1,077 research outputs found
Charge pumping in monolayer graphene driven by a series of time-periodic potentials
We applied the Floquet scattering-matrix formalism to studying the electronic
transport properties in a mesoscopic Dirac system. Using the method, we
investigate theoretically quantum pumping driven by a series of time-periodic
potentials in graphene monolayer both in the adiabatic and non-adiabatic
regimes. Our numerical results demonstrate that adding harmonic modulated
potentials can break the time reversal symmetry when no voltage bias is applied
to the graphene monolayer. Thus, when the system is pumped with proper dynamic
parameters, these scatterers can produce a nonzero dc pumped current. We also
find that the transmission is anisotropic as the incident angle is changed.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Aharonov-Bohm effect in monolayer black phosphorus (phosphorene) nanorings
This work presents theoretical demonstration of Aharonov-Bohm (AB) effect in
monolayer phosphorene nanorings (PNR). Atomistic quantum transport simulations
of PNR are employed to investigate the impact of multiple modulation sources on
the sample conductance. In presence of a perpendicular magnetic field, we find
that the conductance of both armchair and zigzag PNR oscillate periodically in
a low-energy window as a manifestation of the AB effect. Our numerical results
have revealed a giant magnetoresistance (MR) in zigzag PNR (with a maximum
magnitude approaching two thousand percent). It is attributed to the AB effect
induced destructive interference phase in a wide energy range below the bottom
of the second subband. We also demonstrate that PNR conductance is highly
anisotropic, offering an additional way to modulate MR. The giant MR in PNR is
maintained at room temperature in the presence of thermal broadening effect.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Holographic Metal-Insulator Transition in Higher Derivative Gravity
We introduce a Weyl term into the Einstein-Maxwell-Axion theory in four
dimensional spacetime. Up to the first order of the Weyl coupling parameter
, we construct charged black brane solutions without translational
invariance in a perturbative manner. Among all the holographic frameworks
involving higher derivative gravity, we are the first to obtain metal-insulator
transitions (MIT) when varying the system parameters at zero temperature.
Furthermore, we study the holographic entanglement entropy (HEE) of strip
geometry in this model and find that the second order derivative of HEE with
respect to the axion parameter exhibits maximization behavior near quantum
critical points (QCPs) of MIT. It testifies the conjecture in 1502.03661 and
1604.04857 that HEE itself or its derivatives can be used to diagnose quantum
phase transition (QPT).Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures; typo corrected, added 3 references; minor
revisio
A Framework of Dynamic Data Driven Digital Twin for Complex Engineering Products: the Example of Aircraft Engine Health Management
Digital twin is a vital enabling technology for smart manufacturing in the era of Industry 4.0. Digital twin effectively replicates its physical asset enabling easy visualization, smart decision-making and cognitive capability in the system. In this paper, a framework of dynamic data driven digital twin for complex engineering products was proposed. To illustrate the proposed framework, an example of health management on aircraft engines was studied. This framework models the digital twin by extracting information from the various sensors and Industry Internet of Things (IIoT) monitoring the remaining useful life (RUL) of an engine in both cyber and physical domains. Then, with sensor measurements selected from linear degradation models, a long short-term memory (LSTM) neural network is proposed to dynamically update the digital twin, which can estimate the most up-to-date RUL of the physical aircraft engine. Through comparison with other machine learning algorithms, including similarity based linear regression and feed forward neural network, on RUL modelling, this LSTM based dynamical data driven digital twin provides a promising tool to accurately replicate the health status of aircraft engines. This digital twin based RUL technique can also be extended for health management and remote operation of manufacturing systems
Valley-dependent Brewster angles and Goos-Hanchen effect in strained graphene
We demonstrate theoretically how local strains in graphene can be tailored to
generate a valley polarized current. By suitable engineering of local strain
profiles, we find that electrons in opposite valleys (K or K') show different
Brewster-like angles and Goos-H\"anchen shifts, exhibiting a close analogy with
light propagating behavior. In a strain-induced waveguide, electrons in K and
K' valleys have different group velocities, which can be used to construct a
valley filter in graphene without the need for any external fields.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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