32 research outputs found

    Relativistic coupled cluster calculation of Mossbauer isomer shifts of iodine compounds

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    Mossbauer isomer shifts of 129I and127I in the ICl, IBr and I 2 molecules are studied. Filatov's formulation is used, based on calculating the electronic energy change of the two systems involved in the Mossbauer. transition, the source and absorber. The energy difference between the transitions in the two systems determines the shift. The effects of relativity and electron correlation on the shifts are investigated. The exact two-component (X2C) and the four-component relativistic schemes give virtually identical results; the non-relativistic approach yields about 50% of the relativistic shifts. Electron correlation is included by coupled-cluster singles-and-doubles with perturbative triples [CCSD(T)]; it reduces Hartree-Fock shifts by 15%-20%. Basis sets are increased until the isomer shifts converge. The final results, calculated with the converged basis in the framework of the X2C Hamiltonian and CCSD(T) correlation, give an agreement of 10% or better with experimental data. [GRAPHICS

    Braneworld effective action and origin of inflation

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    We construct braneworld effective action in two brane Randall-Sundrum model and show that the radion mode plays the role of a scalar field localizing essentially nonlocal part of this action. Non-minimal curvature coupling of this field reflects the violation of AdS/CFT-correspondence for finite values of brane separation. Under small detuning of the brane tension from the Randall-Sundrum flat brane value, the radion mode can play the role of inflaton. Inflationary dynamics corresponds to branes moving apart in the field of repelling interbrane inflaton-radion potential and implies the existence acceleration stage caused by remnant cosmological constant at late (large brane separation) stages of evolution. We discuss the possibility of fixing initial conditions in this model within the concept of braneworld creation from the tunneling or no-boundary cosmological state, which formally replaces the conventional moduli stabilization mechanism.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, the effective action form factor is corrected for small separation between branes and new references are adde

    OH− and H3O+ Diffusion in Model AEMs and PEMs at Low Hydration: Insights from Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics

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    Fuel cell-based anion-exchange membranes (AEMs) and proton exchange membranes (PEMs) are considered to have great potential as cost-effective, clean energy conversion devices. However, a fundamental atomistic understanding of the hydroxide and hydronium diffusion mechanisms in the AEM and PEM environment is an ongoing challenge. In this work, we aim to identify the fundamental atomistic steps governing hydroxide and hydronium transport phenomena. The motivation of this work lies in the fact that elucidating the key design differences between the hydroxide and hydronium diffusion mechanisms will play an important role in the discovery and determination of key design principles for the synthesis of new membrane materials with high ion conductivity for use in emerging fuel cell technologies. To this end, ab initio molecular dynamics simulations are presented to explore hydroxide and hydronium ion solvation complexes and diffusion mechanisms in the model AEM and PEM systems at low hydration in confined environments. We find that hydroxide diffusion in AEMs is mostly vehicular, while hydronium diffusion in model PEMs is structural. Furthermore, we find that the region between each pair of cations in AEMs creates a bottleneck for hydroxide diffusion, leading to a suppression of diffusivity, while the anions in PEMs become active participants in the hydronium diffusion, suggesting that the presence of the anions in model PEMs could potentially promote hydronium diffusion

    Driven Liouville von Neumann Approach for Time-Dependent Electronic Transport Calculations in a Nonorthogonal Basis-Set Representation

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    A nonorthogonal localized basis-set implementation of the driven Liouville von Neumann (DLvN) approach is presented. The method is based on block-orthogonalization of the Hamiltonian and overlap matrix representations, yielding nonoverlapping blocks that correspond to the various system sections. An extended Hückel description of gold/benzene-dithiol/gold and gold/pyridine-dithiol/gold junctions is used to demonstrate the performance of the method. The presented generalization is an important milestone toward using the DLvN approach for performing accurate dynamic electronic transport calculations in realistic model systems, based on density functional theory packages that rely on atom-centered basis-set representations
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