5,359 research outputs found
Coupling the valley degree of freedom to antiferromagnetic order
Conventional electronics are based invariably on the intrinsic degrees of
freedom of an electron, namely, its charge and spin. The exploration of novel
electronic degrees of freedom has important implications in both basic quantum
physics and advanced information technology. Valley as a new electronic degree
of freedom has received considerable attention in recent years. In this paper,
we develop the theory of spin and valley physics of an antiferromagnetic
honeycomb lattice. We show that by coupling the valley degree of freedom to
antiferromagnetic order, there is an emergent electronic degree of freedom
characterized by the product of spin and valley indices, which leads to
spin-valley dependent optical selection rule and Berry curvature-induced
topological quantum transport. These properties will enable optical
polarization in the spin-valley space, and electrical detection/manipulation
through the induced spin, valley and charge fluxes. The domain walls of an
antiferromagnetic honeycomb lattice harbors valley-protected edge states that
support spin-dependent transport. Finally, we employ first principles
calculations to show that the proposed optoelectronic properties can be
realized in antiferromagnetic manganese chalcogenophosphates (MnPX_3, X = S,
Se) in monolayer form.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Distributional Hessian and divdiv complexes on triangulation and cohomology
In this paper, we construct discrete versions of some
Bernstein-Gelfand-Gelfand (BGG) complexes, i.e., the Hessian and the divdiv
complexes, on triangulations in 2D and 3D. The sequences consist of finite
elements with local polynomial shape functions and various types of Dirac
measure on subsimplices. The construction generalizes Whitney forms (canonical
conforming finite elements) for the de Rham complex and Regge calculus/finite
elements for the elasticity (Riemannian deformation) complex from discrete
topological and Discrete Exterior Calculus perspectives. We show that the
cohomology of the resulting complexes is isomorphic to the continuous versions,
and thus isomorphic to the de~Rham cohomology with coefficients.Comment: keywords: Bernstein-Gelfand-Gelfand sequences, cohomology, finite
element exterior calculus, discrete exterior calculus, Regge calculu
Saturated ground vibration analysis based on a three-dimensional coupled train-track-soil interaction model
A novel three-dimensional (3D) coupled train-track-soil interaction model is developed based on the multi-body simulation (MBS) principle and finite element modeling (FEM) theory using LS-DYNA. The novel model is capable of determining the highspeed effects of trains on track and foundation. The soils in this model are treated as saturated media. The wheel-rail dynamic interactions under the track irregularity are developed based on the Hertz contact theory. This model was validated by comparing its numerical results with experimental results obtained from field measurements and a good agreement was established. The one-layered saturated soil model is firstly developed to investigate the vibration responses of pore water pressures, effective and total stresses, and displacements of soils under different train speeds and soil moduli. The multi-layered soils with and without piles are then developed to highlight the influences of multi-layered soils and piles on the ground vibration responses. The effects of water on the train-track dynamic interactions are also presented. The original insight from this study provides a new and better understanding into saturated ground vibration responses in high-speed railway systems using slab tracks in practice. This insight will help track engineers to inspect, maintain, and improve soil conditions effectively, resulting in a seamless railway operation
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