5,225 research outputs found
Polarization Dependence of Raman Spectra in Strained Graphene
The polarization dependences of the G, D, and 2D (G) bands in Raman
spectra at graphene bulk and edge are examined theoretically. The 2D and D
bands have different selection rules at bulk and edge. At bulk, the 2D band
intensity is maximum when the polarization of the scattered light is parallel
to that of incident light, whereas the D band intensity does not have a
polarization dependence. At edge, the 2D and D bands exhibit a selection rule
similar to that of the G band proposed in a previous paper. We suggest that a
constraint equation on the axial velocity caused by the graphene edge is
essential for the dependence of the G band on the crystallographic orientation
observed in the bulk of strained graphene. This is indicative of that the
pseudospin and valleyspin in the bulk of graphene can not be completely free
from the effect of surrounding edge. The status of the experiments on the G and
D bands at the graphene edge is mentioned.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Berry's Phase for Standing Wave Near Graphene Edge
Standing waves near the zigzag and armchair edges, and their Berry's phases
are investigated. It is suggested that the Berry's phase for the standing wave
near the zigzag edge is trivial, while that near the armchair edge is
non-trivial. A non-trivial Berry's phase implies the presence of a singularity
in parameter space. We have confirmed that the Dirac singularity is absent
(present) in the parameter space for the standing wave near the zigzag
(armchair) edge. The absence of the Dirac singularity has a direct consequence
in the local density of states near the zigzag edge. The transport properties
of graphene nanoribbons observed by recent numerical simulations and
experiments are discussed from the point of view of the Berry's phases for the
standing waves.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Ground state of graphite ribbons with zigzag edges
We study the interaction effects on the ground state of nanographite ribbons
with zigzag edges. Within the mean-field approximation, we found that there are
two possible phases: the superconducting (SC) phase and the excitonic insulator
(EI). The two phases are separated by a first-order transition point. After
taking into account the low-lying fluctuations around the mean-field solutions,
the SC phase becomes a spin liquid phase with one gapless charge mode.
On the other hand, all excitations in the EI phase, especially the spin
excitations, are gapped.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
A tight lower bound for an online hypercube packing problem and bounds for prices of anarchy of a related game
We prove a tight lower bound on the asymptotic performance ratio of
the bounded space online -hypercube bin packing problem, solving an open
question raised in 2005. In the classic -hypercube bin packing problem, we
are given a sequence of -dimensional hypercubes and we have an unlimited
number of bins, each of which is a -dimensional unit hypercube. The goal is
to pack (orthogonally) the given hypercubes into the minimum possible number of
bins, in such a way that no two hypercubes in the same bin overlap. The bounded
space online -hypercube bin packing problem is a variant of the
-hypercube bin packing problem, in which the hypercubes arrive online and
each one must be packed in an open bin without the knowledge of the next
hypercubes. Moreover, at each moment, only a constant number of open bins are
allowed (whenever a new bin is used, it is considered open, and it remains so
until it is considered closed, in which case, it is not allowed to accept new
hypercubes). Epstein and van Stee [SIAM J. Comput. 35 (2005), no. 2, 431-448]
showed that is and , and conjectured that
it is . We show that is in fact . To
obtain this result, we elaborate on some ideas presented by those authors, and
go one step further showing how to obtain better (offline) packings of certain
special instances for which one knows how many bins any bounded space algorithm
has to use. Our main contribution establishes the existence of such packings,
for large enough , using probabilistic arguments. Such packings also lead to
lower bounds for the prices of anarchy of the selfish -hypercube bin packing
game. We present a lower bound of for the pure price of
anarchy of this game, and we also give a lower bound of for
its strong price of anarchy
Magnetic Correlations at Graphene Edges
Magnetic zigzag edges of graphene are considered as a basis for novel
spintronics devices despite the fact that no true long-range magnetic order is
possible in one dimension. We study the transverse and longitudinal
fluctuations of magnetic moments at zigzag edges of graphene from first
principles. We find a high value for the spin wave stiffness = 2100 meV
\AA and a spin-collinear domain wall creation energy = 114 meV
accompanied by low magnetic anisotropy. Above the crossover temperature 10 K the spin correlation length limits the
long-range magnetic order to ~1 nm at 300 K while below it grows
exponentially with decreasing temperature. We discuss possible ways of
increasing the range of magnetic order and effects of edge roughness on it.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Numerical study of the lattice vacancy effects on the single-channel electron transport of graphite ribbons
Lattice vacancy effects on electrical conductance of nanographite ribbon are
investigated by means of the Landauer approach using a tight binding model. In
the low-energy regime ribbons with zigzag boundary provide a single conducting
channel whose origin is connected with the presence of edge states. It is found
that the chemical potential dependence of conductance strongly depends on the
difference () of the number of removed A and B sublattice sites. The
large lattice vacancy with shows zero-conductance dips
in the single-channel region, however, the large lattice vacancy with
has no dip structure in this region. The connection between this
conductance rule and the Longuet-Higgins conjecture is also discussed
Temperature Dependence of the Superfluid Density in a Noncentrosymmetric Superconductor
For a noncentrosymmetric superconductor such as CePt3Si, we consider a Cooper
pairing model with a two-component order parameter composed of spin-singlet and
spin-triplet pairing components.
We calculate the superfluid density tensor in the clean limit on the basis of
the quasiclassical theory of superconductivity.
We demonstrate that such a pairing model accounts for an experimentally
observed feature of the temperature dependence of the London penetration depth
in CePt3Si, i.e., line-node-gap behavior at low temperatures.Comment: 10 page
Electronic States of Graphene Nanoribbons
We study the electronic states of narrow graphene ribbons (``nanoribbons'')
with zigzag and armchair edges. The finite width of these systems breaks the
spectrum into an infinite set of bands, which we demonstrate can be
quantitatively understood using the Dirac equation with appropriate boundary
conditions. For the zigzag nanoribbon we demonstrate that the boundary
condition allows a particle- and a hole-like band with evanescent wavefunctions
confined to the surfaces, which continuously turn into the well-known zero
energy surface states as the width gets large. For armchair edges, we show that
the boundary condition leads to admixing of valley states, and the band
structure is metallic when the width of the sample in lattice constant units is
divisible by 3, and insulating otherwise. A comparison of the wavefunctions and
energies from tight-binding calculations and solutions of the Dirac equations
yields quantitative agreement for all but the narrowest ribbons.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Chalker-Coddington model described by an S-matrix with odd dimensions
The Chalker-Coddington network model is often used to describe the transport
properties of quantum Hall systems. By adding an extra channel to this model,
we introduce an asymmetric model with profoundly different transport
properties. We present a numerical analysis of these transport properties and
consider the relevance for realistic systems.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. To appear in the EP2DS-17 proceeding
- …