11,706 research outputs found

    van der Waals dispersion power laws for cleavage, exfoliation and stretching in multi-scale, layered systems

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    Layered and nanotubular systems that are metallic or graphitic are known to exhibit unusual dispersive van der Waals (vdW) power laws under some circumstances. In this letter we investigate the vdW power laws of bulk and finite layered systems and their interactions with other layered systems and atoms in the electromagnetically non-retarded case. The investigation reveals substantial difference between `cleavage' and `exfoliation' of graphite and metals where cleavage obeys a C2D2C_2 D^{-2} vdW power law while exfoliation obeys a C3log(D/D0)D3C_3 \log(D/D_0) D^{-3} law for graphitics and a C5/2D5/2C_{5/2} D^{-5/2} law for layered metals. This leads to questions of relevance in the interpretation of experimental results for these systems which have previously assumed more trival differences. Furthermore we gather further insight into the effect of scale on the vdW power laws of systems that simultaneously exhibit macroscopic and nanoscopic dimensions. We show that, for metallic and graphitic layered systems, the known "unusual" power laws can be reduced to standard or near standard power laws when the effective scale of one or more dimension is changed. This allows better identification of the systems for which the commonly employed `sum of C6D6C_6 D^{-6}' type vdW methods might be valid such as layered bulk to layered bulk and layered bulk to atom

    A theoretical and semiemprical correction to the long-range dispersion power law of stretched graphite

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    In recent years intercalated and pillared graphitic systems have come under increasing scrutiny because of their potential for modern energy technologies. While traditional \emph{ab initio} methods such as the LDA give accurate geometries for graphite they are poorer at predicting physicial properties such as cohesive energies and elastic constants perpendicular to the layers because of the strong dependence on long-range dispersion forces. `Stretching' the layers via pillars or intercalation further highlights these weaknesses. We use the ideas developed by [J. F. Dobson et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 96}, 073201 (2006)] as a starting point to show that the asymptotic C3D3C_3 D^{-3} dependence of the cohesive energy on layer spacing DD in bigraphene is universal to all graphitic systems with evenly spaced layers. At spacings appropriate to intercalates, this differs from and begins to dominate the C4D4C_4 D^{-4} power law for dispersion that has been widely used previously. The corrected power law (and a calculated C3C_3 coefficient) is then unsuccesfully employed in the semiempirical approach of [M. Hasegawa and K. Nishidate, Phys. Rev. B {\bf 70}, 205431 (2004)] (HN). A modified, physicially motivated semiempirical method including some C4D4C_4 D^{-4} effects allows the HN method to be used successfully and gives an absolute increase of about 232-3% to the predicted cohesive energy, while still maintaining the correct C3D3C_3 D^{-3} asymptotics

    Nonuniversality of the dispersion interaction: analytic benchmarks for van der Waals energy functionals

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    We highlight the non-universality of the asymptotic behavior of dispersion forces, such that a sum of inverse sixth power contributions is often inadequate. We analytically evaluate the cross-correlation energy Ec between two pi-conjugated layers separated by a large distance D within the electromagnetically non-retarded Random Phase Approximation, via a tight-binding model. For two perfect semimetallic graphene sheets at T=0K we find Ec = C D^{-3}, in contrast to the "insulating" D^{-4} dependence predicted by currently accepted approximations. We also treat the case where one graphene layer is replaced by a thin metal, a model relevant to the exfoliation of graphite. Our general considerations also apply to nanotubes, nanowires and layered metals.Comment: 4 pages, 0 fig

    Enhanced dispersion interaction between quasi-one dimensional conducting collinear structures

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    Recent investigations have highlighted the failure of a sum of R6R^{-6} terms to represent the dispersion interaction in parallel metallic, anisotropic, linear or planar nanostructures [J. F. Dobson, A. White, and A. Rubio, Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 073201 (2006) and references therein]. By applying a simple coupled plasmon approach and using electron hydrodynamics, we numerically evaluate the dispersion (non-contact van der Waals) interaction between two conducting wires in a collinear pointing configuration. This case is compared to that of two insulating wires in an identical geometry, where the dispersion interaction is modelled both within a pairwise summation framework, and by adding a pinning potential to our theory leading to a standard oscillator-type model of insulating dielectric behavior. Our results provide a further example of enhanced dispersion interaction between two conducting nanosystems compared to the case of two insulating ones. Unlike our previous work, this calculation explores a region of relatively close coupling where, although the electronic clouds do not overlap, we are still far from the asymptotic region where a single power law describes the dispersion energy. We find that strong differences in dispersion attraction between metallic and semiconducting / insulating cases persist into this non-asymptotic region. While our theory will need to be supplemented with additional short-ranged terms when the electronic clouds overlap, it does not suffer from the short-distance divergence exhibited by purely asymptotic theories, and gives a natural saturation of the dispersion energy as the wires come into contact.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Added new extended numerical calculations, new figures, extra references and heavily revised tex

    A New Reading of the Hippolytus

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    Self-Templated Nucleation in Peptide and Protein aggregation

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    Peptides and proteins exhibit a common tendency to assemble into highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, whose formation proceeds in a nucleation-dependent manner that is often preceded by the formation of disordered oligomeric assemblies. This process has received much attention because disordered oligomeric aggregates have been associated with neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases. Here we describe a self-templated nucleation mechanism that determines the transition between the initial condensation of polypeptide chains into disordered assemblies and their reordering into fibrillar structures. The results that we present show that at the molecular level this transition is due to the ability of polypeptide chains to reorder within oligomers into fibrillar assemblies whose surfaces act as templates that stabilise the disordered assemblies.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    High-Level Correlated Approach to the Jellium Surface Energy, Without Uniform-Electron-Gas Input

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    We resolve the long-standing controversy over the surface energy of simple metals: Density functional methods that require uniform-electron-gas input agree with each other at many levels of sophistication, but not with high-level correlated calculations like Fermi Hypernetted Chain and Diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) that predict the uniform-gas correlation energy. Here we apply a very high-level correlated approach, the inhomogeneous Singwi-Tosi-Land-Sj\"olander (ISTLS) method, and find that the density functionals are indeed reliable (because the surface energy is "bulk-like"). ISTLS values are close to recently-revised DMC values. Our work also vindicates the previously-disputed use of uniform-gas-based nonlocal kernels in time-dependent density functional theory.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Beyond the Random Phase Approximation for the Electron Correlation Energy: The Importance of Single Excitations

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    The random phase approximation (RPA) for the electron correlation energy, combined with the exact-exchange energy, represents the state-of-the-art exchange-correlation functional within density-functional theory (DFT). However, the standard RPA practice -- evaluating both the exact-exchange and the RPA correlation energy using local or semilocal Kohn-Sham (KS) orbitals -- leads to a systematic underbinding of molecules and solids. Here we demonstrate that this behavior is largely corrected by adding a "single excitation" (SE) contribution, so far not included in the standard RPA scheme. A similar improvement can also be achieved by replacing the non-self-consistent exact-exchange total energy by the corresponding self-consistent Hartree-Fock total energy, while retaining the RPA correlation energy evaluated using Kohn-Sham orbitals. Both schemes achieve chemical accuracy for a standard benchmark set of non-covalent intermolecular interactions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, and an additional supplementary materia

    Many-body approach to infinite non-periodic systems: application to the surface of semi-infinite jellium

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    A method to implement the many-body Green function formalism in the GW approximation for infinite non periodic systems is presented. It is suitable to treat systems of known ``asymptotic'' properties which enter as boundary conditions, while the effects of the lower symmetry are restricted to regions of finite volume. For example, it can be applied to surfaces or localized impurities. We illustrate the method with a study of the surface of semi-infinite jellium. We report the dielectric function, the effective potential and the electronic self-energy discussing the effects produced by the screening and by the charge density profile near the surface.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure

    Correlation potentials for molecular bond dissociation within the self-consistent random phase approximation

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    Self-consistent correlation potentials for H2_2 and LiH for various inter-atomic separations are obtained within the random phase approximation (RPA) of density functional theory. The RPA correlation potential shows a peak at the bond midpoint, which is an exact feature of the true correlation potential, but lacks another exact feature: the step important to preserve integer charge on the atomic fragments in the dissociation limit. An analysis of the RPA energy functional in terms of fractional charge is given which confirms these observations. We find that the RPA misses the derivative discontinuity at odd integer particle numbers but explicitly eliminates the fractional spin error in the exact-exchange functional. The latter finding explains the accurate total energy in the dissociation limit.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
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