2,833 research outputs found
Comparison of Power Dependence of Microwave Surface Resistance of Unpatterned and Patterned YBCO Thin Film
The effect of the patterning process on the nonlinearity of the microwave
surface resistance of YBCO thin films is investigated. With the use of a
sapphire dielectric resonator and a stripline resonator, the microwave of
YBCO thin films was measured before and after the patterning process, as a
function of temperature and the rf peak magnetic field in the film. The
microwave loss was also modeled, assuming a dependence of
on current density . Experimental and modeled results
show that the patterning has no observable effect on the microwave residual
or on the power dependence of .Comment: Submitted to IEEE Trans. MT
Universal Features of Quantized Thermal Conductance of Carbon Nanotubes
The universal features of quantized thermal conductance of carbon nanotubes
(CNTs) are revealed through theoretical analysis based on the Landauer theory
of heat transport. The phonon-derived thermal conductance of semiconducting
CNTs exhibits a universal quantization in the low temperature limit,
independent of the radius or atomic geometry. The temperature dependence
follows a single curve given in terms of temperature scaled by the phonon
energy gap. The thermal conductance of metallic CNTs has an additional
contribution from electronic states, which also exhibits quantized behavior up
to room temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Peculiar Width Dependence of the Electronic Property of Carbon Nanoribbons
Nanoribbons (nanographite ribbons) are carbon systems analogous to carbon
nanotubes. We characterize a wide class of nanoribbons by a set of two integers
, and then define the width in terms of and . Electronic
properties are explored for this class of nanoribbons. Zigzag (armchair)
nanoribbons have similar electronic properties to armchair (zigzag) nanotubes.
The band gap structure of nanoribbons exhibits a valley structure with
stream-like sequences of metallic or almost metallic nanoribbons. These
sequences correspond to equi-width curves indexed by . We reveal a peculiar
dependence of the electronic property of nanoribbons on the width .Comment: 8 pages, 13 figure
Fermi energy dependence of first- and second-order Raman spectra in graphene: Kohn anomaly and quantum interference effect
Intensity of the first- and the second-order Raman spectra are calculated as
a function of the Fermi energy. We show that the Kohn anomaly effect, i.e.,
phonon frequency renormalization, in the first-order Raman spectra originates
from the phonon renormalization by the interband electron-hole excitation,
whereas in the second-order Raman spectra, a competition between the interband
and intraband electron-hole excitations takes place. By this calculation, we
confirm the presence of different dispersive behaviors of the Raman peak
frequency as a function of the Fermi energy for the first- and the second-order
Raman spectra, as observed in experiments. Moreover, the calculated results of
the Raman intensity sensitively depend on the Fermi energy for both the first-
and the second-order Raman spectra. These results thus also show the importance
of quantum interference effect phenomena.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Unraveling Orbital Correlations via Magnetic Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering
Although orbital degrees of freedom are a factor of fundamental importance in
strongly correlated transition metal compounds, orbital correlations and
dynamics remain very difficult to access, in particular by neutron scattering.
Via a direct calculation of scattering amplitudes we show that instead magnetic
resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) does reveal orbital correlations. In
contrast to neutron scattering, the intensity of the magnetic excitations in
RIXS depends very sensitively on both the symmetry of the orbitals that spins
occupy, and on photon polarizations. We show in detail how this effect allows
magnetic RIXS to distinguish between alternating orbital ordered and
ferro-orbital (or orbital liquid) states.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Supplemental material adde
Disorder-induced double resonant Raman process in graphene
An analytical study is presented of the double resonant Raman scattering
process in graphene, responsible for the D and D features in the
Raman spectra. This work yields analytical expressions for the D and
D integrated Raman intensities that explicitly show the dependencies
on laser energy, defect concentration, and electronic lifetime. Good agreement
is obtained between the analytical results and experimental measurements on
samples with increasing defect concentrations and at various laser excitation
energies. The use of Raman spectroscopy to identify the nature of defects is
discussed. Comparison between the models for the edge-induced and the
disorder-induced D band intensity suggests that edges or grain boundaries can
be distinguished from disorder by the different dependence of their Raman
intensity on laser excitation energy. Similarly, the type of disorder can
potentially be identified not only by the intensity ratio
, but also by its laser energy
dependence. Also discussed is a quantitative analysis of quantum interference
effects of the graphene wavefunctions, which determine the most important
phonon wavevectors and scattering processes responsible for the D and
D bands.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Quantum transport through single and multilayer icosahedral fullerenes
We use a tight-binding Hamiltonian and Green functions methods to calculate
the quantum transmission through single-wall fullerenes and bilayered and
trilayered onions of icosahedral symmetry attached to metallic leads. The
electronic structure of the onion-like fullerenes takes into account the
curvature and finite size of the fullerenes layers as well as the strength of
the intershell interactions depending on to the number of interacting atom
pairs belonging to adjacent shells. Misalignment of the symmetry axes of the
concentric icosahedral shells produces breaking of the level degeneracies of
the individual shells, giving rise some narrow quasi-continuum bands instead of
the localized discrete peaks of the individual fullerenes. As a result, the
transmission function for non symmetrical onions are rapidly varying functions
of the Fermi energy. Furthermore, we found that most of the features of the
transmission through the onions are due to the electronic structure of the
outer shell with additional Fano-like antiresonances arising from coupling with
or between the inner shells.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figur
Breit-Wigner-Fano lineshapes in Raman spectra of graphene
Excitation of electron-hole pairs in the vicinity of the Dirac cone by the
Coulomb interaction gives rise to an asymmetric Breit-Wigner-Fano lineshape in
the phonon Raman spectra in graphene. This asymmetric lineshape appears due to
the interference effect between the phonon spectra and the electron-hole pair
excitation spectra. The calculated Breit-Wigner-Fano asymmetric factor 1/qBWF
as a function of the Fermi energy shows a V-shaped curve with a minimum value
at the charge neutrality point and gives good agreement with the experimental
result.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Heat conduction of single-walled carbon nanotube isotope-superlattice structures: A molecular dynamics study
Heat conduction of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs)
isotope-superlattice is investigated by means of classical molecular dynamics
simulations. Superlattice structures were formed by alternately connecting
SWNTs with different masses. On varying the superlattice period, the critical
value with minimum effective thermal conductivity was identified, where
dominant physics switches from zone-folding effect to thermal boundary
resistance of lattice interface. The crossover mechanism is explained with the
energy density spectra where zone-folding effects can be clearly observed. The
results suggest that the critical superlattice period thickness depends on the
mean free path distribution of diffusive-ballistic phonons. The reduction of
the thermal conductivity with superlattice structures beats that of the
one-dimensional alloy structure, though the minimum thermal conductivity is
still slightly higher than the value obtained by two-dimensional random mixing
of isotopes.Comment: 7 Pages, 5 figures, accepted to Phys. Rev.
Endohedral Impurities in Carbon Nanotubes
A generalization of the Anderson model that includes pseudo-Jahn-Teller
impurity coupling is proposed to describe distortions of an endohedral impurity
in a carbon nanotube. Treating the distortion within mean-field theory,
spontaneous axial symmetry breaking is found when the vibronic coupling
strength g exceeds a critical value g. The effective potential in the
symmetry-broken state is found to have O(2) symmetry, in agreement with
numerical calculations. For metallic zigzag nanotubes endohedrally-doped with
transition metals in the dilute limit, the low-energy properties of the system
may display two-channel Kondo behavior; however, strong vibronic coupling is
seen to exponentially suppress the Kondo energy scale.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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