205 research outputs found
Phonon Properties of Knbo3 and Ktao3 from First-Principles Calculations
The frequencies of transverse-optical phonons in KNbO and
KTaO are calculated in the frozen-phonon scheme making use of the
full-potential linearized muffin-tin orbital method. The calculated frequencies
in the cubic phase of KNbO and in the tetragonal ferroelectric phase are in
good agreement with experimental data. For KTaO, the effect of lattice
volume was found to be substantial on the frequency of the soft mode, but
rather small on the relative displacement patterns of atoms in all three modes
of the symmetry. The TO frequencies in KTaO are found to be of the
order of, but somehow higher than, the corresponding frequencies in cubic
KNbO.Comment: 8 pages + 1 LaTeX figure, Revtex 3.0, SISSA-CM-94-00
Correlated local distortions of the TlO layers in TlBaCuO: An x-ray absorption study
We have used the XAFS (x-ray-absorption fine structure) technique to
investigate the local structure about the Cu, Ba, and Tl atoms in orthorhombic
Tl-2201 with a superconducting transition temperature T=60 K. Our results
clearly show that the O(1), O(2), Cu, and Ba atoms are at their ideal sites as
given by the diffraction measurements, while the Tl and O(3) atoms are more
disordered than suggested by the average crystal structure. The Tl-Tl distance
at 3.5 \AA{ } between the TlO layers does not change, but the Tl-Tl distance at
3.9 \AA{ } within the TlO layer is not observed and the Tl-Ba and Ba-Tl peaks
are very broad. The shorter Tl-O(3) distance in the TlO layer is about 2.33
\AA, significantly shorter than the distance calculated with both the Tl and
O(3) atoms at their ideal sites ( 0 or ). A model based
on these results shows that the Tl atom is displaced along the
directions from its ideal site by about 0.11 \AA; the displacements of
neighboring Tl atoms are correlated. The O(3) atom is shifted from the $4e$
site by about 0.53 \AA{ } roughly along the directions. A comparison of
the Tl L-edge XAFS spectra from three samples, with T=60 K, 76 K,
and 89 K, shows that the O environment around the Tl atom is sensitive to T
while the Tl local displacement is insensitive to T and the structural
symmetry. These conclusions are compared with other experimental results and
the implications for charge transfer and superconductivity are discussed. This
paper has been submitted to Phys. Rev. B.Comment: 20 pages plus 14 ps figures, REVTEX 3.
Born Effective Charges of Barium Titanate: band by band decomposition and sensitivity to structural features
The Born effective charge tensors of Barium Titanate have been calculated for
each of its 4 phases. Large effective charges of Ti and O, also predicted by
shell model calculations and made plausible by a simplified model, reflect the
partial covalent character of the chemical bond. A band by band decomposition
confirms that orbital hybridization is not restricted to Ti and O atoms but
also involves Ba which appears more covalent than generally assumed. Our
calculations reveal a strong dependence of the effective charges on the atomic
positions contrasting with a relative insensitivity on isotropic volume
changes.Comment: 13 page
Polarization Dependence of Born Effective Charge and Dielectric Constant in KNbO
The Born effective charge Z^{*} and dielectric tensor \epsilon_{\infty} of
KNbO_3 are found to be very sensitive to the atomic geometry, changing by as
much as 27% between the paraelectric cubic and ferroelectric tetragonal and
rhombohedral phases. Subtracting the bare ionic contribution reveals changes of
the dynamic component of Z^{*} as large as 50%, for atomic displacements that
are typically only a few percent of the lattice constant. Z^{*},
\epsilon_{\infty} and all phonon frequencies at the Brillouin zone center were
calculated using the {\it ab initio} linearized augmented plane-wave linear
response method with respect to the reference cubic, experimental tetragonal,
and theoretically determined rhombohedral ground state structures. The ground
state rhombohedral structure of KNbO_3 was determined by minimizing the forces
on the relaxed atoms. By contrast with the cubic structure, all zone center
phonon modes of the rhombohedral structure are stable and their frequencies are
in good agreement with experiment. In the tetragonal phase, one of the soft
zone center modes in the cubic phase is stablized. In view of the small atomic
displacements involved in the ferroelectric transitions, it is evident that not
only the soft mode frequencies but also the Born effective charge and
dielectric constants are very sensitive to the atomic geometry.Comment: 26 pages, revtex, no figures; to appear in Phys. Rev. B15 (Oct.),
199
The physics of dynamical atomic charges: the case of ABO3 compounds
Based on recent first-principles computations in perovskite compounds,
especially BaTiO3, we examine the significance of the Born effective charge
concept and contrast it with other atomic charge definitions, either static
(Mulliken, Bader...) or dynamical (Callen, Szigeti...). It is shown that static
and dynamical charges are not driven by the same underlying parameters. A
unified treatment of dynamical charges in periodic solids and large clusters is
proposed. The origin of the difference between static and dynamical charges is
discussed in terms of local polarizability and delocalized transfers of charge:
local models succeed in reproducing anomalous effective charges thanks to large
atomic polarizabilities but, in ABO3 compounds, ab initio calculations favor
the physical picture based upon transfer of charges. Various results concerning
barium and strontium titanates are presented. The origin of anomalous Born
effective charges is discussed thanks to a band-by-band decomposition which
allows to identify the displacement of the Wannier center of separated bands
induced by an atomic displacement. The sensitivity of the Born effective
charges to microscopic and macroscopic strains is examined. Finally, we
estimate the spontaneous polarization in the four phases of barium titanate.Comment: 25 pages, 6 Figures, 10 Tables, LaTe
Transformation of Cs-IONSIV® into a ceramic wasteform by hot isostatic pressing
A simple method to directly convert Cs-exchanged IONSIV® IE-911 into a ceramic wasteform by hot isostatic pressing (1100 °C/190 MPa/2 hr) is presented. Two major Cs-containing phases, Cs2TiNb6O18 and Cs2ZrSi6O15, and a series of mixed oxides form. The microstructure and phase assemblage of the samples as a function of Cs content were examined using XRD, XRF, SEM and TEM/EDX. The chemical aqueous durability of the materials was investigated using the MCC-1 and PCT-B standard test methods. For HIPed Cs-IONSIV® samples, the MCC-1 normalised release rates of Cs were <1.57 × 10−1 g m−2 d−1 at 0–28 days, and <3.78 × 10−2 g m−2 d−1 for PCT-B at 7 days. The low rates are indicative of a safe long-term immobilisation matrix for Cs formed directly from spent IONSIV®. It was also demonstrated that the phase formation can be altered by adding Ti metal due to a controlled redox environment
Insights into Minor Group Rhinovirus Uncoating: The X-ray Structure of the HRV2 Empty Capsid
Upon attachment to their respective receptor, human rhinoviruses (HRVs) are internalized into the host cell via different pathways but undergo similar structural changes. This ultimately results in the delivery of the viral RNA into the cytoplasm for replication. To improve our understanding of the conformational modifications associated with the release of the viral genome, we have determined the X-ray structure at 3.0 Ã… resolution of the end-stage of HRV2 uncoating, the empty capsid. The structure shows important conformational changes in the capsid protomer. In particular, a hinge movement around the hydrophobic pocket of VP1 allows a coordinated shift of VP2 and VP3. This overall displacement forces a reorganization of the inter-protomer interfaces, resulting in a particle expansion and in the opening of new channels in the capsid core. These new breaches in the capsid, opening one at the base of the canyon and the second at the particle two-fold axes, might act as gates for the externalization of the VP1 N-terminus and the extrusion of the viral RNA, respectively. The structural comparison between native and empty HRV2 particles unveils a number of pH-sensitive amino acid residues, conserved in rhinoviruses, which participate in the structural rearrangements involved in the uncoating process
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