125 research outputs found
A many-body interatomic potential for ionic systems: application to MgO
An analytic representation of the short-range repulsion energy in ionic
systems is described that allows for the fact that ions may change their size
and shape depending on their environment. This function is extremely efficient
to evaluate relative to previous methods of modeling the same physical effects.
Using a well-defined parametrization procedure we have obtained parameter sets
for this energy function that reproduce closely the density functional theory
potential energy surface of bulk MgO. We show how excellent agreement can be
obtained with experimental measurements of phonon frequencies and temperature
and pressure dependences of the density by using this effective potential in
conjunction with ab initio parametrization.Comment: To appear in Journal of Chemical Physics (Oct 15th 2003
Spectroscopic fingerprints of a surface Mott-Hubbard insulator: the case of SiC(0001)
We discuss the spectroscopic fingerprints that a surface Mott-Hubbard
insulator should show at the intra-atomic level. The test case considered is
that of the Si-terminated SiC(0001) sqrt{3}xsqrt{3} surface, which is known
experimentally to be insulating. We argue that, due to the Mott-Hubbard
phenomenon, spin unpaired electrons in the Si adatom dangling bonds are
expected to give rise to a Si-2p core level spectrum with a characteristic
three-peaked structure, as seen experimentally. This structure results from the
joint effect of intra-atomic exchange, spatial anisotropy, and spin-orbit
coupling. Auger intensities are also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, ECOSS-18 conferenc
Operational Thermodynamics from Purity (extended abstract)
This is an extended abstract based on the preprint arXiv:1608.04459. We propose four information-theoretic axioms for the foundations of statistical mechanics in general physical theories. The axioms 'Causality, Purity Preservation, Pure Sharpness, and Purification' identify purity as a fundamental ingredient for every sensible theory of thermodynamics. Indeed, in physical theories satisfying these axioms, called sharp theories with purification, every mixed state can be modelled as the marginal of a pure entangled state, and every unsharp measurement can be modelled as a sharp measurement on a composite system. We show that these theories support a well-behaved notion of entropy and of Gibbs states, by which one can derive Landauer's principle. We show that in sharp theories with purification some bipartite states can have negative conditional entropy, and we construct an operational protocol exploiting this feature to overcome Landauer's principlepublished_or_final_versio
The mechanism for the 3 x 3 distortion of Sn/ge (111)
We show that two distinct ground states, one nonmagnetic,
metallic, and distorted, the other magnetic, semimetallic (or insulating) and
undistorted, compete in -phase adsorbates on semiconductor (111)
surfaces. In Sn/Ge(111), LSDA/GGA calculations indicate, in agreement with
experiment, that the distorted metallic ground state prevails. The reason for
stability of this state is analysed, and is traced to a sort of bond density
wave, specifically a modulation of the antibonding state filling between the
adatom and a Ge-Ge bond directly underneath
Disproportionation Phenomena on Free and Strained Sn/Ge(111) and Sn/Si(111) Surfaces
Distortions of the Sn/Ge(111) and Sn/Si(111) surfaces
are shown to reflect a disproportionation of an integer pseudocharge, ,
related to the surface band occupancy. A novel understanding of the
-1U (``1 up, 2 down'') and 2U (``2 up, 1 down'') distortions of
Sn/Ge(111) is obtained by a theoretical study of the phase diagram under
strain. Positive strain keeps the unstrained value Q=3 but removes distorsions.
Negative strain attracts pseudocharge from the valence band causing first a
-2U distortion (Q=4) on both Sn/Ge and Sn/Si, and eventually a
-3U (``all up'') state with Q=6. The possibility of a
fluctuating phase in unstrained Sn/Si(111) is discussed.Comment: Revtex, 5 pages, 3 figure
SiC(0001): a surface Mott-Hubbard insulator
We present ab-initio electronic structure calculations for the Si-terminated
SiC(0001) surface. While local density approximation
(LDA) calculations predict a metallic ground state with a half-filled narrow
band, Coulomb effects, included by the spin-polarized LDA+U method, result in a
magnetic (Mott-Hubbard) insulator with a gap of 1.5 eV, comparable with the
experimental value of 2.0 eV. The calculated value of the inter-site exchange
parameter, J=30K, leads to the prediction of a paramagnetic Mott state, except
at very low temperatures. The observed Si 2p surface core level doublet can
naturally be explained as an on-site exchange splitting.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 4 eps-figure
First Principles Calculations of Charge and Spin Density Waves of sqr3-Adsorbates on Semiconductors
We present ab-initio electronic structure results on the surface of sqr3
adsorbates. In particular, we address the issue of metal-insulator
instabilities, charge-density-waves (CDWs) or spin-density-waves (SDWs), driven
by partly filled surface states and their 2D Fermi surface, and/or by the onset
of magnetic instabilities. The focus is both on the newly discovered
commensurate CDW transitions in the Pb/Ge(111) and Sn/Ge(111) structures, and
on the puzzling semiconducting behavior of the Pb/Ge(111), K/Si(111):B and
SiC(0001) surfaces. In all cases, the main factor driving the instability
appears to be an extremely narrow surface state band. We have carried out so
far preliminary calculations for the Si/Si(111) surface, chosen as our model
system, within the gradient corrected local density (LDA+GC) and local spin
density (LSD+GC) approximations, with the aim of understanding the possible
interplay between 2D Fermi surface and electron correlations in the surface +
adsorbate system. Our spin- unrestricted results show that the sqr3
paramagnetic surface is unstable towards a commensurate SDW with periodicity
3x3 and magnetization 1/3.Comment: 9 pages, 4 Postscript figures, to be published in Surf. Sc
OPTIMAL PORTFOLIO ALLOCATION WITH CVAR: A ROBUSTAPPROACH
The paper discuss the sensitivity to the presence of outliers of the portfolio optimization procedure based on the expected shortfall as a measure of risk. A robust approach based on the forward search is then suggested which seems to give quite good results
Squeezing Oil into Water under Pressure: Inverting the Hydrophobic Effect
The molecular structure of dense homogeneous fluid water-methane mixtures has been determined for the first time using high-pressure neutron-scattering techniques at 1.7 and 2.2 GPa. A mixed state with a fully H-bonded water network is revealed. The hydration shell of the methane molecules is, however, revealed to be pressure-dependent with an increase in the water coordination between 1.7 and 2.2 GPa. In parallel, ab initio molecular dynamics simulations have been performed to provide insight into the microscopic mechanisms associated with the phenomenon of mixing. These calculations reproduce the observed phase change from phase separation to mixing with increasing pressure. The calculations also reproduce the experimentally observed structural properties. Unexpectedly, the simulations show mixing is accompanied by a subtle enhancement of the polarization of methane. Our results highlight the key role played by fine electronic effects on miscibility and the need to readjust our fundamental understanding of hydrophobicity to account for these
Design of a low band gap oxide ferroelectric: BiTiO
A strategy for obtaining low band gap oxide ferroelectrics based on charge
imbalance is described and illustrated by first principles studies of the
hypothetical compound BiTiO, which is an alternate stacking of
the ferroelectric BiTiO. We find that this compound is
ferroelectric, similar to BiTiO although with a reduced
polarization. Importantly, calculations of the electronic structure with the
recently developed functional of Tran and Blaha yield a much reduced band gap
of 1.83 eV for this material compared to BiTiO. Therefore,
BiTiO is predicted to be a low band gap ferroelectric material
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