugate gradient method is developed to solve
exponential-type eigenvalue problem for complex wave vectors. A remarkable
feature of the proposed algorithm is that the numerical procedure is very
similar to that of conventional band structure calculations. We implement the
developed method in the framework of the real-space higher-order finite
difference scheme with nonlocal pseudopotentials. Numerical tests for a wide
variety of materials validate the robustness, accuracy, and efficiency of the
proposed method. As an illustration of the method, we present the electron
transport property of the free-standing silicene with the line defect
originating from the reversed buckled phases.Comment: 36 pages, 13 figures, 2 table
Shortening of Subjective Visual Intervals Followed by Repetitive Stimulation
Our previous research demonstrated that repetitive tone stimulation shortened the perceived duration of the preceding auditory time interval. In this study, we examined whether repetitive visual stimulation influences the perception of preceding visual time intervals. Results showed that a time interval followed by a high-frequency visual flicker was perceived as shorter than that followed by a low-frequency visual flicker. The perceived duration decreased as the frequency of the visual flicker increased. The visual flicker presented in one hemifield shortened the apparent time interval in the other hemifield. A final experiment showed that repetitive tone stimulation also shortened the perceived duration of preceding visual time intervals. We concluded that visual flicker shortened the perceived duration of preceding visual time intervals in the same way as repetitive auditory stimulation shortened the subjective duration of preceding tones
Efficient calculation of the Green's function in scattering region for electron-transport simulations
We propose a first-principles method of efficiently evaluating
electron-transport properties of very long systems. Implementing the recursive
Green's function method and the shifted conjugate gradient method in the
transport simulator based on real-space finite-difference formalism, we can
suppress the increase in the computational cost, which is generally
proportional to the cube of the system length to a linear order. This enables
us to perform the transport calculations of double-walled carbon
nanotubes~(DWCNTs) with 196,608 atoms. We find that the conductance spectra
exhibit different properties depending on the periodicity of doped impurities
in DWCNTs and they differ from the properties for systems with less than 1,000
atoms.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
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