7,931 research outputs found

    Sub-Poissonian Shot Noise in Molecular Wires

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    We investigate the transport behavior of polyene molecules sandwiched between two metallic contacts using the non-equilibrium Green's function formalism. We calculate both current and noise power as a function of applied voltage and show that they decrease with increasing size of the polyene molecules. We find that even with symmetric connection to metallic contacts, current verus voltage curves can be asymmetric for asymmetrically substituted polyenes. Most importantly, we demonstrate a cross-over from Poissonian to sub-Poissonian behavior in the shot noise as a function of applied voltage. The algorithm for noise power calculation can be used for designing molecules with low noise.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter

    Electron Correlations and Two-Photon States in Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Molecules: A Peculiar Role of Geometry

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    We present numerical studies of one- and two-photon excited states ordering in a number of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon molecules: coronene, hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene and circumcoronene, all possessing D6hD_{6h} point group symmetry versus ovalene with D2hD_{2h} symmetry, within the Pariser-Parr-Pople model of interacting π\pi-electrons. The calculated energies of the two-photon states as well as their relative two-photon absorption cross-sections within the interacting model are qualitatively different from single-particle descriptions. More remarkably, a peculiar role of molecular geometry is found. The consequence of electron correlations is far stronger for ovalene, where the lowest spin-singlet two-photon state is a quantum superposition of pairs of lowest spin triplet states, as in the linear polyenes. The same is not true for D6hD_{6h} group hydrocarbons. Our work indicates significant covalent character, in valence bond language, of the ground state, the lowest spin triplet state and a few of the lowest two-photon states in D2hD_{2h} ovalene but not in those with D6hD_{6h} symmetry.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 3 table

    Theory of triangular lattice quasi-one-dimensional charge-transfer solids

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    Recent investigations of the magnetic properties and the discovery of superconductivity in quasi-one-dimensional triangular lattice organic charge-transfer solids have indicated the severe limitations of the effective 1/2-filled band Hubbard model for these and related systems. Our computational studies of these materials within a 1/4-filled band Hubbard model in which the organic monomer molecules, and not their dimers, constitute the sites of the Hamiltonian are able to reproduce the experimental results. We ascribe the spin gap transition in kappa-(BEDT-TTF)_2B(CN)_4 to the formation of a two-dimensional paired-electron crystal and make the testable prediction that the spin gap will be accompanied by charge-ordering and period doubling in two directions. We find enhancement of the long-range component of superconducting pairing correlations by the Hubbard repulsive interaction for band parameters corresponding to kappa-(BEDT-TTF)_2CF_3SO_3. The overall results strongly support a valence bond theory of superconductivity we have proposed recently.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Absence of long-range superconducting correlations in the frustrated 1/2-filled band Hubbard model

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    We present many-body calculations of superconducting pair-pair correlations in the ground state of the half-filled band Hubbard model on large anisotropic triangular lattices. Our calculations cover nearly the complete range of anisotropies between the square and isotropic triangular lattice limits. We find that the superconducting pair-pair correlations decrease monotonically with increasing onsite Hubbard interaction U for inter-pair distances greater than nearest neighbor. For the large lattices of interest here the distance dependence of the correlations approaches that for noninteracting electrons. Both these results are consistent with the absence of superconductivity in this model in the thermodynamic limit. We conclude that the effective 1/2-filled band Hubbard model, suggested by many authors to be appropriate for the kappa-(BEDT-TTF)-based organic charge-transfer solids, does not explain the superconducting transition in these materials.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
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