73,432 research outputs found
Electronic properties of graphene nano-flakes: Energy gap, permanent dipole, termination effect and Raman spectroscopy
The electronic properties of graphene nano-flakes (GNFs) with different edge
passivation is investigated by using density functional theory. Passivation
with F and H atoms are considered: C X (X=F or H). We studied
GNFs with and limit ourselves to the lowest energy configurations.
We found that: i) the energy difference between the highest occupied
molecular orbital (HOMO) and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO)
decreases with , ii) topological defects (pentagon and heptagon) break the
symmetry of the GNFs and enhance the electric polarization, iii) the mutual
interaction of bilayer GNFs can be understood by dipole-dipole interaction
which were found sensitive to the relative orientation of the GNFs, iv) the
permanent dipoles depend on the edge terminated atom, while the energy gap is
independent of it, and v) the presence of heptagon and pentagon defects in the
GNFs results in the largest difference between the energy of the spin-up and
spin-down electrons which is larger for the H-passivated GNFs as compared to
F-passivated GNFs. Our study shows clearly the effect of geometry, size,
termination and bilayer on the electronic properties of small GNFs.This study
reveals important features of graphene nano-flakes which can be detected using
Raman spectroscopy.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures, accepted in J. Chem. Phy
Thermomechanical properties of a single hexagonal boron nitride sheet
Using atomistic simulations we investigate the thermodynamical properties of
a single atomic layer of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN). The thermal induced
ripples, heat capacity, and thermal lattice expansion of large scale h-BN
sheets are determined and compared to those found for graphene (GE) for
temperatures up to 1000 K. By analyzing the mean square height fluctuations and the height-height correlation function we found that the h-BN
sheet is a less stiff material as compared to graphene. The bending rigidity of
h-BN: i) is about 16% smaller than the one of GE at room temperature (300 K),
and ii) increases with temperature as in GE. The difference in stiffness
between h-BN and GE results in unequal responses to external uniaxial and shear
stress and different buckling transitions. In contrast to a GE sheet, the
buckling transition of a h-BN sheet depends strongly on the direction of the
applied compression. The molar heat capacity, thermal expansion coefficient and
the Gruneisen parameter are estimated to be 25.2 J\,mol\,K,
7.2K and 0.89, respectively
Revisiting and Induced Quasielastic Scattering from Nuclei in Sub-GeV Energy Region
We present the results of charged current quasielastic(CCQE) scattering cross
sections from free as well as bound nucleons like in , ,
and nuclear targets in 1 GeV
energy region.
The results are obtained using local Fermi gas model with and without RPA
effect.
The differences those may arise in the electron and muon production cross
sections due to the different lepton mass, uncertainties in the axial dipole
mass and pseudoscalar form factor, and due to the inclusion of second
class currents have been highlighted for neutrino/antineutrino induced
processes.Comment: Published in Journal of the Physical Society of Japan (NuInt-2015
A constitutive model for simple shear of dense frictional suspensions
Discrete particle simulations are used to study the shear rheology of dense,
stabilized, frictional particulate suspensions in a viscous liquid, toward
development of a constitutive model for steady shear flows at arbitrary stress.
These suspensions undergo increasingly strong continuous shear thickening (CST)
as solid volume fraction increases above a critical volume fraction, and
discontinuous shear thickening (DST) is observed for a range of . When
studied at controlled stress, the DST behavior is associated with non-monotonic
flow curves of the steady-state stress as a function of shear rate. Recent
studies have related shear thickening to a transition between mostly lubricated
to predominantly frictional contacts with the increase in stress. In this
study, the behavior is simulated over a wide range of the dimensionless
parameters , and , with the dimensionless shear stress and the coefficient of
interparticle friction: the dimensional stress is , and , where is the magnitude of repulsive force at contact
and is the particle radius. The data have been used to populate the model
of the lubricated-to-frictional rheology of Wyart and Cates [Phys. Rev.
Lett.{\bf 112}, 098302 (2014)], which is based on the concept of two viscosity
divergences or \textquotedblleft jamming\textquotedblright\ points at volume
fraction (random close packing) for the
low-stress lubricated state, and at for
any nonzero in the frictional state; a generalization provides the normal
stress response as well as the shear stress. A flow state map of this material
is developed based on the simulation results.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
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