Ground-state and Thermodynamic Properties of an S = 1 Kitaev Model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koga, Akihisa; Tomishige, Hiroyuki; Nasu, Joji
2018-06-01
We study the ground-state and thermodynamic properties of an S = 1 Kitaev model. We first clarify the existence of global parity symmetry in addition to the local symmetry on each plaquette, which enables us to perform large-scale calculations on up to 24 sites. It is found that the ground state should be singlet, and its energy is estimated as E/N ˜ -0.65J, where J is the Kitaev exchange coupling. We find that the lowest excited state belongs to the same subspace as the ground state, and that the gap decreases monotonically with increasing system size, which suggests that the ground state of the S = 1 Kitaev model is gapless. Using the thermal pure quantum states, we clarify the finite temperature properties characteristic of the Kitaev models with S ≤ 2.
How Single-site Mutation Affects HP Lattice Proteins
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shi, Guangjie; Landau, David P.; Vogel, Thomas; Wüst, Thomas; Li, Ying Wai
2014-03-01
We developed a heuristic method based on Wang-Landauand multicanonical sampling for determining the ground-state degeneracy of HP lattice proteins . Our algorithm allowed the most precise estimations of the (sometimes substantial) ground-state degeneracies of some widely studied HP sequences. We investigated the effects of single-site mutation on specific long HP lattice proteins comprehensively, including structural changes in ground-states, changes of ground-state degeneracy and thermodynamic properties of the systems. Both extremely sensitive and insensitive cases have been observed; consequently, properties such as specific heat, tortuosities etc. may be either largely unaffected or may change significantly due to mutation. More interestingly, mutation can even induce a lower ground-state energy in a few cases. Supported by NSF.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Danilowicz, R.
1973-01-01
Ground-state properties of quantum crystals have received considerable attention from both theorists and experimentalists. The theoretical results have varied widely with the Monte Carlo calculations being the most successful. The molecular field approximation yields ground-state properties which agree closely with the Monte Carlo results. This approach evaluates the dynamical behavior of each pair of molecules in the molecular field of the other N-2 molecules. In addition to predicting ground-state properties that agree well with experiment, this approach yields data on the relative importance of interactions of different nearest neighbor pairs.
Infinite projected entangled-pair state algorithm for ruby and triangle-honeycomb lattices
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jahromi, Saeed S.; Orús, Román; Kargarian, Mehdi; Langari, Abdollah
2018-03-01
The infinite projected entangled-pair state (iPEPS) algorithm is one of the most efficient techniques for studying the ground-state properties of two-dimensional quantum lattice Hamiltonians in the thermodynamic limit. Here, we show how the algorithm can be adapted to explore nearest-neighbor local Hamiltonians on the ruby and triangle-honeycomb lattices, using the corner transfer matrix (CTM) renormalization group for 2D tensor network contraction. Additionally, we show how the CTM method can be used to calculate the ground-state fidelity per lattice site and the boundary density operator and entanglement entropy (EE) on an infinite cylinder. As a benchmark, we apply the iPEPS method to the ruby model with anisotropic interactions and explore the ground-state properties of the system. We further extract the phase diagram of the model in different regimes of the couplings by measuring two-point correlators, ground-state fidelity, and EE on an infinite cylinder. Our phase diagram is in agreement with previous studies of the model by exact diagonalization.
Ziegler, Tom; Krykunov, Mykhaylo; Autschbach, Jochen
2014-09-09
The random phase approximation (RPA) equation of adiabatic time dependent density functional ground state response theory (ATDDFT) has been used extensively in studies of excited states. It extracts information about excited states from frequency dependent ground state response properties and avoids, thus, in an elegant way, direct Kohn-Sham calculations on excited states in accordance with the status of DFT as a ground state theory. Thus, excitation energies can be found as resonance poles of frequency dependent ground state polarizability from the eigenvalues of the RPA equation. ATDDFT is approximate in that it makes use of a frequency independent energy kernel derived from the ground state functional. It is shown in this study that one can derive the RPA equation of ATDDFT from a purely variational approach in which stationary states above the ground state are located using our constricted variational DFT (CV-DFT) method and the ground state functional. Thus, locating stationary states above the ground state due to one-electron excitations with a ground state functional is completely equivalent to solving the RPA equation of TDDFT employing the same functional. The present study is an extension of a previous work in which we demonstrated the equivalence between ATDDFT and CV-DFT within the Tamm-Dancoff approximation.
Rayleigh approximation to ground state of the Bose and Coulomb glasses
Ryan, S. D.; Mityushev, V.; Vinokur, V. M.; Berlyand, L.
2015-01-01
Glasses are rigid systems in which competing interactions prevent simultaneous minimization of local energies. This leads to frustration and highly degenerate ground states the nature and properties of which are still far from being thoroughly understood. We report an analytical approach based on the method of functional equations that allows us to construct the Rayleigh approximation to the ground state of a two-dimensional (2D) random Coulomb system with logarithmic interactions. We realize a model for 2D Coulomb glass as a cylindrical type II superconductor containing randomly located columnar defects (CD) which trap superconducting vortices induced by applied magnetic field. Our findings break ground for analytical studies of glassy systems, marking an important step towards understanding their properties. PMID:25592417
Comparative study of ferromagnetic and non-ferromagnetic modifications of TDAE-C60
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Arčon, D.; Blinc, R.; Cevc, P.; Omerzu, A.; Mihailovič, D.
1999-09-01
The magnetic properties of two different modifications of TDAE-C60 have been studied with the ESR and 1H NMR. Well-annealed single crystals display a transition to a ferromagnetically ordered state as confirmed by the observation of the ferromagnetic resonance. On the other hand the magnetic ground state of the non-ferromagnetic modification is consistent with the singlet ground state. The gap between the singlet and low laying triplet excited state opens below 11 K and reaches about 15 K at 5 K. A possible structural differences and their impact on the observed magnetic properties of the two modifications are discussed.
Theoretical study of actinide monocarbides (ThC, UC, PuC, and AmC)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pogány, Peter; Kovács, Attila; Visscher, Lucas; Konings, Rudy J. M.
2016-12-01
A study of four representative actinide monocarbides, ThC, UC, PuC, and AmC, has been performed with relativistic quantum chemical calculations. The two applied methods were multireference complete active space second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) including the Douglas-Kroll-Hess Hamiltonian with all-electron basis sets and density functional theory with the B3LYP exchange-correlation functional in conjunction with relativistic pseudopotentials. Beside the ground electronic states, the excited states up to 17 000 cm-1 have been determined. The molecular properties explored included the ground-state geometries, bonding properties, and the electronic absorption spectra. According to the occupation of the bonding orbitals, the calculated electronic states were classified into three groups, each leading to a characteristic bond distance range for the equilibrium geometry. The ground states of ThC, UC, and PuC have two doubly occupied π orbitals resulting in short bond distances between 1.8 and 2.0 Å, whereas the ground state of AmC has significant occupation of the antibonding orbitals, causing a bond distance of 2.15 Å.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Salter, Latasha M.; Chaban, Galina M.; Kwak, Dochan (Technical Monitor)
2002-01-01
Geometrical structures and energetic properties for different tautomers of adenine are calculated in this study, using multi-configurational wave functions. Both the ground and the lowest singlet excited state potential energy surfaces are studied. Four tautomeric forms are considered, and their energetic order is found to be different on the ground and the excited state potential energy surfaces. Minimum energy reaction paths are obtained for hydrogen atom transfer (tautomerization) reactions in the ground and the lowest excited electronic states. It is found that the barrier heights and the shapes of the reaction paths are different for the ground and the excited electronic states, suggesting that the probability of such tautomerization reaction is higher on the excited state potential energy surface. This tautomerization process should become possible in the presence of water or other polar solvent molecules and should play an important role in the photochemistry of adenine.
Rayleigh approximation to ground state of the Bose and Coulomb glasses
Ryan, S. D.; Mityushev, V.; Vinokur, V. M.; ...
2015-01-16
Glasses are rigid systems in which competing interactions prevent simultaneous minimization of local energies. This leads to frustration and highly degenerate ground states the nature and properties of which are still far from being thoroughly understood. We report an analytical approach based on the method of functional equations that allows us to construct the Rayleigh approximation to the ground state of a two-dimensional (2D) random Coulomb system with logarithmic interactions. We realize a model for 2D Coulomb glass as a cylindrical type II superconductor containing randomly located columnar defects (CD) which trap superconducting vortices induced by applied magnetic field. Ourmore » findings break ground for analytical studies of glassy systems, marking an important step towards understanding their properties.« less
Two-nucleon emitters within a pseudostate method: The case of 6Be and 16Be
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Casal, J.
2018-03-01
Background: Since the first experimental observation, two-nucleon radioactivity has gained renewed attention since the early 2000s. The 6Be system is the lightest two-proton ground-state emitter, while 16Be was recently proposed to be the first two-neutron ground-state emitter ever observed. A proper understanding of their properties and decay modes requires a reasonable description of the three-body continuum. Purpose: Study the ground-state properties of 6Be and 16Be within a general three-body model and investigate their nucleon-nucleon correlations in the continuum. Method: The pseudostate (PS) method in hyperspherical coordinates, using the analytical transformed harmonic oscillator (THO) basis for three-body systems, is used to construct the 6Be and 16Be ground-state wave functions. These resonances are approximated as a stable PS around the known two-nucleon separation energy. Effective core-N potentials, constrained by the available experimental information on the binary subsystems 5Li and 15Be, are employed in the calculations. Results: The ground state of 16Be is found to present a strong dineutron configuration, with the valence neutrons occupying mostly an l =2 state relative to the core. The results are consistent with previous R -matrix calculations for the actual continuum. The case of 6Be shows a clear symmetry with respect to its mirror partner, the two-neutron halo 6He: The diproton configuration is dominant, and the valence protons occupy an l =1 orbit. Conclusions: The PS method is found to be a suitable tool in describing the properties of unbound core+N +N ground states. For both 16Be and 6Be, the results are consistent with previous theoretical studies and confirm the dominant dinucleon configuration. This favors the picture of a correlated two-nucleon emission.
Classification and properties of quantum spin liquids on the hyperhoneycomb lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Huang, Biao; Choi, Wonjune; Kim, Yong Baek; Lu, Yuan-Ming
2018-05-01
The family of "Kitaev materials" provides an ideal platform to study quantum spin liquids and their neighboring magnetic orders. Motivated by the possibility of a quantum spin liquid ground state in pressurized hyperhoneycomb iridate β -Li2IrO3 , we systematically classify and study symmetric quantum spin liquids on the hyperhoneycomb lattice, using the Abrikosov-fermion representation. Among the 176 symmetric U (1 ) spin liquids (and 160 Z2 spin liquids), we identify eight "root" U (1 ) spin liquids in proximity to the ground state of the solvable Kitave model on the hyperhonecyomb lattice. These eight states are promising candidates for possible U (1 ) spin liquid ground states in pressurized β -Li2IrO3 . We further discuss physical properties of these eight U (1 ) spin liquid candidates, and show that they all support nodal-line-shaped spinon Fermi surfaces.
Roy, Amritendu; Mukherjee, Somdutta; Sarkar, Surajit; Auluck, Sushil; Prasad, Rajendra; Gupta, Rajeev; Garg, Ashish
2012-10-31
We present a combined experimental-theoretical study demonstrating the role of site disorder, off-stoichiometry and strain on the optical properties of magnetoelectric gallium ferrite. Optical properties (bandgap, refractive indices and dielectric constants) were experimentally obtained by performing ellipsometric studies over the energy range 0.8-4.2 eV on pulsed laser deposited epitaxial thin films of stoichiometric gallium ferrite with b-axis orientation and the data were compared with theoretical results. Calculations on the ground state structure show that the optical activity in GaFeO(3) arises primarily from O 2p-Fe 3d transitions. Further, inclusion of site disorder and epitaxial strain in the ground state structure significantly improves the agreement between the theory and the room temperature experimental data substantiating the presence of site disorder in the experimentally derived strained GaFeO(3) films at room temperature. We attribute the modification of the ground state optical behavior upon inclusion of site disorder to the corresponding changes in the electronic band structure, especially in Fe 3d states leading to a lowered bandgap of the material.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Borkowski, M.; Ciurylo, R.; Julienne, P. S.
2010-10-29
We study theoretically the properties of photoassociation spectra near the {sup 1}S{sub 0}-{sup 3}P{sub 1} inter-combination line of bosonic ytterbium. We construct a mass scaled model of the excited state interaction potential that well describes bound state energies obtained in a previous photoassociation experiment. We then use it to calculate theoretical photoassociation spectra in a range of ultracold temperatures using semianalytical theory developed by Bohn and Julienne.Photoassociation spectra not only give us the energies of excited bound states, but also provide information about the behavior of the ground state wavefunction. In fact, it can be shown that within the so-calledmore » reflection approximation the line intensity is proportional to the ground state wavefunction at the transition's Condon point. We show that in the case of ytterbium, the rotational structure of the photoassociation spectra depends heavily on the behavior of the ground-state wavefunction. The change of the scattering length from one isotope to another and the resulting occurence of shape resonances in higher partial waves determines the appearance and disapperance of rotational components, especially in the deeper lying states, whose respective Condon points lie near the ground state centrifugal barrier. Thus, photoassociation spectra differ qualitatively between isotopes.« less
Ground-state phase diagram in the Kugel-Khomskii model with finite spin-orbit interactions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koga, Akihisa; Nakauchi, Shiryu; Nasu, Joji
2018-05-01
We study ground-state properties in the Kugel-Khomskii model on the two-dimensional honeycomb lattice. Using the cluster mean-field approximations, we deal with the exchange and spin-orbit couplings on an equal footing. We then discuss the stability of the ferromagnetically ordered states against the nonmagnetic state, which is adiabatically connected to the quantum spin liquid state realized in a strong spin-orbit coupling limit.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Luque-Ceballos, Jonathan C.; Posada-Borbón, Alvaro; Herrera-Urbina, Ronaldo; Aceves, R.; Juárez-Sánchez, J. Octavio; Posada-Amarillas, Alvaro
2018-03-01
Spectroscopic properties of gas-phase copper sulfide clusters (CuS)n (n = 2-6) are calculated using Density Functional Theory (DFT) and time-dependent (TD) DFT approaches. The energy landscape of the potential energy surface is explored through a basin-hopping DFT methodology. Ground-state and low-lying isomer structures are obtained. The global search was performed at the B3PW91/SDD level of theory. Normal modes are calculated to validate the existence of optimal cluster structures. Energetic properties are obtained for the ground-state and isomer clusters and their relative energies are evaluated for probing isomerization. This is a few tenths of an eV, except for (CuS)2 cluster, which presents energy differences of ∼1 eV. Notable differences in the infrared spectra exist between the ground-state and first isomer structures, even for the (CuS)5 cluster, which has in both configurations a core copper pyramid. TDDFT provides the simulated absorption spectrum, presenting a theoretical description of optical absorption bands in terms of electronic excitations in the UV and visible regions. Results exhibit a significant dependence of the calculated UV/vis spectra on clusters size and shape regarding the ground state structures. Optical absorption is strong in the UV region, and weak or forbidden in the visible region of the spectrum.
Structure of the exotic 9He nucleus from the no-core shell model with continuum
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vorabbi, Matteo; Calci, Angelo; Navrátil, Petr; Kruse, Michael K. G.; Quaglioni, Sofia; Hupin, Guillaume
2018-03-01
Background: The exotic 9He nucleus, which presents one of the most extreme neutron-to-proton ratios, belongs to the N =7 isotonic chain famous for the phenomenon of ground-state parity inversion with decreasing number of protons. Consequently, it would be expected to have an unnatural (positive) parity ground state similar to 11Be and 10Li. Despite many experimental and theoretical investigations, its structure remains uncertain. Apart from the fact that it is unbound, other properties including the spin and parity of its ground state, and the very existence of additional low-lying resonances are still a matter of debate. Purpose: In this work, we study the properties of 9He by analyzing the n +8He continuum in the context of the ab initio no-core shell model with continuum (NCSMC) formalism with chiral nucleon-nucleon interactions as the only input. Methods: The NCSMC is a state-of-the-art approach for the ab initio description of light nuclei. With its capability to predict properties of bound states, resonances, and scattering states in a unified framework, the method is particularly well suited for the study of unbound nuclei such as 9He. Results: Our analysis produces an unbound 9He nucleus. Two resonant states are found at the energies of ˜1 and ˜3.5 MeV, respectively, above the n +8He breakup threshold. The first state has a spin-parity assignment of Jπ=1/2 - and can be associated with the ground state of 9He, while the second, broader state has a spin parity of 3/2 -. No resonance is found in the 1/2 + channel, only a very weak attraction. Conclusions: We find that the 9He ground-state resonance has a negative parity and thus breaks the parity-inversion mechanism found in the 11Be and 10Li nuclei of the same N =7 isotonic chain.
Exact ground-state correlation functions of an atomic-molecular Bose–Einstein condensate model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Links, Jon; Shen, Yibing
2018-05-01
We study the ground-state properties of an atomic-molecular Bose–Einstein condensate model through an exact Bethe Ansatz solution. For a certain range of parameter choices, we prove that the ground-state Bethe roots lie on the positive real-axis. We then use a continuum limit approach to obtain a singular integral equation characterising the distribution of these Bethe roots. Solving this equation leads to an analytic expression for the ground-state energy. The form of the expression is consistent with the existence of a line of quantum phase transitions, which has been identified in earlier studies. This line demarcates a molecular phase from a mixed phase. Certain correlation functions, which characterise these phases, are then obtained through the Hellmann–Feynman theorem.
Effect of single-site mutations on hydrophobic-polar lattice proteins
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shi, Guangjie; Vogel, Thomas; Wüst, Thomas; Li, Ying Wai; Landau, David P.
2014-09-01
We developed a heuristic method for determining the ground-state degeneracy of hydrophobic-polar (HP) lattice proteins, based on Wang-Landau and multicanonical sampling. It is applied during comprehensive studies of single-site mutations in specific HP proteins with different sequences. The effects in which we are interested include structural changes in ground states, changes of ground-state energy, degeneracy, and thermodynamic properties of the system. With respect to mutations, both extremely sensitive and insensitive positions in the HP sequence have been found. That is, ground-state energies and degeneracies, as well as other thermodynamic and structural quantities, may be either largely unaffected or may change significantly due to mutation.
Ground state sign-changing solutions for fractional Kirchhoff equations in bounded domains
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Luo, Huxiao; Tang, Xianhua; Gao, Zu
2018-03-01
We study the existence of ground state sign-changing solutions for the fractional Kirchhoff problem. Under mild assumptions on the nonlinearity, by using some new analytical skills and the non-Nehari manifold method, we prove that the fractional Kirchhoff problem possesses a ground state sign-changing solution ub. Moreover, we show that the energy of ub is strictly larger than twice that of the ground state solutions of Nehari-type. Finally, we establish the convergence property of ub as the parameter b ↘ 0. Our results generalize some results obtained by Shuai [J. Differ. Equations 259, 1256 (2015)] and Tang and Cheng [J. Differ. Equations 261, 2384 (2016)].
Structure-property correlation study through sum-over-state approach
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nandi, P. K.; Hatua, K.; Bansh, A. K.; Panja, N.; Ghanty, T. K.
2015-01-01
The use of Thomas Kuhn (TK) sum rule in the expanded sum-over-state (SOS) expression of hyperpolarizabilities leads to various relationships between different order of polarizabilities and ground state dipole moment etc.
Half-metallic ferromagnetism in Sr3Ru2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rivero, Pablo; Meunier, Vincent; Shelton, William
2017-05-01
The bilayered member of the Ruddesden-Popper family of ruthenates, Sr3Ru2O7 , has received increasing attention due to its interesting properties and phases. By using first principle calculations we find that the ground state is characterized by a ferromagnetic (FM) half-metallic state. This state strongly competes with an antiferromagnetic metallic phase, which indicates the possible presence of a particular state characterized by the existence of different magnetic domains. To drive the system towards a phase transition we studied the electronic and magnetic properties as a function of RuO6 octahedra rotations and found that the magnetic phase does not couple with the rotation angle. Our results provide accurate electronic, structure, and magnetic ground-state properties of Sr3Ru2O7 and stimulate the investigation of other types of octahedra rotations and distortions in the search of phase transitions.
Exotic Structure of Carbon Isotopes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Suzuki, Toshio; Sagawa, Hiroyuki; Hagino, Kouichi
2003-12-01
Ground state properties of C isotopes, deformation and elecromagnetic moments, as well as electric dipole transition strength are investigated. We first study the ground state properties of C isotopes using a deformed Hartree-Fock (HF) + BCS model with Skyrme interactions. Isotope dependence of the deformation properties is investigated. Shallow deformation minima are found in several neutron-rich C isotopes. It is also shown that the deformation minima appear in both the oblate and the prolate sides in 17C and 19C having almost the same binding energies. Next, we carry out shell model calculations to study electromagnetic moments and electric dipole transitions of C isotopes. We point out the clear configuration dependence of the quadrupole and magnetic moments in the odd C isotopes, which will be useful to find out the deformation and spin-parities of the ground states of these nuclei. Electric dipole states of C isotopes are studied focusing on the interplay between low energy Pigmy strength and giant dipole resonances. Low peak energies, two-peak structure and large widths of the giant resonances show deformation effects. Calculated transition strength below dipole giant resonance in heavier C isotopes than 15C is found to exhaust 12 ~ 15% of the Thomas-Reiche-Kuhn sum rule value and 50 ~ 80% of the cluster sum rule value.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vusovich, O. V.; Tchaikovskaya, O. N.; Sokolova, I. V.; Vasil'eva, N. Yu.
2014-05-01
Methods of electronic spectroscopy and quantum chemistry are used to compare protolytic vanillin and isovanillin species. Three protolytic species: anion, cation, and neutral are distinguished in the ground state of the examined molecules. Vanillin and isovanillin in the ground state in water possess identical spectral characteristics: line positions and intensities in the absorption spectra coincide. Minima of the electrostatic potential demonstrate that the deepest isomer minimum is observed on the carbonyl oxygen atom. However, investigations of the fluorescence spectra show that the radiative properties of isomers differ. An analysis of results of quantum-chemical calculations demonstrate that the long-wavelength ππ* transition in the vanillin absorption spectra is formed due to electron charge transfer from the phenol part of the molecule to oxygen atoms of the methoxy and carbonyl groups, and in the isovanillin absorption spectra, it is formed only on the oxygen atom of the methoxy group. The presence of hydroxyl and carbonyl groups in the structure of the examined molecules leads to the fact that isovanillin in the ground S0 state, the same as vanillin, possesses acidic properties, whereas in the excited S1 state, they possess basic properties. A comparison of the рKа values of aqueous solutions demonstrates that vanillin possesses stronger acidic and basic properties in comparison with isovanillin.
Structure, strain, and control of ground state property in LaTiO3/LaAlO3 superlattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, Alex Taekyung; Han, Myung Joon
2014-03-01
We examined the ground state property of LaTiO3/LaAlO3 superlattice through density functional band calculations. Total energy calculations, including the structural distortions, U dependence, and the exchange correlation functional dependence, clearly showed that the spin and orbital ground state can be controlled systematically by the epitaxial strain. In the wide range of strain, the ferromagnetic-spin and antiferro-orbital order are stabilized, which is notably different from the previously reported ground state in the titanate systems. By applying +2.8% of tensile strains, we showed that the antiferromagnetic-spin and ferro-orbital ordered phase become stabilized.
Nonlinear optical properties of curcumin: solvatochromism-based approach and computational study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Margar, Sachin N.; Sekar, Nagaiyan
2016-06-01
Nonlinear optical (NLO) properties of curcumin were studied using solvatochromic method and density functional theory (DFT). DFT calculations were performed to determine the static first hyperpolarisability (βο) and its related properties (μ, α0,Δα, β, ?) for curcumin, using B3LYP functional with 6-31G (d), 6-311+G (d) and 6-311+G (d,p) basis sets at the ground-state and excited-state geometries and with CAM-B3LYP using 6-311+G (d,p) basis sets at the ground-state geometry in different solvent environments. In polar solvent environment, the values are slightly lower as compared to the non-polar solvent environments. The results obtained are correlated with the polarisability parameter αCT, first hyperpolarisability parameter βCT and the solvatochromic descriptor of γSDobtained by the solvatochromic method. The static first hyperpolarisability (βο) and its related properties were compared with urea and dibenzoylmethane (β-diketonate) and it is observed that curcumin shows very large values for first hyperpolarisability and its components.
Bose-Einstein condensate of rigid rotor molecules
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jones, Evan; Smith, Joseph; Rittenhouse, Seth; Peden, Brandon; Wilson, Ryan
2017-04-01
We study the ground state phases of a quasi-two-dimensional Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) of dipolar rigid rotor molecules subject to a DC electric field. In the high-field limit, this system acquires the properties of the fully polarized dipolar BEC, which exhibits a roton-maxon excitation spectrum, and has been thoroughly studied in the theoretical literature. In the weak-field limit, however, qualitatively new physics emerges due to the competition between the (weak) applied field and internal electric fields, which are produced by the molecules themselves. We characterize the ground states of this system, and study its unique dielectric properties. We gratefully acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHYS-1516421.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Singha Roy, Sudipto; Dhar, Himadri Shekhar; Rakshit, Debraj; Sen(De), Aditi; Sen, Ujjwal
2017-12-01
Phase transition in quantum many-body systems inevitably causes changes in certain physical properties which then serve as potential indicators of critical phenomena. Besides the traditional order parameters, characterization of quantum entanglement has proven to be a computationally efficient and successful method for detection of phase boundaries, especially in one-dimensional models. Here we determine the rich phase diagram of the ground states of a quantum spin-1/2 XXZ ladder by analyzing the variation of bipartite and multipartite entanglements. Our study characterizes the different ground state phases and notes the correspondence with known results, while highlighting the finer details that emerge from the behavior of ground state entanglement. Analysis of entanglement in the ground state provides a clearer picture of the complex ground state phase diagram of the system using only a moderate-size model.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ling, Wang; Dong, Die; Shi-Jian, Wang; Zheng-Quan, Zhao
2015-01-01
The geometrical, electronic, and magnetic properties of small CunFe (n=1-12) clusters have been investigated by using density functional method B3LYP and LanL2DZ basis set. The structural search reveals that Fe atoms in low-energy CunFe isomers tend to occupy the position with the maximum coordination number. The ground state CunFe clusters possess planar structure for n=2-5 and three-dimensional (3D) structure for n=6-12. The electronic properties of CunFe clusters are analyzed through the averaged binding energy, the second-order energy difference and HOMO-LUMO energy gap. It is found that the magic numbers of stability are 1, 3, 7 and 9 for the ground state CunFe clusters. The energy gap of Fe-encapsulated cage clusters is smaller than that of other configurations. The Cu5Fe and Cu7Fe clusters have a very large energy gap (>2.4 eV). The vertical ionization potential (VIP), electron affinity (EA) and photoelectron spectra are also calculated and simulated theoretically for all the ground-state clusters. The magnetic moment analyses for the ground-state CunFe clusters show that Fe atom can enhance the magnetic moment of the host cluster and carries most of the total magnetic moment.
Decoherence induced deformation of the ground state in adiabatic quantum computation.
Deng, Qiang; Averin, Dmitri V; Amin, Mohammad H; Smith, Peter
2013-01-01
Despite more than a decade of research on adiabatic quantum computation (AQC), its decoherence properties are still poorly understood. Many theoretical works have suggested that AQC is more robust against decoherence, but a quantitative relation between its performance and the qubits' coherence properties, such as decoherence time, is still lacking. While the thermal excitations are known to be important sources of errors, they are predominantly dependent on temperature but rather insensitive to the qubits' coherence. Less understood is the role of virtual excitations, which can also reduce the ground state probability even at zero temperature. Here, we introduce normalized ground state fidelity as a measure of the decoherence-induced deformation of the ground state due to virtual transitions. We calculate the normalized fidelity perturbatively at finite temperatures and discuss its relation to the qubits' relaxation and dephasing times, as well as its projected scaling properties.
Decoherence induced deformation of the ground state in adiabatic quantum computation
Deng, Qiang; Averin, Dmitri V.; Amin, Mohammad H.; Smith, Peter
2013-01-01
Despite more than a decade of research on adiabatic quantum computation (AQC), its decoherence properties are still poorly understood. Many theoretical works have suggested that AQC is more robust against decoherence, but a quantitative relation between its performance and the qubits' coherence properties, such as decoherence time, is still lacking. While the thermal excitations are known to be important sources of errors, they are predominantly dependent on temperature but rather insensitive to the qubits' coherence. Less understood is the role of virtual excitations, which can also reduce the ground state probability even at zero temperature. Here, we introduce normalized ground state fidelity as a measure of the decoherence-induced deformation of the ground state due to virtual transitions. We calculate the normalized fidelity perturbatively at finite temperatures and discuss its relation to the qubits' relaxation and dephasing times, as well as its projected scaling properties. PMID:23528821
Electronic and transport properties of Cobalt-based valence tautomeric molecules and polymers
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, Yifeng; Calzolari, Arrigo; Buongiorno Nardelli, Marco
2011-03-01
The advancement of molecular spintronics requires further understandings of the fundamental electronic structures and transport properties of prototypical spintronics molecules and polymers. Here we present a density functional based theoretical study of the electronic structures of Cobalt-based valence tautomeric molecules Co III (SQ)(Cat)L Co II (SQ)2 L and their polymers, where SQ refers to the semiquinone ligand, and Cat the catecholate ligand, while L is a redox innocent backbone ligand. The conversion from low-spin Co III ground state to high-spin Co II excited state is realized by imposing an on-site potential U on the Co atom and elongating the Co-N bond. Transport properties are subsequently calculated by extracting electronic Wannier functions from these systems and computing the charge transport in the ballistic regime using a Non-Equilibrium Green's Function (NEGF) approach. Our transport results show distinct charge transport properties between low-spin ground state and high-spin excited state, hence suggesting potential spintronics devices from these molecules and polymers such as spin valves.
Is the ground state of 5d4 double-perovskite Iridate Ba2YIrO6 magnetic or nonmagnetic?
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gong, Hoshin; Kim, Kyoo; Kim, Beom Hyun; Kim, Bongjae; Kim, Junwon; Min, B. I.
2018-05-01
We have investigated electronic structures and magnetic properties of double perovskite Iridate Ba2YIrO6 with 5d4 configuration, employing the exact diagonalization method for multi-site clusters. We have considered a many-body Hamiltonian for all d states (eg and t2g) including all relevant physical parameters such as the Coulomb correlation, spin-orbit coupling, crystal-field effect, and Hund coupling. We have found that the ground state of Ba2YIrO6 is nonmagnetic and that the Hund coupling plays an important role in the magnetic properties of the 5d4 systems, unlike the well-studied 5d5 systems.
Chiral helimagnetic state in a Kondo lattice model with the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Okumura, Shun; Kato, Yasuyuki; Motome, Yukitoshi
2018-05-01
Monoaxial chiral magnets can form a noncollinear twisted spin structure called the chiral helimagnetic state. We study magnetic properties of such a chiral helimagnetic state, with emphasis on the effect of itinerant electrons. Modeling a monoaxial chiral helimagnet by a one-dimensional Kondo lattice model with the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, we perform a variational calculation to elucidate the stable spin configuration in the ground state. We obtain a chiral helimagnetic state as a candidate for the ground state, whose helical pitch is modulated by the model parameters: the Kondo coupling, the Dzyaloshinski-Moriya interaction, and electron filling.
Basic optical and radiation response properties of Lumilass-B fluorescent glass
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fujimoto, Yutaka; Yanagida, Takayuki
2014-08-01
The optical, scintillation, and dosimetric properties of Lumilass-B fluorescent glass were studied. The glass showed an ultraviolet absorption band that can be attributed to the transition from 4f7(8S7/2) ground state to the 4f65d excited state of Eu2+ ions in the glass matrix. When an X-ray excited the glass, the radioluminescence band appeared at 400 nm as in the PL spectrum. This is identified as the transition from the 5d excited state to the 4f7(8S7/2) ground state of Eu2+. The scintillation decay time under excitation with the pulsed X-ray was calculated to be about 630 ns. The irradiation dose response of the thermoluminescence (TL) and optically-stimulated luminescence (OSL) intensities was linear in the studied dose range at 0.25-200 mGy and 0.25-16 Gy, respectively.
Constraining nuclear photon strength functions by the decay properties of photo-excited states
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Isaak, J.; Savran, D.; Krtička, M.; Ahmed, M. W.; Beller, J.; Fiori, E.; Glorius, J.; Kelley, J. H.; Löher, B.; Pietralla, N.; Romig, C.; Rusev, G.; Scheck, M.; Schnorrenberger, L.; Silva, J.; Sonnabend, K.; Tonchev, A. P.; Tornow, W.; Weller, H. R.; Zweidinger, M.
2013-12-01
A new approach for constraining the low-energy part of the electric dipole Photon Strength Function (E1-PSF) is presented. Experiments at the Darmstadt High-Intensity Photon Setup and the High Intensity γ→-Ray Source have been performed to investigate the decay properties of 130Te between 5.50 and 8.15 MeV excitation energy. In particular, the average γ-ray branching ratio to the ground state and the population intensity of low-lying excited states have been studied. A comparison to the statistical model shows that the latter is sensitive to the low-energy behavior of the E1-PSF, while the average ground state branching ratio cannot be described by the statistical model in the energy range between 5.5 and 6.5 MeV.
Ising antiferromagnet on the Archimedean lattices.
Yu, Unjong
2015-06-01
Geometric frustration effects were studied systematically with the Ising antiferromagnet on the 11 Archimedean lattices using the Monte Carlo methods. The Wang-Landau algorithm for static properties (specific heat and residual entropy) and the Metropolis algorithm for a freezing order parameter were adopted. The exact residual entropy was also found. Based on the degree of frustration and dynamic properties, ground states of them were determined. The Shastry-Sutherland lattice and the trellis lattice are weakly frustrated and have two- and one-dimensional long-range-ordered ground states, respectively. The bounce, maple-leaf, and star lattices have the spin ice phase. The spin liquid phase appears in the triangular and kagome lattices.
Ising antiferromagnet on the Archimedean lattices
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yu, Unjong
2015-06-01
Geometric frustration effects were studied systematically with the Ising antiferromagnet on the 11 Archimedean lattices using the Monte Carlo methods. The Wang-Landau algorithm for static properties (specific heat and residual entropy) and the Metropolis algorithm for a freezing order parameter were adopted. The exact residual entropy was also found. Based on the degree of frustration and dynamic properties, ground states of them were determined. The Shastry-Sutherland lattice and the trellis lattice are weakly frustrated and have two- and one-dimensional long-range-ordered ground states, respectively. The bounce, maple-leaf, and star lattices have the spin ice phase. The spin liquid phase appears in the triangular and kagome lattices.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shugani, Mani; Aynyas, Mahendra; Sanyal, S. P.
2018-05-01
We present a structural, Electronic and Fermi surface properties of Aluminum Praseodymium (AlPr) using First-principles density functional calculation by using full potential linearized augmented plane wave (FP-LAPW) method within generalized gradient approximation (GGA). The ground state properties along with electronic and Fermi surface properties are studied. It is found that AlPr is metallic and the bonding between Al and Pr is covalent.
Topological Magnon Bands and Unconventional Superconductivity in Pyrochlore Iridate Thin Films.
Laurell, Pontus; Fiete, Gregory A
2017-04-28
We theoretically study the magnetic properties of pyrochlore iridate bilayer and trilayer thin films grown along the [111] direction using a strong coupling approach. We find the ground state magnetic configurations on a mean field level and carry out a spin-wave analysis about them. In the trilayer case the ground state is found to be the all-in-all-out (AIAO) state, whereas the bilayer has a deformed AIAO state. For all parameters of the spin-orbit coupled Hamiltonian we study, the lowest magnon band in the trilayer case has a nonzero Chern number. In the bilayer case we also find a parameter range with nonzero Chern numbers. We calculate the magnon Hall response for both geometries, finding a striking sign change as a function of temperature. Using a slave-boson mean-field theory we study the doping of the trilayer system and discover an unconventional time-reversal symmetry broken d+id superconducting state. Our study complements prior work in the weak coupling limit and suggests that the [111] grown thin film pyrochlore iridates are a promising candidate for topological properties and unconventional orders.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Säkkinen, Niko; Peng, Yang; Fritz-Haber-Institut der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Faradayweg 4-6, 14195 Berlin-Dahlem
2015-12-21
We present a Kadanoff-Baym formalism to study time-dependent phenomena for systems of interacting electrons and phonons in the framework of many-body perturbation theory. The formalism takes correctly into account effects of the initial preparation of an equilibrium state and allows for an explicit time-dependence of both the electronic and phononic degrees of freedom. The method is applied to investigate the charge neutral and non-neutral excitation spectra of a homogeneous, two-site, two-electron Holstein model. This is an extension of a previous study of the ground state properties in the Hartree (H), partially self-consistent Born (Gd) and fully self-consistent Born (GD) approximationsmore » published in Säkkinen et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 143, 234101 (2015)]. Here, the homogeneous ground state solution is shown to become unstable for a sufficiently strong interaction while a symmetry-broken ground state solution is shown to be stable in the Hartree approximation. Signatures of this instability are observed for the partially self-consistent Born approximation but are not found for the fully self-consistent Born approximation. By understanding the stability properties, we are able to study the linear response regime by calculating the density-density response function by time-propagation. This amounts to a solution of the Bethe-Salpeter equation with a sophisticated kernel. The results indicate that none of the approximations is able to describe the response function during or beyond the bipolaronic crossover for the parameters investigated. Overall, we provide an extensive discussion on when the approximations are valid and how they fail to describe the studied exact properties of the chosen model system.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pramod, A. G.; Renuka, C. G.; Shivashankar, K.; Boregowda, P.; Nadaf, Y. F.
2018-05-01
Steady-state absorption and the fluorescence properties of the synthesized Benzofuran derivatives were studied. Absorption and fluorescence spectra of 4-(2-Oxo-2H-benzo[h]chromen-4-ylm ethoxy)-benzaldehyde (4-OBCM) have been recorded at room temperature in extensive variety of solvents of various polarities. 4-OBCM Fluorescence band maxima of the solvents are small amount spectral shifted to hypsochromic when the solvent polarity will increase, compared to absorption band under the identical circumstance. This suggests an increase in dipole moment of excited state compared to ground state. The ground-state dipole moment of 4-OBCM was found from quantum mechanical methods and the excited state dipole moment of 4-OBCM was evaluated from Lippert-Mataga Bakhshiev's, Kawski-Chamma-Viallet's and Reichardt conditions by methods for solvatochromic shift. Kamlet-Taft coefficients which affect this absorption profiles.
Slow quenches in two-dimensional time-reversal symmetric Z2 topological insulators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ulčakar, Lara; Mravlje, Jernej; Ramšak, Anton; Rejec, Tomaž
2018-05-01
We study the topological properties and transport in the Bernevig-Hughes-Zhang model undergoing a slow quench between different topological regimes. Due to the closing of the band gap during the quench, the system ends up in an excited state. We prove that for quenches that preserve the time-reversal symmetry, the Z2 invariant remains equal to the one evaluated in the initial state. On the other hand, the bulk spin Hall conductivity does change, and its time average approaches that of the ground state of the final Hamiltonian. The deviations from the ground-state spin Hall conductivity as a function of the quench time follow the Kibble-Zurek scaling. We also consider the breaking of the time-reversal symmetry, which restores the correspondence between the bulk invariant and the transport properties after the quench.
Motta, Mario; Zhang, Shiwei
2017-11-14
We address the computation of ground-state properties of chemical systems and realistic materials within the auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo method. The phase constraint to control the Fermion phase problem requires the random walks in Slater determinant space to be open-ended with branching. This in turn makes it necessary to use back-propagation (BP) to compute averages and correlation functions of operators that do not commute with the Hamiltonian. Several BP schemes are investigated, and their optimization with respect to the phaseless constraint is considered. We propose a modified BP method for the computation of observables in electronic systems, discuss its numerical stability and computational complexity, and assess its performance by computing ground-state properties in several molecular systems, including small organic molecules.
Surface hopping investigation of the relaxation dynamics in radical cations
Assmann, Mariana; Weinacht, Thomas; Matsika, Spiridoula
2016-01-19
Ionization processes can lead to the formation of radical cations with population in several ionic states. In this study, we examine the dynamics of three radical cations starting from an excited ionic state using trajectory surface hopping dynamics in combination with multiconfigurational electronic structure methods. The efficiency of relaxation to the ground state is examined in an effort to understand better whether fragmentation of cations is likely to occur directly on excited states or after relaxation to the ground state. The results on cyclohexadiene, hexatriene, and uracil indicate that relaxation to the ground ionic state is very fast in thesemore » systems, while fragmentation before relaxation is rare. Ultrafast relaxation is facilitated by the close proximity of electronic states and the presence of two- and three-state conical intersections. Furthermore, examining the properties of the systems in the Franck-Condon region can give some insight into the subsequent dynamics.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gálisová, Lucia; Jakubczyk, Dorota
2017-01-01
Ground-state and magnetocaloric properties of a double-tetrahedral chain, in which nodal lattice sites occupied by the localized Ising spins regularly alternate with triangular clusters half filled with mobile electrons, are exactly investigated by using the transfer-matrix method in combination with the construction of the Nth tensor power of the discrete Fourier transformation. It is shown that the ground state of the model is formed by two non-chiral phases with the zero residual entropy and two chiral phases with the finite residual entropy S = NkB ln 2. Depending on the character of the exchange interaction between the localized Ising spins and mobile electrons, one or three magnetization plateaus can be observed in the magnetization process. Their heights basically depend on the values of Landé g-factors of the Ising spins and mobile electrons. It is also evidenced that the system exhibits both the conventional and inverse magnetocaloric effect depending on values of the applied magnetic field and temperature.
Multiple normalized solutions for a planar gauged nonlinear Schrödinger equation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Luo, Xiao
2018-06-01
We study the existence, multiplicity, quantitative property and asymptotic behavior of normalized solutions for a gauged nonlinear Schrödinger equation arising from the Chern-Simons theory Δ u + ω u +|x|^2u+ λ ( {{h^2}(| x | )}/{{{| x | ^2}}} + \\int \\limits _{| x | }^{ + ∞} {{h(s)}/s} {u^2}(s)ds) u = {| u | ^{p - 2}}u,\\quad x\\in R^2, where ω \\in R, λ >0, p>4 and h(s) = 1/2\\int \\limits _0^s {r{u^2}(r)dr} . Combining constraint minimization method and minimax principle, we prove that the problem possesses at least two normalized solutions: One is a ground state and the other is an excited state. Furthermore, the asymptotic behavior and quantitative property of the ground state are analyzed.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Peköz, Rengi˙n; Erkoç, Şaki˙r
2018-01-01
The structural and electronic properties of neutral ternary PbxSbySez clusters (x + y + z = 2, 3) in their ground states have been explored by means of density functional theory calculations. The geometric structures and binding energies are systematically explored and for the most stable configurations of each cluster type vibrational frequencies, charges on atoms, energy difference between highest occupied and lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals, and the possible dissociations channels have been analyzed. Depending on being binary or ternary cluster and composition, the most energetic structures have singlet, doublet or triplet ground states, and trimers prefer to form isosceles, equilateral or scalene triangle structure.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chaban, Galina M.; Salter, Latasha M.; Kwak, Dochan (Technical Monitor)
2002-01-01
Geometrical structures and energetic properties for four different tautomers of adenine are calculated in this study, using multi-configurational wave functions. Both the ground and the lowest single excited state potential energy surface are studied. The energetic order of the tautomers on the ground state potential surface is 9H less than 7H less than 3H less than 1H, while on the excited state surface this order is found to be different: 3H less than 1H less than 9H less than 7H. Minimum energy reaction paths are obtained for hydrogen atom transfer (9 yields 3 tautomerization) reactions in the ground and the lowest excited electronic state. It is found that the barrier heights and the shapes of the reaction paths are different for the ground and the excited electronic state, suggesting that the probability of such tautomerization reaction is higher on the excited state potential energy surface. The barrier for this reaction in the excited state may become very low in the presence of water or other polar solvent molecules, and therefore such tautomerization reaction may play an important role in the solution phase photochemistry of adenine.
Lawrence, Stephen J.
2006-01-01
This report provides abridged information describing the most salient properties and biodegradation of 27 chlorinated volatile organic compounds detected during ground-water studies in the United States. This information is condensed from an extensive list of reports, papers, and literature published by the U.S. Government, various State governments, and peer-reviewed journals. The list includes literature reviews, compilations, and summaries describing volatile organic compounds in ground water. This report cross-references common names and synonyms associated with volatile organic compounds with the naming conventions supported by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. In addition, the report describes basic physical characteristics of those compounds such as Henry's Law constant, water solubility, density, octanol-water partition (log Kow), and organic carbon partition (log Koc) coefficients. Descriptions and illustrations are provided for natural and laboratory biodegradation rates, chemical by-products, and degradation pathways.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Schmidt, Matthew; Constable, Steve; Ing, Christopher
2014-06-21
We developed and studied the implementation of trial wavefunctions in the newly proposed Langevin equation Path Integral Ground State (LePIGS) method [S. Constable, M. Schmidt, C. Ing, T. Zeng, and P.-N. Roy, J. Phys. Chem. A 117, 7461 (2013)]. The LePIGS method is based on the Path Integral Ground State (PIGS) formalism combined with Path Integral Molecular Dynamics sampling using a Langevin equation based sampling of the canonical distribution. This LePIGS method originally incorporated a trivial trial wavefunction, ψ{sub T}, equal to unity. The present paper assesses the effectiveness of three different trial wavefunctions on three isotopes of hydrogen formore » cluster sizes N = 4, 8, and 13. The trial wavefunctions of interest are the unity trial wavefunction used in the original LePIGS work, a Jastrow trial wavefunction that includes correlations due to hard-core repulsions, and a normal mode trial wavefunction that includes information on the equilibrium geometry. Based on this analysis, we opt for the Jastrow wavefunction to calculate energetic and structural properties for parahydrogen, orthodeuterium, and paratritium clusters of size N = 4 − 19, 33. Energetic and structural properties are obtained and compared to earlier work based on Monte Carlo PIGS simulations to study the accuracy of the proposed approach. The new results for paratritium clusters will serve as benchmark for future studies. This paper provides a detailed, yet general method for optimizing the necessary parameters required for the study of the ground state of a large variety of systems.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jędrzejewska, Beata; Grabarz, Anna; Bartkowiak, Wojciech; Ośmiałowski, Borys
2018-06-01
The solvatochromism of the dyes was analyzed based on the four-parameter scale including: polarizability (SP), dipolarity (SdP), acidity (SA) and basicity (SB) parameters by method proposed by Catalán. The change of solvent to more polar caused the red shift of absorption and fluorescence band position. The frequency shifts manifest the change in the dipole moment upon excitation. The ground-state dipole moment of the difluoroboranyls was estimated based on changes in molecular polarization with temperature. Moreover, the Stokes shifts were used to calculate the excited state dipole moments of the dyes. For the calculation, the ground-state dipole moments and Onsager cavity radius were also determined theoretically using density functional theory (DFT). The experimentally determined excited-state dipole moments for the compounds are higher than the corresponding ground-state values. The increase in the dipole moment is described in terms of the nature of the excited state.
Rohrdanz, Mary A; Martins, Katie M; Herbert, John M
2009-02-07
We introduce a hybrid density functional that asymptotically incorporates full Hartree-Fock exchange, based on the long-range-corrected exchange-hole model of Henderson et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 128, 194105 (2008)]. The performance of this functional, for ground-state properties and for vertical excitation energies within time-dependent density functional theory, is systematically evaluated, and optimal values are determined for the range-separation parameter, omega, and for the fraction of short-range Hartree-Fock exchange. We denote the new functional as LRC-omegaPBEh, since it reduces to the standard PBEh hybrid functional (also known as PBE0 or PBE1PBE) for a certain choice of its two parameters. Upon optimization of these parameters against a set of ground- and excited-state benchmarks, the LRC-omegaPBEh functional fulfills three important requirements: (i) It outperforms the PBEh hybrid functional for ground-state atomization energies and reaction barrier heights; (ii) it yields statistical errors comparable to PBEh for valence excitation energies in both small and medium-sized molecules; and (iii) its performance for charge-transfer excitations is comparable to its performance for valence excitations. LRC-omegaPBEh, with the parameters determined herein, is the first density functional that satisfies all three criteria. Notably, short-range Hartree-Fock exchange appears to be necessary in order to obtain accurate ground-state properties and vertical excitation energies using the same value of omega.
Quantum Monte Carlo calculations of two neutrons in finite volume
Klos, P.; Lynn, J. E.; Tews, I.; ...
2016-11-18
Ab initio calculations provide direct access to the properties of pure neutron systems that are challenging to study experimentally. In addition to their importance for fundamental physics, their properties are required as input for effective field theories of the strong interaction. In this work, we perform auxiliary-field diffusion Monte Carlo calculations of the ground state and first excited state of two neutrons in a finite box, considering a simple contact potential as well as chiral effective field theory interactions. We compare the results against exact diagonalizations and present a detailed analysis of the finite-volume effects, whose understanding is crucial formore » determining observables from the calculated energies. Finally, using the Lüscher formula, we extract the low-energy S-wave scattering parameters from ground- and excited-state energies for different box sizes.« less
Chattopadhyaya, Surya; Nath, Abhijit; Das, Kalyan Kumar
2014-04-24
Ab initio based relativistic configuration interaction calculations have been performed to study the electronic states and spectroscopic properties of tellurium selenide (TeSe) - the heaviest heteronuclear diatomic group 16-16 molecule. Potential energy curves of several spin-excluded (Λ-S) electronic states of TeSe have been constructed and spectroscopic constants of low-lying bound Λ-S states within 3.85 eV are reported in the first stage of calculations. The X(3)Σ(-), a(1)Δ and b(1)Σ(+) are found as the ground, first excited and second excited state, respectively, at the Λ-S level and all these three states are mainly dominated by …π(4)π(*2) configuration. The computed ground state dissociation energy is in very good agreement with the experimental results. In the next stage of calculations, effects of spin-orbit coupling on the potential energy curves and spectroscopic properties of the species are investigated in details and compared with the existing experimental results. After inclusion of spin-orbit coupling the X(3)(1)Σ(-)(0(+)) is found as the ground-state spin component of TeSe. The computed spin-orbit splitting between two components of X(3)Σ(-) state is 1285 cm(-1). Also, significant amount of spin-orbit splitting are found between spin-orbit components (Ω-components) of several other excited states. Transition moments of some important spin-allowed and spin-forbidden transitions are calculated from configuration interaction wave functions. The spin-allowed transition B(3)Σ(-)-X(3)Σ(-) and spin-forbidden transition b(1)Σ(+)(0(+))-X(3)(1)Σ(-)(0(+)) are found to be the strongest in their respective categories. Electric dipole moments of all the bound Λ-S states along with those of the two Ω-components of X(3)Σ(-) are also calculated in the present study. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Lower bounds to energies for cusped-gaussian wavefunctions. [hydrogen atom ground state
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Eaves, J. O.; Walsh, B. C.; Steiner, E.
1974-01-01
Calculations for the ground states of H, He, and Be, conducted by Steiner and Sykes (1972), show that the inclusion of a very small number of cusp functions can lead to a substantial enhancement of the quality of the Gaussian basis used in molecular wavefunction computations. The properties of the cusped-Gaussian basis are investigated by a calculation of lower bounds concerning the ground state energy of the hydrogen atom.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Jian-ming; Xu, Xue-xiang
2018-04-01
Using dressed state method, we cleverly solve the dynamics of atom-field interaction in the process of two-photon absorption and emission between atomic levels. Here we suppose that the atom is initially in the ground state and the optical field is initially in Fock state, coherent state or thermal state, respectively. The properties of the atom, including the population in excited state and ground state, the atom inversion, and the properties for optical field, including the photon number distribution, the mean photon number, the second-order correlation function and the Wigner function, are discussed in detail. We derive their analytical expressions and then make numerical analysis for them. In contrast with Jaynes-Cummings model, some similar results, such as quantum Rabi oscillation, revival and collapse, are also exhibit in our considered model. Besides, some novel nonclassical states are generated.
Electronic Properties of Cyclacenes from TAO-DFT
Wu, Chun-Shian; Lee, Pei-Yin; Chai, Jeng-Da
2016-01-01
Owing to the presence of strong static correlation effects, accurate prediction of the electronic properties (e.g., the singlet-triplet energy gaps, vertical ionization potentials, vertical electron affinities, fundamental gaps, symmetrized von Neumann entropy, active orbital occupation numbers, and real-space representation of active orbitals) of cyclacenes with n fused benzene rings (n = 4–100) has posed a great challenge to traditional electronic structure methods. To meet the challenge, we study these properties using our newly developed thermally-assisted-occupation density functional theory (TAO-DFT), a very efficient method for the study of large systems with strong static correlation effects. Besides, to examine the role of cyclic topology, the electronic properties of cyclacenes are also compared with those of acenes. Similar to acenes, the ground states of cyclacenes are singlets for all the cases studied. In contrast to acenes, the electronic properties of cyclacenes, however, exhibit oscillatory behavior (for n ≤ 30) in the approach to the corresponding properties of acenes with increasing number of benzene rings. On the basis of the calculated orbitals and their occupation numbers, the larger cyclacenes are shown to exhibit increasing polyradical character in their ground states, with the active orbitals being mainly localized at the peripheral carbon atoms. PMID:27853249
Zhu, Xiaolei
2007-01-01
Ground and excited states of mixed gallium stannide tetramers (Ga3Sn, Ga3Sn+, Ga3Sn-, GaSn3, GaSn3+, and GaSn3-) are investigated employing the complete active space self-consistent-field (CASSCF), density function theory (DFT), and the coupled-cluster single and double substitution (including triple excitations) (CCSD(T)) methods. The ground states of Ga3Sn, Ga3Sn+, and Ga3Sn- are found to be the 2A1, 3B1, and 1A1 states in C2v symmetry with a planar quadrilateral geometry, respectively. The ground states of GaSn3 and GaSn3- is predicted to be the 2A1 and 1A1 states in C2v point group with a planar quadrilateral structure, respectively, while the ground state of GaSn3+ is the 1A1 state with ideal triangular pyramid C3v geometry. Equilibrium geometries, vibrational frequencies, binding energies, electron affinities, ionization energies, and other properties of Ga3Sn and GaSn3 are computed and discussed. The anion photoelectron spectra of Ga3Sn- and GaSn3- are also predicted. It is interesting to find that the amount of charge transfer between Ga and Sn2 atoms in the 1A1 state of GaSn3+ greatly increases upon electron ionization from the 2A1 state of GaSn3, which may be caused by large geometry change. On the other hand, the results of the low-lying states of Ga3Sn and GaSn3 are compared with those of Ga3Si and GaSi3.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhu, Xiaolei
2007-01-01
Ground and excited states of mixed gallium stannide tetramers (Ga 3Sn, Ga 3Sn +, Ga 3Sn -, GaSn 3, GaSn 3+, and GaSn 3-) are investigated employing the complete active space self-consistent-field (CASSCF), density function theory (DFT), and the coupled-cluster single and double substitution (including triple excitations) (CCSD(T)) methods. The ground states of Ga 3Sn, Ga 3Sn +, and Ga 3Sn - are found to be the 2A 1, 3B 1, and 1A 1 states in C2v symmetry with a planar quadrilateral geometry, respectively. The ground states of GaSn 3 and GaSn 3- is predicted to be the 2A 1 and 1A 1 states in C2v point group with a planar quadrilateral structure, respectively, while the ground state of GaSn 3+ is the 1A 1 state with ideal triangular pyramid C3v geometry. Equilibrium geometries, vibrational frequencies, binding energies, electron affinities, ionization energies, and other properties of Ga 3Sn and GaSn 3 are computed and discussed. The anion photoelectron spectra of Ga 3Sn - and GaSn 3- are also predicted. It is interesting to find that the amount of charge transfer between Ga and Sn 2 atoms in the 1A 1 state of GaSn 3+ greatly increases upon electron ionization from the 2A 1 state of GaSn 3, which may be caused by large geometry change. On the other hand, the results of the low-lying states of Ga 3Sn and GaSn 3 are compared with those of Ga 3Si and GaSi 3.
Structural investigations and the effect of strain on lead based double perovskites
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Abbett, Brian; Fennie, Craig J.
2014-03-01
The A2 BB' O6 double perovskite structure, in which the B and B' ions are ordered (typically in a rocksalt configuration), provides a versatile platform to realize new properties such as multiferroicity. In particular, compounds with a lone-pair cation on the A-site, such as A=Pb2+, and magnetic B=Co, Mn, and diamagnetic B'= Te, Mo, W, Re, cations have been investigated experimentally, but as of yet none have been found to display ferroelectricity, although several are known to be antiferroelectric. Here we present a first-principles study of the structural and dielectric properties of this family of compounds. We resolve any conflicting reports in the literature as to the ground state structure of compounds and predict the ground state structure when no structural data is available. Additionally, we investigate the effect of epitaxial strain on the structural and magnetic properties.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Prima, Eka Cahya; Computational Material Design and Quantum Engineering Laboratory, Engineering Physics, Institut Teknologi Bandung; International Program on Science Education, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia
2015-09-30
The aglycones of anthocyanidin dyes were previously reported to form carbinol pseudobase, cis-chalcone, and trans-chalcone due to the basic levels. The further investigations of ground and excited state properties of the dyes were characterized using density functional theory with PCM(UFF)/B3LYP/6-31+G(d,p) level in the basic solutions. However, to the best of our knowledge, the theoretical investigation of their potential photosensitizers has never been reported before. In this paper, the theoretical photovoltaic properties sensitized by dyes have been successfully investigated including the electron injections, the ground and excited state oxidation potentials, the estimated open circuit voltages, and the light harvesting efficiencies. Themore » results prove that the electronic properties represented by dyes’ LUMO-HOMO levels will affect to the photovoltaic performances. Cis-chalcone dye is the best anthocyanidin aglycone dye with the electron injection spontaneity of −1.208 eV, the theoretical open circuit voltage of 1.781 V, and light harvesting efficiency of 56.55% due to the best HOMO-LUMO levels. Moreover, the ethanol solvent slightly contributes to the better cell performance than the water solvent dye because of the better oxidation potential stabilization in the ground state as well as in the excited state. These results are in good agreement with the known experimental report that the aglycones of anthocyanidin dyes in basic solvent are the high potential photosensitizers for dye-sensitized solar cell.« less
Nature of ground and electronic excited states of higher acenes
Yang, Yang; Yang, Weitao
2016-01-01
Higher acenes have drawn much attention as promising organic semiconductors with versatile electronic properties. However, the nature of their ground state and electronic excited states is still not fully clear. Their unusual chemical reactivity and instability are the main obstacles for experimental studies, and the potentially prominent diradical character, which might require a multireference description in such large systems, hinders theoretical investigations. Here, we provide a detailed answer with the particle–particle random-phase approximation calculation. The 1Ag ground states of acenes up to decacene are on the closed-shell side of the diradical continuum, whereas the ground state of undecacene and dodecacene tilts more to the open-shell side with a growing polyradical character. The ground state of all acenes has covalent nature with respect to both short and long axes. The lowest triplet state 3B2u is always above the singlet ground state even though the energy gap could be vanishingly small in the polyacene limit. The bright singlet excited state 1B2u is a zwitterionic state to the short axis. The excited 1Ag state gradually switches from a double-excitation state to another zwitterionic state to the short axis, but always keeps its covalent nature to the long axis. An energy crossing between the 1B2u and excited 1Ag states happens between hexacene and heptacene. Further energetic consideration suggests that higher acenes are likely to undergo singlet fission with a low photovoltaic efficiency; however, the efficiency might be improved if a singlet fission into multiple triplets could be achieved. PMID:27528690
Gutzwiller renormalization group
Lanatà, Nicola; Yao, Yong -Xin; Deng, Xiaoyu; ...
2016-01-06
We develop a variational scheme called the “Gutzwiller renormalization group” (GRG), which enables us to calculate the ground state of Anderson impurity models (AIM) with arbitrary numerical precision. Our method exploits the low-entanglement property of the ground state of local Hamiltonians in combination with the framework of the Gutzwiller wave function and indicates that the ground state of the AIM has a very simple structure, which can be represented very accurately in terms of a surprisingly small number of variational parameters. Furthermore, we perform benchmark calculations of the single-band AIM that validate our theory and suggest that the GRG mightmore » enable us to study complex systems beyond the reach of the other methods presently available and pave the way to interesting generalizations, e.g., to nonequilibrium transport in nanostructures.« less
The properties of 4'-N,N-dimethylaminoflavonol in the ground and excited states
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Moroz, V. V.; Chalyi, A. G.; Roshal, A. D.
2008-09-01
The mechanism of protonation of 4-N,N-dimethylaminoflavonol and the structure of its protolytic forms in the ground and excited states were studied by electron absorption and fluorescence (steady-state and time-resolved) spectroscopy and with the use of the RM1 quantum-chemical method. A comparison of equilibrium constants and the theoretical enthalpies of formation showed that excitation should be accompanied by the inversion of the basicity of the electron acceptor groups of this compound and, as a consequence, changes in the structure of its monocationic form. An analysis of the spectral parameters of the protolytic 4-N,N-dimethylaminoflavonol forms, however, showed that their structure and the sequence of protonation in the excited state were the same as in the ground state. Changes in the structure of the monocation in the excited state were not observed because of the fast radiationless deactivation of this form and the occurrence of excited state intramolecular proton transfer in aprotic solvents.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dhiflaoui, J.; Bejaoui, M.; Farjallah, M.; Berriche, H.
2018-05-01
The potential energy and spectroscopic constants of the ground and many excited states of the Be+He van der Waals system have been investigated using a one-electron pseudo-potential approach, which is used to replace the effect of the Be2+ core and the electron-He interactions by effective potentials. Furthermore, the core-core interactions are incorporated. This permits the reduction of the number of active electrons of the Be+He van der Waals system to only one electron. Therefore, the potential energy of the ground state as well as the excited states is performed at the SCF level and considering the spin-orbit interaction. The core-core interaction for Be2+He ground state is included using accurate CCSD (T) calculations. Then, the spectroscopic properties of the Be+He electronic states are extracted and compared with the previous theoretical and experimental studies. This comparison has shown a very good agreement for the ground and the first excited states. Moreover, the transition dipole moment has been determined for a large and dense grid of internuclear distances including the spin orbit effect. In addition, a vibrational spacing analysis for the Be2+He and Be+He ground states is performed to extract the He atomic polarisability.
Quantum spin liquids: a review.
Savary, Lucile; Balents, Leon
2017-01-01
Quantum spin liquids may be considered 'quantum disordered' ground states of spin systems, in which zero-point fluctuations are so strong that they prevent conventional magnetic long-range order. More interestingly, quantum spin liquids are prototypical examples of ground states with massive many-body entanglement, which is of a degree sufficient to render these states distinct phases of matter. Their highly entangled nature imbues quantum spin liquids with unique physical aspects, such as non-local excitations, topological properties, and more. In this review, we discuss the nature of such phases and their properties based on paradigmatic models and general arguments, and introduce theoretical technology such as gauge theory and partons, which are conveniently used in the study of quantum spin liquids. An overview is given of the different types of quantum spin liquids and the models and theories used to describe them. We also provide a guide to the current status of experiments in relation to study quantum spin liquids, and to the diverse probes used therein.
Canonical ensemble ground state and correlation entropy of Bose-Einstein condensate
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Svidzinsky, Anatoly; Kim, Moochan; Agarwal, Girish; Scully, Marlan O.
2018-01-01
Constraint of a fixed total number of particles yields a correlation between the fluctuation of particles in different states in the canonical ensemble. Here we show that, below the temperature of Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC), the correlation part of the entropy of an ideal Bose gas is cancelled by the ground-state contribution. Thus, in the BEC region, the thermodynamic properties of the gas in the canonical ensemble can be described accurately in a simplified model which excludes the ground state and assumes no correlation between excited levels.
When One Configuration Is Not Enough
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
McMillin, David R.
2008-01-01
For most molecules molecular orbital theory predicts a ground-state electronic configuration that is useful for rationalizing relative bond lengths, magnetic properties, and so forth. However, when electron correlation is a dominant consideration, the ground-state configuration may provide a poor representation of the system. In such cases,…
modes), gamma rays (energy, intensity, multipolarity, coinc.) Nuclear Wallet Cards Search Latest Ground NuDat 2.7 Levels and Gammas Search Ground and excited states (energy, T1/2, spin/parity, decay and isomeric states properties Decay Radiation Search Radiation type, energy, intensity and dose
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sonzogni, A. A.
2001-07-01
Experimental data on ground- and excited-state properties for all nuclei with mass number A = 144 have been compiled and evaluated. States populated in radioactive decay as well as in nuclear reactions have been considered. For these nuclei, level and decay schemes have been built, as well as tables of nuclear properties. This work supersedes the 1989 evaluation by J.K. Tuli (1989Tu02). Manuscripts published before December 2000 have been included in this work.
Python-Based Tool for Universal Nuclear Data Extraction
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
McDonald, William; Blair, Hayden; Consalvi, Peter; Garbiso, Markus; Grover, Hannah; Harget, Alex; Martin, Matthew; Natzke, Connor; Leach, Kyle
2017-09-01
Over the past 70 years, nuclear physics experiments have provided a vast wealth of experimental data on both ground and excited state properties across the nuclear chart. In many cases, searching for and parsing the relevant nuclear structure data from previous work can be tedious and difficult. Although the compilation, evaluation, and digitization of this data by multiple groups around the world over the past several decades has helped dramatically in this respect, the process of performing systematic studies using this data can still be cumbersome and limited. We are in the process of creating a python-based program to extract, sort, and manipulate nuclear and atomic data efficiently. In its current state, the program is able to extract all atomic-shell ionization energies, excited- and ground-state nuclear properties, and all beta-decay rates and ratios. As a part of this ongoing project, we plan to use this tool to examine beta-decay rates in extreme astrophysical environments.
Guidez, Emilie B; Aikens, Christine M
2015-04-09
The origin of the emission of the gold phosphine thiolate complex (TPA)AuSCH(CH3)2 (TPA = 1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantanetriylphosphine) is investigated using time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT). This system absorbs light at 3.6 eV, which corresponds mostly to a ligand-to-metal transition with some interligand character. The P-Au-S angle decreases upon relaxation in the S1 and T1 states. Our calculations show that these two states are strongly spin-orbit coupled at the ground state geometry. Ligand effects on the optical properties of this complex are also discussed by looking at the simple AuP(CH3)3SCH3 complex. The excitation energies differ by several tenths of an electronvolt. Excited state optimizations show that the excited singlet and triplet of the (TPA)AuSCH(CH3)2 complex are bent. On the other hand, the Au-S bond breaks in the excited state for the simple complex, and TDDFT is no longer an adequate method. The excited state energy landscape of gold phosphine thiolate systems is very complex, with several state crossings. This study also shows that the formation of the [(TPA)AuSCH(CH3)2]2 dimer is favorable in the ground state. The inclusion of dispersion interactions in the calculations affects the optimized geometries of both ground and excited states. Upon excitation, the formation of a Au-Au bond occurs, which results in an increase in energy of the low energy excited states in comparison to the monomer. The experimentally observed emission of the (TPA)AuSCH(CH3)2 complex at 1.86 eV cannot be unambiguously assigned and may originate from several excited states.
Kohn, Lucas; Tschirsich, Ferdinand; Keck, Maximilian; Plenio, Martin B; Tamascelli, Dario; Montangero, Simone
2018-01-01
We provide evidence that randomized low-rank factorization is a powerful tool for the determination of the ground-state properties of low-dimensional lattice Hamiltonians through tensor network techniques. In particular, we show that randomized matrix factorization outperforms truncated singular value decomposition based on state-of-the-art deterministic routines in time-evolving block decimation (TEBD)- and density matrix renormalization group (DMRG)-style simulations, even when the system under study gets close to a phase transition: We report linear speedups in the bond or local dimension of up to 24 times in quasi-two-dimensional cylindrical systems.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kohn, Lucas; Tschirsich, Ferdinand; Keck, Maximilian; Plenio, Martin B.; Tamascelli, Dario; Montangero, Simone
2018-01-01
We provide evidence that randomized low-rank factorization is a powerful tool for the determination of the ground-state properties of low-dimensional lattice Hamiltonians through tensor network techniques. In particular, we show that randomized matrix factorization outperforms truncated singular value decomposition based on state-of-the-art deterministic routines in time-evolving block decimation (TEBD)- and density matrix renormalization group (DMRG)-style simulations, even when the system under study gets close to a phase transition: We report linear speedups in the bond or local dimension of up to 24 times in quasi-two-dimensional cylindrical systems.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aaron, Jean Jacques; Maafi, Mounir; Párkányi, Cyril; Boniface, Christian
1995-04-01
Electronic absorption and fluorescence excitation and emission spectra of four acridines (acridine, Acridine Yellow, 9-aminoacridine and proflavine) and three phenazines (phenazine, neutral Red and safranine) are determined at room temperature (298 K) in several solvents of various polarities (dioxane, chloroform, ethyl ether, ethyl acetate, 1-butanol, 2-propanol, ethanol, methanol, dimethylformamide, acetonitrile and dimethyl sulfoxide). The effect of the solvent upon the spectral characteristics of the above compounds, is studied. In combination with the ground-state dipole moments of these compounds, the spectral data are used to evaluate their first excited singlet-state dipole moments by means of the solvatochromic shift method (Bakhshiev's and Kawski-Chamma-Viallet's correlations). The theoretical ground and excited singlet-state dipole moments for acridines and phenazines are also calculated as a vector sum of the π-component (obtained by the PPP method) and the σ-component (obtained from σ-bond moments). For most acridines and phenazines under study, the experimental excited singlet-state dipole moments are found to be higher than their ground state counterpart. The application of the Kamlet-Abboud-Taft solvatochromic parameters to the solvent effect on spectral properties of acridine and phenazine derivatives is discussed.
First principles study of pressure induced polymorphic phase transition in KNO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yedukondalu, N.; Vaitheeswaran, G.
2015-06-01
We report the structural, elastic, electronic, and vibrational properties of polymorphic phases II and III of KNO3 based on density functional theory (DFT). Using semi-empirical dispersion correction (DFT-D2) method, we predicted the correct thermodynamic ground state of KNO3 and the obtained ground state properties of the polymorphs are in good agreement with the experiments. We further used this method to calculate the elastic constants, IR and Raman spectra, vibrational frequencies and their assignment of these polymorphs. The calculated Tran Blaha-modified Becke Johnson (TB-mBJ) electronic structure shows that both the polymorphic phases are direct band gap insulators with mixed ionic and covalent bonding. Also the TB-mBJ band gaps are improved over standard DFT functionals which are comparable with the available experiments.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Noor, N. A.; Alay-e-Abbas, S. M.; Hassan, M.; Mahmood, I.; Alahmed, Z. A.; Reshak, A. H.
2017-08-01
In this study, the elastic, electronic, optical and thermoelectric properties of CaTiO3 perovskite oxide have been investigated using first-principles calculations. The generalised gradient approximation (GGA) has been employed for evaluating structural and elastic properties, while the modified Becke Johnson functional is used for studying the optical response of this compound. In addition to ground state physical properties, we also investigate the effects of pressure (0, 30, 60, 90 and 120 GPa) on the electronic structure of CaTiO3. The application of pressure from 0 to 90 GPa shows that the indirect band gap (Γ-M) of CaTiO3 increases with increasing pressure and at 120 GPa it spontaneously decreases transforming cubic CaTiO3 to a direct (Γ-Γ) band gap material. The complex dielectric function and some optical parameters are also investigated under the application of pressures. All the calculated optical properties have been found to exhibit a shift to the higher energies with the increase of applied pressure suggesting potential optoelectronic device applications of CaTiO3. The thermoelectric properties of CaTiO3 have been computed at 0 GPa in terms of electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity and Seebeck coefficient.
Ground-state properties of the three-band Hubbard model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhang, Shiwei; Vitali, Ettore; Chiciak, Adam; Shi, Hao
The three-band Hubbard model proposed by Emery describes the CuO2 plane in cuprate superconductors by retaining both Cu and O orbitals in a minimal sense. Applying the latest developments in the auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo (AFQMC) method, we investigate ground-state properties of this model at half-filling and when lightly (under-)doped. The AFQMC uses generalized Hartree-Fock (GHF) trial wave functions to control the sign problem. A self-consistent constraint is applied. We also determine the unrestricted Hartree-Fock (UHF) and GHF ground states and compare their predictions with those from AFQMC. Similarities and differences between the three-band model and one-band Hubbard model will be discussed. Supported by NSF, and the Simons Foundation. Computing is carried out at the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment(XSEDE).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Bauer, Eric D; Mitchell, Jeremy N; Booth, C H
2009-01-01
The effects of various chemical substitutions and induced lattice disorder in the Ce- and Pu-based 115 superconductors are reviewed, with particular emphasis on results from x-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) measurements. The competition between spin, charge, and lattice interactions is at the heart of many of the strongly-correlated ground states in materials of current interest, such as in colossal magnetoresistors and high-temperature superconductors. This relationship is particularly strong in the CeTIn{sub 5} and PuTGa{sub 5} series (T = Co, Rh, Ir) of heavy-fermion superconductors. In these systems (figure 1), competition between bulk magnetic and non-magnetic ground states, as well asmore » between superconducting and normal states, are directly related to local properties around the lanthanide or actinide ion, such as the nearest-neighbor bond lengths and the local density of states at the Fermi level. Tiny changes in the latter values can easily tip the balance from one ground state to another. This paper reviews recent work by the authors exploring the relationship between local crystal and electronic structure and ground state magnetic and conducting properties in the Ce- and Pu-based 115 materials.« less
Ab-initio study of electronic structure and elastic properties of ZrC
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Mund, H. S., E-mail: hmoond@gmail.com; Ahuja, B. L.
2016-05-23
The electronic and elastic properties of ZrC have been investigated using the linear combination of atomic orbitals method within the framework of density functional theory. Different exchange-correlation functionals are taken into account within generalized gradient approximation. We have computed energy bands, density of states, elastic constants, bulk modulus, shear modulus, Young’s modulus, Poisson’s ratio, lattice parameters and pressure derivative of the bulk modulus by calculating ground state energy of the rock salt structure type ZrC.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mansikkamäki, Akseli; Popov, Alexey A.; Deng, Qingming; Iwahara, Naoya; Chibotaru, Liviu F.
2017-09-01
The magnetic properties and electronic structure of the ground and excited states of two recently characterized endohedral metallo-fullerenes, [Gd2@C78]- (1) and [Gd2@C80]- (2), have been studied by theoretical methods. The systems can be considered as [Gd2]5+ dimers encapsulated in a fullerene cage with the fifteen unpaired electrons ferromagnetically coupled into an S = 15/2 high-spin configuration in the ground state. The microscopic mechanisms governing the Gd-Gd interactions leading to the ferromagnetic ground state are examined by a combination of density functional and ab initio calculations and the full energy spectrum of the ground and lowest excited states is constructed by means of ab initio model Hamiltonians. The ground state is characterized by strong electron delocalization bordering on a σ type one-electron covalent bond and minor zero-field splitting (ZFS) that is successfully described as a second order spin-orbit coupling effect. We have shown that the observed ferromagnetic interaction originates from Hund's rule coupling and not from the conventional double exchange mechanism. The calculated ZFS parameters of 1 and 2 in their optimized geometries are in qualitative agreement with experimental EPR results. The higher excited states display less electron delocalization, but at the same time they possess unquenched first-order angular momentum. This leads to strong spin-orbit coupling and highly anisotropic energy spectrum. The analysis of the excited states presented here constitutes the first detailed study of the effects of spin-dependent delocalization in the presence of first order orbital angular momentum and the obtained results can be applied to other mixed valence lanthanide systems.
Probing the 5 f electrons in Am-I by hybrid density functional theory
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Atta-Fynn, Raymond; Ray, Asok K.
2009-11-01
The ground states of the actinides and their compounds continue to be matters of considerable controversies. Experimentally, Americium-I (Am-I) is a non-magnetic dhcp metal whereas theoretically an anti-ferromagnetic ground state is predicted. We show that hybrid density functional theory, which admixes a fraction, λ, of exact Hartree-Fock (HF) exchange with approximate DFT exchange, can correctly reproduce the ground state properties of Am. In particular, for λ=0.40, we obtain a non-magnetic ground state with equilibrium atomic volume, bulk modulus, 5 f electron population, and the density of electronic states all in good agreement with experimental data. We argue that the exact HF exchange corrects the overestimation of the approximate DFT exchange interaction.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Parusel, A. B.
2000-01-01
The ground and excited states of a covalently linked porphyrin-fullerene dyad in both its free-base and zinc forms (D. Kuciauskas et al., J. Phys. Chem. 100 (1996) 15926) have been investigated by semiempirical methods. The excited-state properties are discussed by investigation of the character of the molecular orbitals. All frontier MOs are mainly localized on either the donor or the acceptor subunit. Thus, the absorption spectra of both systems are best described as the sum of the spectra of the single components. The experimentally observed spectra are well reproduced by the theoretical computations. Both molecules undergo efficient electron transfer in polar but not in apolar solvents. This experimental finding is explained theoretically by explicitly considering solvent effects. The tenth excited state in the gas phase is of charge-separated character where an electron is transferred from the porphyrin donor to the fullerene acceptor subunit. This state is stabilized in energy in polar solvents due to its large formal dipole moment. The stabilization energy for an apolar environment such as benzene is not sufficient to lower this state to become the first excited singlet state. Thus, no electron transfer is observed, in agreement with experiment. In a polar environment such as acetonitrile, the charge-separated state becomes the S, state and electron transfer takes place, as observed experimentally. The flexible single bond connecting both the donor and acceptor subunits allows free rotation by ca. +/- 30 degrees about the optimized ground-state conformation. For the charge-separated state this optimized geometry has a maximum dipole moment. The geometry of the charge-separated state thus does not change relatively to the ground-state conformation. The electron-donating properties of porphyrin are enhanced in the zinc derivative due to a reduced porphyrin HOMO-LUMO energy gap. This yields a lower energy for the charge-separated state compared to the free-base dyad.
Ground state of a Heisenberg chain with next-nearest-neighbor bond alternation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Capriotti, Luca; Becca, Federico; Sorella, Sandro; Parola, Alberto
2003-05-01
We investigate the ground-state properties of the spin-half J1-J2 Heisenberg chain with a next-nearest-neighbor spin-Peierls dimerization using conformal field theory and Lanczos exact diagonalizations. In agreement with the results of a recent bosonization analysis by Sarkar and Sen [Phys. Rev. B 65, 172408 (2002)], we find that for small frustration (J2/J1) the system is in a Luttinger spin-fluid phase, with gapless excitations, and a finite spin-wave velocity. In the regime of strong frustration the ground state is spontaneously dimerized and the bond alternation reduces the triplet gap, leading to a slight enhancement of the critical point separating the Luttinger phase from the gapped one. An accurate determination of the phase boundary is obtained numerically from the study of the excitation spectrum.
Scattering Properties of Ground-State 23Na Vapor Using Generalized Scattering Theory
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Al-Harazneh, A. A.; Sandouqa, A. S.; Joudeh, B. R.; Ghassib, H. B.
2018-04-01
The scattering properties of ground-state 23Na vapor are investigated within the framework of the Galitskii-Migdal-Feynman formalism. Viewed as a generalized scattering theory, this formalism is used to calculate the medium phase shifts. The scattering properties of the system—the total, viscosity, spin-exchange, and average cross sections—are then computed using these phase shifts according to standard recipes. The total cross section is found to exhibit the Ramsauer-Townsend effect as well as resonance peaks. These peaks are caused by the large difference between the potentials for electronic spin-singlet and spin-triplet states. They represent quasi-bound states in the system. The results obtained for the complex spin-exchange cross sections are particularly highlighted because of their importance in the spectroscopy of the Na2 dimer. So are the results for the scattering lengths pertaining to both singlet and triplet states. Wherever possible, comparison is made with other published results.
Study of ground state optical transfer for ultracold alkali dimers
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bouloufa-Maafa, Nadia; Londono, Beatriz; Borsalino, Dimitri; Vexiau, Romain; Mahecha, Jorge; Dulieu, Olivier; Luc-Koenig, Eliane
2013-05-01
Control of molecular states by laser pulses offer promising potential applications. The manipulation of molecules by external fields requires precise knowledge of the molecular structure. Our motivation is to perform a detailed analysis of the spectroscopic properties of alkali dimers, with the aim to determine efficient optical paths to form molecules in the absolute ground state and to determine the optimal parameters of the optical lattices where those molecules are manipulated to avoid losses by collisions. To this end, we use state of the art molecular potentials, R-dependent spin-orbit coupling and transition dipole moment to perform our calculations. R-dependent SO coupling are of crucial importance because the transitions occur at internuclear distances where they are affected by this R-dependence. Efficient schemes to transfer RbCs, KRb and KCs to the absolute ground state as well as the optimal parameters of the optical lattices will be presented. This work was supported in part by ``Triangle de la Physique'' under contract 2008-007T-QCCM (Quantum Control of Cold Molecules).
Applications of a global nuclear-structure model to studies of the heaviest elements
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Moeller, P.; Nix, J.R.
1993-10-01
We present some new results on heavy-element nuclear-structure properties calculated on the basis of the finite-range droplet model and folded-Yukawa single-particle potential. Specifically, we discuss calculations of nuclear ground-state masses and microscopic corrections, {alpha}-decay properties, {beta}-decay properties, fission potential-energy surfaces, and spontaneous-fission half-lives. These results, obtained in a global nuclear-structure approach, are particularly reliable for describing the stability properties of the heaviest elements.
pH-Dependent Optical Properties of Synthetic Fluorescent Imidazoles
Berezin, Mikhail Y.; Kao, Jeff; Achilefu, Samuel
2010-01-01
An imidazole moiety is often found as an integral part of fluorophores in a variety of fluorescent proteins and many such proteins possess pH dependent light emission. In contrast, synthetic fluorescent compounds with incorporated imidazoles are rare and have not been studied as pH probes. In this report, the richness of imidazole optical properties, including pH sensitivity, was demonstrated via a novel imidazole-based fluorophore 1H-imidazol-5-yl-vinyl-benz[e]indolium. Three species corresponding to protonated, neutral and deprotonated imidazoles were identified in the broad range of pH 1-12. The absorption and emission bands of each species were assigned by comparative spectral analysis with synthesized mono- and di-N-methylated fluorescent imidazole analogues. pKa analysis in the ground and the excited states showed photoacidic properties of the fluorescent imidazoles due to the excited state proton transfer (ESPT). This effect was negligible for substituted imidazoles. The assessment of a pH sensitive center in the imidazole ring revealed the switching of the pH sensitive centers from 1-N in the ground state to 3-N in the excited state. The effect was attributed to the unique kind of the excited state charge transfer (ESCT) resulting in a positive charge swapping between two nitrogens. PMID:19212987
Nuclear equation of state from ground and collective excited state properties of nuclei
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Roca-Maza, X.; Paar, N.
2018-07-01
This contribution reviews the present status on the available constraints to the nuclear equation of state (EoS) around saturation density from nuclear structure calculations on ground and collective excited state properties of atomic nuclei. It concentrates on predictions based on self-consistent mean-field calculations, which can be considered as an approximate realization of an exact energy density functional (EDF). EDFs are derived from effective interactions commonly fitted to nuclear masses, charge radii and, in many cases, also to pseudo-data such as nuclear matter properties. Although in a model dependent way, EDFs constitute nowadays a unique tool to reliably and consistently access bulk ground state and collective excited state properties of atomic nuclei along the nuclear chart as well as the EoS. For comparison, some emphasis is also given to the results obtained with the so called ab initio approaches that aim at describing the nuclear EoS based on interactions fitted to few-body data only. Bridging the existent gap between these two frameworks will be essential since it may allow to improve our understanding on the diverse phenomenology observed in nuclei. Examples on observations from astrophysical objects and processes sensitive to the nuclear EoS are also briefly discussed. As the main conclusion, the isospin dependence of the nuclear EoS around saturation density and, to a lesser extent, the nuclear matter incompressibility remain to be accurately determined. Experimental and theoretical efforts in finding and measuring observables specially sensitive to the EoS properties are of paramount importance, not only for low-energy nuclear physics but also for nuclear astrophysics applications.
Quantifying and tuning entanglement for quantum systems
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xu, Qing
A 2D Ising model with transverse field on a triangular lattice is studied using exact diagonalization. The quantum entanglement of the system is quantified by the entanglement of formation. The ground state property of the system is studied and the quantified entanglement is shown to be closely related to the ground state wavefunction while the singularity in the entanglement as a function of the transverse field is a reasonable indicator of the quantum phase transition. In order to tune the entanglement, one can either include an impurity in the otherwise homogeneous system whose strength is tunable, or one can vary the external transverse field as a tuner. The latter kind of tuning involves complicated dynamical properties of the system. From the study of the dynamics on a comparatively smaller system, we provide ways to tune the entanglement without triggering any decoherence. The finite temperature effect is also discussed. Besides showing above physical results, the realization of the trace-minimization method in our system is provided; the scalability of such method to larger systems is argued.
Magnetic switching in Crx (x = 2-8) and its oxide cluster series
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shah, Esha V.; Roy, Debesh R.
2018-04-01
First principle studies on the magnetic ground state structure, noncollinearity, binding energy and various electronic properties of a series of Crx (x = 2-8) clusters are performed. In order to investigate the effect of ionization and oxidation on the clusters, the anionic (Crx-) and oxidized (CrxO2) analogues of those clusters are also studied in detail. To calculate adiabatic electron affinity of CrxO2 clusters, additionally CrxO2- analogues are also included in the present work. An interesting even (non-magnetic) - odd (magnetic) feature in the considered cluster series has been noticed. The similar behavior is also reflected from their electronic properties as even (less reactive) - odd (more reactive). The most of the neutral and ionized chromium clusters, viz., Crx and Crx- are found to be noncollinear in their ground states, whereas oxidation stabilized those clusters into the collinear spin alignments. The bond distances of Cr clusters are found to be close with available experimental studies.
Theoretical investigations on structural, elastic and electronic properties of thallium halides
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Singh, Rishi Pal; Singh, Rajendra Kumar; Rajagopalan, Mathrubutham
2011-04-01
Theoretical investigations on structural, elastic and electronic properties, viz. ground state lattice parameter, elastic moduli and density of states, of thallium halides (viz. TlCl and TlBr) have been made using the full potential linearized augmented plane wave method within the generalized gradient approximation (GGA). The ground state lattice parameter and bulk modulus and its pressure derivative have been obtained using optimization method. Young's modulus, shear modulus, Poisson ratio, sound velocities for longitudinal and shear waves, Debye average velocity, Debye temperature and Grüneisen parameter have also been calculated for these compounds. Calculated structural, elastic and other parameters are in good agreement with the available data.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Zhao; Han, Dan; Chen, Guohong; Chen, Shiyou
2018-03-01
The III-V binary compound semiconductors such as GaN, GaP, InN and InP have extensive applications in various optoelectronic, microwave and power-electronic devices. Using first-principles calculation, we systematically studied the structural and electronic properties of the V-V binary compounds (BiN, BiP, SbN and SbP) that are isoelectronic to GaN, GaP, InN and InP if Bi and Sb are in the +3 valence state. Interestingly, we found that the ground-state structures of BiP, SbN and SbP have the R-3m symmetry and are isostructural to the layered structure of gray arsenic, whereas BiN prefers a different ground-state structure with the C2 symmetry. Electronic structure calculations showed that the bulk BiN is a narrow bandgap semiconductor for its bandgap is about 0.2 eV. In contrast, BiP, SbN and SbP are metallic. The layered ground-state structure of the V-V binary compounds motivates us to study the electronic properties of their few-layer structures. As the structure becomes monolayer, their bandgaps increase significantly and are all in the range from about 1 eV to 1.7 eV, which are comparative to the bandgap of the monolayer gray arsenic. The monolayer BiP, SbN and SbP have indirect bandgaps, and they show a semiconductor-metal transition as the number of layers increase. Interestingly, the monolayer BiP has the largest splitting (350 meV) of the CBM valley, and thus may have potential application in novel spintronics and valleytronics devices.
Vortex line in the unitary Fermi gas
Madeira, Lucas; Vitiello, Silvio A.; Gandolfi, Stefano; ...
2016-04-06
Here, we report diffusion Monte Carlo results for the ground state of unpolarized spin-1/2 fermions in a cylindrical container and properties of the system with a vortex-line excitation. The density profile of the system with a vortex line presents a nonzero density at the core. We also calculate the ground-state energy per particle, the superfluid pairing gap, and the excitation energy per particle. Finally, these simulations can be extended to calculate the properties of vortex excitations in other strongly interacting systems such as superfluid neutron matter using realistic nuclear Hamiltonians.
Lee-Yang Polynomials and Ground States of Spin Systems
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Slawny, Joseph
2014-08-01
We obtain two kinds of results on the region in the space of the interactions of lattice systems where the Lee-Yang property holds (LY domain). First we show that the LY domain is related to interactions with exactly two ground states. Then we give a description of the full LY domain of an extended "plaquette model" analyzed by Lebowitz and Ruelle (Commun Math Phys 304:711-722,
The excited spin-triplet state of a charged exciton in quantum dots.
Molas, M R; Nicolet, A A L; Piętka, B; Babiński, A; Potemski, M
2016-09-14
We report on spectroscopic studies of resonances related to ladder of states of a charged exciton in single GaAlAs/AlAs quantum dot structures. Polarization-resolved photoluminescence, photoluminescence excitation and photon-correlation measurements were performed at low (T = 4.2 K) temperature also in magnetic field applied in Faraday configuration. The investigated resonances are assigned to three different configurations of a positively charged exciton. Together with a singlet ground state and a conventional triplet state (involving an electron from the ground state electronic s-shell), an excited triplet state, which involved an electron from the excited electronic p-shell was identified in single dots. The appearance of an emission line related to the latter complex is due to a partially suppressed electron relaxation in the investigated dots. An analysis of this emission line allows us to scrupulously determine properties of the excited triplet state and compare them with those of the conventional triplet state. Both triplets exhibit similar patterns of anisotropic fine structure and Zeeman splitting, however their amplitudes significantly differ for those two states. Presented results emphasize the role of the symmetry of the electronic state on the properties of the triplet states of two holes + electron excitonic complex.
Electronic spectra and DFT calculations of some pyrimido[1,2-a]benzimidazole derivatives
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Elshakre, Mohamed E.; Moustafa, H.; Hassaneen, Huwaida. M. E.; Moussa, Abdelrahim. Z.
2015-06-01
Ground state properties of 2,4-diphenyl-1,4-dihydrobenzo[4,5]imidazo[1,2-a]pyrimidine, compound 1, and its derivatives are investigated experimentally and theoretically in Dioxane and DMF. The calculations show that all the studied compounds (1-7) are non-planar, resulting in a significant impact on the electronic and structural properties. The ground state properties of compounds 1-7 at B3LYP/6-311G (d, p) show that compound 5 has the lowest EHOMO, ELUMO, and ΔE indicating highest reactivity. Compound 7 is found to have the highest polarity. The observed UV spectra in Dioxane and DMF of compounds 1-4 show 2 bands, while compounds 5-7 show 4 bands in both solvents. Band maxima (λmax) and intensities of the spectra are found to have solvent dependence reflected as blue and red shifts. The theoretical spectra computed at TD-B3LYP/6-311G (d, p) in gas phase, Dioxane and DMF indicate a good agreement with the observed spectra.
Fractional statistics and quantum scaling properties of the integrable Penson-Kolb-Hubbard chain
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vitoriano, Carlindo; Coutinho-Filho, M. D.
2010-09-01
We investigate the ground-state and low-temperature properties of the integrable version of the Penson-Kolb-Hubbard chain. The model obeys fractional statistical properties, which give rise to fractional elementary excitations and manifest differently in the four regions of the phase diagram U/t versus n , where U is the Coulomb coupling, t is the correlated hopping amplitude, and n is the particle density. In fact, we can find local pair formation, fractionalization of the average occupation number per orbital k , or U - and n -dependent average electric charge per orbital k . We also study the scaling behavior near the U -driven quantum phase transitions and characterize their universality classes. Finally, it is shown that in the regime of parameters where local pair formation is energetically more favorable, the ground state exhibits power-law superconductivity; we also stress that above half filling the pair-hopping term stabilizes local Cooper pairs in the repulsive- U regime for U
Role of Boron Element on the Electronic Properties of α-Nb5Si3: A First-Principle Study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pan, Yong; Lin, Yuanhua
2018-03-01
Transition metal silicides (TMSis) are attracting increasing interest from the microelectronics and nanoelectronic industries. In this paper, we use the first-principles method to investigate the B-doped mechanism and the influence of B on the electronic properties of α-Nb5Si3. The calculated results show that B-doped Nb5Si3 is thermodynamically stable at the ground state. The calculated electronic structure shows that the thermodynamically stable B-doped Nb5Si3 is attributed to the 3D-network B-Si bonds and B-Nb bond. In particular, B element prefers to occupy B -IT4 site in comparison to other sites. Moreover, the calculated band structure indicates that Nb5Si3 exhibits metallic behavior at the ground state. We find that B-doping can improve charge overlap between conduction band and the valence band, which effectively improves the electronic properties of Nb5Si3.
Stability of superheavy nuclei
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pomorski, K.; Nerlo-Pomorska, B.; Bartel, J.; Schmitt, C.
2018-03-01
The potential-energy surfaces of an extended set of heavy and superheavy even-even nuclei with 92 ≤Z ≤126 and isospins 40 ≤N -Z ≤74 are evaluated within the recently developed Fourier shape parametrization. Ground-state and decay properties are studied for 324 different even-even isotopes in a four-dimensional deformation space, defined by nonaxiality, quadrupole, octupole, and hexadecapole degrees of freedom. Nuclear deformation energies are evaluated in the framework of the macroscopic-microscopic approach, with the Lublin-Strasbourg drop model and a Yukawa-folded mean-field potential. The evolution of the ground-state equilibrium shape (and possible isomeric, metastable states) is studied as a function of Z and N . α -decay Q values and half-lives, as well as fission-barrier heights, are deduced. In order to understand the transition from asymmetric to symmetric fission along the Fm isotopic chain, the properties of all identified fission paths are investigated. Good agreement is found with experimental data wherever available. New interesting features about the population of different fission modes for nuclei beyond Fm are predicted.
Sarsa, Antonio; Le Sech, Claude
2011-09-13
Variational Monte Carlo method is a powerful tool to determine approximate wave functions of atoms, molecules, and solids up to relatively large systems. In the present work, we extend the variational Monte Carlo approach to study confined systems. Important properties of the atoms, such as the spatial distribution of the electronic charge, the energy levels, or the filling of electronic shells, are modified under confinement. An expression of the energy very similar to the estimator used for free systems is derived. This opens the possibility to study confined systems with little changes in the solution of the corresponding free systems. This is illustrated by the study of helium atom in its ground state (1)S and the first (3)S excited state confined by spherical, cylindrical, and plane impenetrable surfaces. The average interelectronic distances are also calculated. They decrease in general when the confinement is stronger; however, it is seen that they present a minimum for excited states under confinement by open surfaces (cylindrical, planes) around the radii values corresponding to ionization. The ground (2)S and the first (2)P and (2)D excited states of the lithium atom are calculated under spherical constraints for different confinement radii. A crossing between the (2)S and (2)P states is observed around rc = 3 atomic units, illustrating the modification of the atomic energy level under confinement. Finally the carbon atom is studied in the spherical symmetry by using both variational and diffusion Monte Carlo methods. It is shown that the hybridized state sp(3) becomes lower in energy than the ground state (3)P due to a modification and a mixing of the atomic orbitals s, p under strong confinement. This result suggests a model, at least of pedagogical interest, to interpret the basic properties of carbon atom in chemistry.
Barakat, Khaldoon A; Cundari, Thomas R; Omary, Mohammad A
2003-11-26
DFT calculations were used to optimize the phosphorescent excited state of three-coordinate [Au(PR3)3]+ complexes. The results indicate that the complexes rearrange from their singlet ground-state trigonal planar geometry to a T-shape in the lowest triplet luminescent excited state. The optimized structure of the exciton contradicts the structure predicted based on the AuP bonding properties of the ground-state HOMO and LUMO. The rearrangement to T-shape is a Jahn-Teller distortion because an electron is taken from the degenerate e' (5dxy, 5dx2-y2) orbital upon photoexcitation of the ground-state D3h complex. The calculated UV absorption and visible emission energies are consistent with the experimental data and explain the large Stokes' shifts while such correlations are not possible in optimized models that constrained the exciton to the ground-state trigonal geometry.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Mishev, S., E-mail: mishev@theor.jinr.ru; Voronov, V. V., E-mail: voronov@theor.jinr.ru
The role of the nucleon correlations in the ground states of even–even nuclei on the properties of low-lying states in odd–even spherical and transitional nuclei is studied. We reason about this subject using the language of the quasiparticle–phonon model which we extend to take account of the existence of quasiparticle⊗phonon configurations in the wave functions of the ground states of the even–even cores. Of paramount importance to the structure of the low-lying states happens to be the quasiparticle–phonon interaction in the ground states which we evaluated using both the standard and the extended random phase approximations. Numerical calculations for nucleimore » in the barium and cadmium regions are performed using pairing and quadrupole–quadrupole interaction modes which have the dominant impact on the lowest-lying states’ structure. It is found that states with same angular momentum and parity become closer in energy as compared to the predictions of models disregarding the backward amplitudes, which turns out to be in accord with the experimental data. In addition we found that the interaction between the last quasiparticle and the ground-state phonon admixtures produces configurations which contribute significantly to the magnetic dipolemoment of odd-A nuclei. It also reveals a potential for reproducing their experimental values which proves impossible if this interaction is neglected.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, Tao; Zhu, Shaobing; Li, Xiaolin; Qian, Jun; Wang, Yuzhu
2014-06-01
Using fitted model potential curves of the ground and lowest three excited states yielded by the relativistic Kramers-restricted multireference configuration interaction method with 19 electrons correlated, we theoretically investigate the rovibrational properties including the number of vibrational state and diagonally distributed Franck-Condon factors for a 87Rb84Sr molecule. Benefiting from a turning point at about v'=20 for the Franck-Condon factors between the ground state and spin-orbit 2(Ω=1/2) excited state, we choose |2(Ω=1/2),v'=21,J'=1> as the intermediate state in the three-level model to theoretically analyze the possibility of performing stimulated Raman adiabatic passage to transfer weakly bound RbSr molecules to the rovibrational ground state. With 1550 nm pump laser (2 W/cm2) and 1342 nm dump laser (10 mW/cm2) employed and appropriate settings of pulse time length (about 300 μs), we have formalistically achieved a round-trip transfer efficiency of 60%, namely 77% for one-way transfer. The results demonstrate the possibility of producing polar 87Rb84Sr molecules efficiently in a submicrokelvin regime, and further provide promising directions for future theoretical and experimental studies on alkali-alkaline(rare)-earth dimers.
A Multireference Configuration Interaction Study of the Photodynamics of Nitroethylene
2014-01-01
Extended multireference configuration interaction with singles and doubles (MR-CISD) calculations of nitroethylene (H2C=CHNO2) were carried out to investigate the photodynamical deactivation paths to the ground state. The ground (S0) and the first five valence excited electronic states (S1–S5) were investigated. In the first step, vertical excitations and potential energy curves for CH2 and NO2 torsions and CH2 out-of-plane bending starting from the ground state geometry were computed. Afterward, five conical intersections, one between each pair of adjacent states, were located. The vertical calculations mostly confirm the previous assignment of experimental spectrum and theoretical results using lower-level calculations. The conical intersections have as main features the torsion of the CH2 moiety, different distortions of the NO2 group and CC, CN, and NO bond stretchings. In these conical intersections, the NO2 group plays an important role, also seen in excited state investigations of other nitro molecules. Based on the conical intersections found, a photochemical nonradiative deactivation process after a π–π* excitation to the bright S5 state is proposed. In particular, the possibility of NO2 release in the ground state, an important property in nitro explosives, was found to be possible. PMID:25158277
Quantum Hall ferromagnets and transport properties of buckled Dirac materials
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Luo, Wenchen; Chakraborty, Tapash
2015-10-01
We study the ground states and low-energy excitations of a generic Dirac material with spin-orbit coupling and a buckling structure in the presence of a magnetic field. The ground states can be classified into three types under different conditions: SU(2), easy-plane, and Ising quantum Hall ferromagnets. For the SU(2) and the easy-plane quantum Hall ferromagnets there are goldstone modes in the collective excitations, while all the modes are gapped in an Ising-type ground state. We compare the Ising quantum Hall ferromagnet with that of bilayer graphene and present the domain-wall solution at finite temperatures. We then specify the phase transitions and transport gaps in silicene in Landau levels 0 and 1. The phase diagram depends strongly on the magnetic field and the dielectric constant. We note that there exist triple points in the phase diagrams in Landau level N =1 that could be observed in experiments.
The One-Hole, One-Dimensional Hubbard Model at U = ∞
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hodge, William; Holzwarth, Natalie; Kerr, William
2008-03-01
The Hubbard Hamiltonian is the simplest model that describes interacting electrons on a lattice. In this work, we use the properties of stochastic matrices to examine the ground state with an even number of lattice sites and one electron less than half-filling. We show that there exists a highly symmetric state with energy -2 (in units where t = 1) at all U. At U = ∞ this state becomes the lowest energy state, consistent with the established lower energy bound. ootnotetextS. A. Trugman, Phys. Rev. B 42, 6612 (1990) Using this result, several properties of the strongly coupled ground state are derived, including the chemical potential and momentum distribution. This method may be applicable to other models as well. Disagreements between our results and previous work are examined.
An LDA+U study of the photoemission spectra of ground state phase of americium and curium
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Islam, Md; Ray, Asok
2009-03-01
We have investigated the photoemission spectra and other ground state properties such as equilibrium volume and bulk modulus of dhcp americium and the density of states and magnetic properties of dhcp curium using LDA+U method. Our calculations show that spin polarized americium is energetically favorable but spin degenerate configuration produces experimental quantities much better than that calculated using spin polarized configuration. The DOS calculated using LDA+U with both non-magnetic and spin polarized configurations is compared and the non-magnetic DOS is shown to be in good agreement with experimental photoemission spectra when U=4.5 eV. In spin polarized case, U is observed to increase the splitting between occupied and unoccupied bands by enhancing Stoner parameter. The results are shown to be in good agreement with that calculated using dynamical mean field theory for these two heavy actinides. For curium, exchange interaction appears to play the dominant role in its magnetic stability.
Correlation between electronic structure and electron conductivity in MoX2 (X = S, Se, and Te)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Muzakir, Saifful Kamaluddin
2017-12-01
Layered structure molybdenum dichalcogenides, MoX2 (X = S, Se, and Te) are in focus as reversible charge storage electrode for pseudocapacitor applications. Correlation between number of layer and bandgap of the materials has been established by previous researchers. The correlation would reveal a connection between the bandgap and charge storage properties i.e., amount of charges that could be stored, and speed of storage or dissociation. In this work, fundamental parameters viz., (i) size-offset between a monolayer and exciton Bohr radius of MoX2 and (ii) ground and excited state electron density have been studied. We have identified realistic monolayer models of MoX2 using quantum chemical calculations which explain a correlation between size-offset and charge storage properties. We conclude that as the size-offset decreases, the higher possibility of wave functions overlap between the excited state, and ground state electrons; therefore the higher the electron mobility, and conductivity of the MoX2 would be.
A hybrid system of a membrane oscillator coupled to ultracold atoms
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kampschulte, Tobias
2015-05-01
The control over micro- and nanomechanical oscillators has recently made impressive progress. First experiments demonstrated ground-state cooling and single-phonon control of high-frequency oscillators using cryogenic cooling and techniques of cavity optomechanics. Coupling engineered mechanical structures to microscopic quantum system with good coherence properties offers new possibilities for quantum control of mechanical vibrations, precision sensing and quantum-level signal transduction. Ultracold atoms are an attractive choice for such hybrid systems: Mechanical can either be coupled to the motional state of trapped atoms, which can routinely be ground-state cooled, or to the internal states, for which a toolbox of coherent manipulation and detection exists. Furthermore, atomic collective states with non-classical properties can be exploited to infer the mechanical motion with reduced quantum noise. Here we use trapped ultracold atoms to sympathetically cool the fundamental vibrational mode of a Si3N4 membrane. The coupling of membrane and atomic motion is mediated by laser light over a macroscopic distance and enhanced by an optical cavity around the membrane. The observed cooling of the membrane from room temperature to 650 +/- 230 mK shows that our hybrid mechanical-atomic system operates at a large cooperativity. Our scheme could provide ground-state cooling and quantum control of low-frequency oscillators such as levitated nanoparticles, in a regime where purely optomechanical techniques cannot reach the ground state. Furthermore, we will present a scheme where an optomechanical system is coupled to internal states of ultracold atoms. The mechanical motion is translated into a polarization rotation which drives Raman transitions between atomic ground states. Compared to the motional-state coupling, the new scheme enables to couple atoms to high-frequency structures such as optomechanical crystals.
Roton Excitations and the Fluid-Solid Phase Transition in Superfluid 2D Yukawa Bosons
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Molinelli, S.; Galli, D. E.; Reatto, L.; Motta, M.
2016-10-01
We compute several ground-state properties and the dynamical structure factor of a zero-temperature system of Bosons interacting with the 2D screened Coulomb (2D-SC) potential. We resort to the exact shadow path integral ground state (SPIGS) quantum Monte Carlo method to compute the imaginary-time correlation function of the model, and to the genetic algorithm via falsification of theories (GIFT) to retrieve the dynamical structure factor. We provide a detailed comparison of ground-state properties and collective excitations of 2D-SC and ^4He atoms. The roton energy of the 2D-SC system is an increasing function of density, and not a decreasing one as in ^4He. This result is in contrast with the view that the roton is the soft mode of the fluid-solid transition. We uncover a remarkable quasi-universality of backflow and of other properties when expressed in terms of the amount of short-range order as quantified by the height of the first peak of the static structure factor.
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Structures of the mycotoxin zearalenone and its analogs were investigated using density functional theory methods to gain insight into the ground state and excited state properties related to detection. Zearalenone is an estrogenic mycotoxin that can occur in agricultural commodities, and ultraviole...
Ground state and magnetic phase transitions of the spin Lieb nanolattice: Monte Carlo simulations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Masrour, R.; Jabar, A.
2018-02-01
We study the ground state and magnetic properties of the spin Lieb nanolattice with three lattice sites with spins (S = 2 , σ = 1 / 2 , q = 3 / 2) using Monte Carlo simulations. The ground state phase diagrams of the Lieb nanolattice have been studied. The phase diagrams show some key features: coexistence between regions, points where six, eight and ten states can coexist. The total and partial magnetization of each sublattice is given and the corresponding magnetic susceptibility is also found. The variation of total magnetization with the exchange interaction RSq and Rσq of the Lieb nanolattice with three lattice sites with spins (S , σ , q) has been studied. Moreover, the total magnetization versus the fields Δ /JSσ of the Lieb nanolattice with three lattice sites with spins (S , σ , q) are established for several values of Rσq and Rsq. Magnetic hysteresis cycles of the Lieb nanolattice with three lattice sites with spins (S , σ , q) are found for several values of Rsq and temperature. We show that the superparamagnetism behaviour appears for a weak coupling value between S and q thus around the transition temperature.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lofrumento, C.; Arci, F.; Carlesi, S.; Ricci, M.; Castellucci, E.; Becucci, M.
2015-02-01
The analysis of ground state structural and vibrational properties of Safranin-O is presented. The experimental results, obtained by FTIR, Raman and SERS spectroscopy, are discussed in comparison to the results of DFT calculations carried out at the B3LYP/6-311 + G(d,p) level of theory. The calculated spectra reproduce quite satisfactorily the experimental data. The calculated Safranin-O equilibrium structure and the assignment of the vibrational spectra are reported as well. From the changes between Raman and SERS spectra a model is presented for the interaction of Safranin-O with silver nanoparticles.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schmidt, Matthew; Roy, Pierre-Nicholas
2018-03-01
We extend the Langevin equation Path Integral Ground State (LePIGS), a ground state quantum molecular dynamics method, to simulate flexible molecular systems and calculate both energetic and structural properties. We test the approach with the H2O and D2O monomers and dimers. We systematically optimize all simulation parameters and use a unity trial wavefunction. We report ground state energies, dissociation energies, and structural properties using three different water models, two of which are empirically based, q-TIP4P/F and q-SPC/Fw, and one which is ab initio, MB-pol. We demonstrate that our energies calculated from LePIGS can be merged seamlessly with low temperature path integral molecular dynamics calculations and note the similarities between the two methods. We also benchmark our energies against previous diffusion Monte Carlo calculations using the same potentials and compare to experimental results. We further demonstrate that accurate vibrational energies of the H2O and D2O monomer can be calculated from imaginary time correlation functions generated from the LePIGS simulations using solely the unity trial wavefunction.
Ground-state properties of neutron magic nuclei
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Saxena, G., E-mail: gauravphy@gmail.com; Kaushik, M.
2017-03-15
A systematic study of the ground-state properties of the entire chains of even–even neutron magic nuclei represented by isotones of traditional neutron magic numbers N = 8, 20, 40, 50, 82, and 126 has been carried out using relativistic mean-field plus Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer approach. Our present investigation includes deformation, binding energy, two-proton separation energy, single-particle energy, rms radii along with proton and neutron density profiles, etc. Several of these results are compared with the results calculated using nonrelativistic approach (Skyrme–Hartree–Fock method) along with available experimental data and indeed they are found with excellent agreement. In addition, the possible locations of themore » proton and neutron drip-lines, the (Z, N) values for the new shell closures, disappearance of traditional shell closures as suggested by the detailed analyzes of results are also discussed in detail.« less
Ground state properties of 3d metals from self-consistent GW approach
Kutepov, Andrey L.
2017-10-06
The self consistent GW approach (scGW) has been applied to calculate the ground state properties (equilibrium Wigner–Seitz radius S WZ and bulk modulus B) of 3d transition metals Sc, Ti, V, Fe, Co, Ni, and Cu. The approach systematically underestimates S WZ with average relative deviation from the experimental data of about 1% and it overestimates the calculated bulk modulus with relative error of about 25%. We show that scGW is superior in accuracy as compared to the local density approximation but it is less accurate than the generalized gradient approach for the materials studied. If compared to the randommore » phase approximation, scGW is slightly less accurate, but its error for 3d metals looks more systematic. Lastly, the systematic nature of the deviation from the experimental data suggests that the next order of the perturbation theory should allow one to reduce the error.« less
Ground state properties of 3d metals from self-consistent GW approach
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kutepov, Andrey L.
The self consistent GW approach (scGW) has been applied to calculate the ground state properties (equilibrium Wigner–Seitz radius S WZ and bulk modulus B) of 3d transition metals Sc, Ti, V, Fe, Co, Ni, and Cu. The approach systematically underestimates S WZ with average relative deviation from the experimental data of about 1% and it overestimates the calculated bulk modulus with relative error of about 25%. We show that scGW is superior in accuracy as compared to the local density approximation but it is less accurate than the generalized gradient approach for the materials studied. If compared to the randommore » phase approximation, scGW is slightly less accurate, but its error for 3d metals looks more systematic. Lastly, the systematic nature of the deviation from the experimental data suggests that the next order of the perturbation theory should allow one to reduce the error.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kanagaprabha, S.; Rajeswarapalanichamy, R.; Sudhapriyanga, G.; Murugan, A.; Santhosh, M.; Iyakutti, K.
2015-06-01
The structural and mechanical properties of CrH and MnH are investigated using first principles calculation based on density functional theory as implemented in VASP code with generalized gradient approximation. The calculated ground state properties are in good agreement with previous experimental and other theoretical results. A structural phase transition from NaCl to NiAs phase at a pressure of 76 GPa is predicted for both CrH and MnH.
Comparative study of metallic silicide-germanide orthorhombic MnP systems.
Connétable, Damien; Thomas, Olivier
2013-09-04
We present a comparative study of the structural, energetic, electronic and elastic properties of MX type MnP systems (where X=Si or Ge, and M=Pt, Pd or Ni) using first-principles calculations. The optimized ground state properties of these systems are in excellent agreement with the experimental values. A detailed comparative study of the elastic properties of polycrystalline structures is also presented. We analyze the relationship between the composition and the properties of the systems. Finally, we present the properties of NiSi1-xGex alloys. We show that these properties depend linearly on the Ge content of the alloy. This work has important consequences for semiconductor devices in which silicides, germanides and alloys thereof are used as contact materials.
Ground-state energy of an exciton-(LO) phonon system in a parabolic quantum well
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gerlach, B.; Wüsthoff, J.; Smondyrev, M. A.
1999-12-01
This paper presents a variational study of the ground-state energy of an exciton-(LO) phonon system, which is spatially confined to a quantum well. The exciton-phonon interaction is of Fröhlich type, the confinement potentials are assumed to be parabolic functions of the coordinates. Making use of functional integral techniques, the phonon part of the problem can be eliminated exactly, leading us to an effective two-particle system, which has the same spectral properties as the original one. Subsequently, Jensen's inequality is applied to obtain an upper bound on the ground-state energy. The main intention of this paper is to analyze the influence of the quantum-well-induced localization of the exciton on its ground-state energy (or its binding energy, respectively). To do so, we neglect any mismatch of the masses or the dielectric constants, but admit an arbitrary strength of the confinement potentials. Our approach allows for a smooth interpolation of the ultimate limits of vanishing and infinite confinement, corresponding to the cases of a free three-dimensional and a free two-dimensional exciton-phonon system. The interpolation formula for the ground-state energy bound corresponds to similar formulas for the free polaron or the free exciton-phonon system. These bounds in turn are known to compare favorably with all previous ones, which we are aware of.
Role of spin-orbit coupling in the Kugel-Khomskii model on the honeycomb lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koga, Akihisa; Nakauchi, Shiryu; Nasu, Joji
2018-03-01
We study the effective spin-orbital model for honeycomb-layered transition metal compounds, applying the second-order perturbation theory to the three-orbital Hubbard model with the anisotropic hoppings. This model is reduced to the Kitaev model in the strong spin-orbit coupling limit. Combining the cluster mean-field approximations with the exact diagonalization, we treat the Kugel-Khomskii type superexchange interaction and spin-orbit coupling on an equal footing to discuss ground-state properties. We find that a zigzag ordered state is realized in the model within nearest-neighbor interactions. We clarify how the ordered state competes with the nonmagnetic state, which is adiabatically connected to the quantum spin liquid state realized in a strong spin-orbit coupling limit. Thermodynamic properties are also addressed. The present paper should provide another route to account for the Kitaev-based magnetic properties in candidate materials.
Understanding the transport properties of YNiBi half- Heusler alloy: An Ab-initio study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sharma, Sonu; Kumar, Pradeep
2017-05-01
In the present work, we have studied the electronic and transport properties of YNiBi half-Heusler alloy by combining the first principles methods with the Boltzmann transport theory. The electronic band structure and total density of states plot suggest the presence of semiconducting ground state in the compound. The value of indirect band gap is found to be ˜0.21 eV. The origin of the band gap is associated primarily with the interaction between the Ni 3d and the Y 4d states. The room temperature value of Seebeck coefficient is ˜230 µVK-1. A moderate power factor of about 12×1014 μ Wcm-1 K-2 s-1 is obtained at 980 k.
Experimental Insights into Ground-State Selection of Quantum XY Pyrochlores
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hallas, Alannah M.; Gaudet, Jonathan; Gaulin, Bruce D.
2018-03-01
Extensive experimental investigations of the magnetic structures and excitations in the XY pyrochlores have been carried out over the past decade. Three families of XY pyrochlores have emerged: Yb2B2O7, Er2B2O7, and, most recently, [Formula: see text]Co2F7. In each case, the magnetic cation (either Yb, Er, or Co) exhibits XY anisotropy within the local pyrochlore coordinates, a consequence of crystal field effects. Materials in these families display rich phase behavior and are candidates for exotic ground states, such as quantum spin ice, and exotic ground-state selection via order-by-disorder mechanisms. In this review, we present an experimental summary of the ground-state properties of the XY pyrochlores, including evidence that they are strongly influenced by phase competition. We empirically demonstrate the signatures for phase competition in a frustrated magnet: multiple heat capacity anomalies, suppressed TN or TC, sample- and pressure-dependent ground states, and unconventional spin dynamics.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Okubo, Tsuyoshi; Shinjo, Kazuya; Yamaji, Youhei; Kawashima, Naoki; Sota, Shigetoshi; Tohyama, Takami; Imada, Masatoshi
2017-08-01
We investigate the ground state properties of Na2IrO3 based on numerical calculations of the recently proposed ab initio Hamiltonian represented by Kitaev and extended Heisenberg interactions. To overcome the limitation posed by small tractable system sizes in the exact diagonalization study employed in a previous study [Y. Yamaji et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 107201 (2014), 10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.107201], we apply a two-dimensional density matrix renormalization group and an infinite-size tensor-network method. By calculating at much larger system sizes, we critically test the validity of the exact diagonalization results. The results consistently indicate that the ground state of Na2IrO3 is a magnetically ordered state with zigzag configuration in agreement with experimental observations and the previous diagonalization study. Applications of the two independent methods in addition to the exact diagonalization study further uncover a consistent and rich phase diagram near the zigzag phase beyond the accessibility of the exact diagonalization. For example, in the parameter space away from the ab initio value of Na2IrO3 controlled by the trigonal distortion, we find three phases: (i) an ordered phase with the magnetic moment aligned mutually in 120 degrees orientation on every third hexagon, (ii) a magnetically ordered phase with a 16-site unit cell, and (iii) an ordered phase with presumably incommensurate periodicity of the moment. It suggests that potentially rich magnetic structures may appear in A2IrO3 compounds for A other than Na. The present results also serve to establish the accuracy of the first-principles approach in reproducing the available experimental results thereby further contributing to finding a route to realize the Kitaev spin liquid.
Electronic structure and spectra of the RbHe van der Waals system including spin orbit interaction
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dhiflaoui, Jamila; Bejaoui, Mohamed; Berriche, Hamid
2017-12-01
The potential energy interaction, the spectroscopic properties and dipole functions of the RbHe van der Waals dimer have been investigated. We used a one-electron pseudopotential approach and large Gaussian basis sets to represent the two atoms Rb and He. The Rb+ core and the electron-He interactions were replaced by semi-local pseudopotentials and a core-core interaction is included. Therefore, the number of active electrons of RbHe is reduced to only one electron. Consequently, the potential energy curves and dipole moments for many electronic states dissociating into Rb(5s,5p,4d,6s,6p,5d,7s)+He are performed at the SCF level. In addition, the spin-orbit coupling is included in the calculation. The Rb+He interaction, in its ground state, is taken from accurate CCSD (T) calculations and fitted to an analytical expression for a better description of the potential in all internuclear ranges. The spectroscopic properties of the RbHe electronic states are extracted. The comparison of these constants has shown a very good agreement for the ground state as well as for the lower excited states when compared with existing theoretical and experimental studies.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zafra, José Luis; González Cano, Rafael C.; Ruiz Delgado, M. Carmen
A analysis of the electronic and molecular structures of new molecular materials based on zethrene is presented with particular attention to those systems having a central benzo-quinoidal core able to generate Kekulé biradicals whose stability is provided by the aromaticity recovery in this central unit. These Kekulé biradicals display singlet ground electronic states thanks to double spin polarization and have low-energy lying triplet excited states also featured by the aromaticity gain. Pro-aromatization is also the driving force for the stabilization of the ionized species. Moreover, the low energy lying singlet excited states also display a profound biradical fingerprint allowing tomore » singlet exciton fission. These properties are discussed in the context of the size of the zethrene core and of its substitution. The work encompasses all known long zethrenes and makes use of a variety of experimental techniques, such as Raman, UV-Vis-NIR absorption, transient absorption, in situ spectroelectrochemistry and quantum chemical calculations. This study reveals how the insertion of suitable molecular modules (i.e., quinoidal) opens the door to new intriguing molecular properties exploitable in organic electronics.« less
Ligand Field Strength Mediates Electron Delocalization in Octahedral [((H)L)2Fe6(L')m](n+) Clusters.
Hernández Sánchez, Raúl; Zheng, Shao-Liang; Betley, Theodore A
2015-09-02
To assess the impact of terminal ligand binding on a variety of cluster properties (redox delocalization, ground-state stabilization, and breadth of redox state accessibility), we prepared three electron-transfer series based on the hexanuclear iron cluster [((H)L)2Fe6(L')m](n+) in which the terminal ligand field strength was modulated from weak to strong (L' = DMF, MeCN, CN). The extent of intracore M-M interactions is gauged by M-M distances, spin ground state persistence, and preference for mixed-valence states as determined by electrochemical comproportionation constants. Coordination of DMF to the [((H)L)2Fe6] core leads to weaker Fe-Fe interactions, as manifested by the observation of ground states populated only at lower temperatures (<100 K) and by the greater evidence of valence trapping within the mixed-valence states. Comproportionation constants determined electrochemically (Kc = 10(4)-10(8)) indicate that the redox series exhibits electronic delocalization (class II-III), yet no intervalence charge transfer (IVCT) bands are observable in the near-IR spectra. Ligation of the stronger σ donor acetonitrile results in stabilization of spin ground states to higher temperatures (∼300 K) and a high degree of valence delocalization (Kc = 10(2)-10(8)) with observable IVCT bands. Finally, the anionic cyanide-bound series reveals the highest degree of valence delocalization with the most intense IVCT bands (Kc = 10(12)-10(20)) and spin ground state population beyond room temperature. Across the series, at a given formal oxidation level, the capping ligand on the hexairon cluster dictates the overall properties of the aggregate, modulating the redox delocalization and the persistence of the intracore coupling of the metal sites.
Final Scientific/Technical Report (DE-FG02-05ER46201)
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Car, Roberto
The research supported by this grant focused on the quantum mechanical theory of the electrons in materials and molecules. Progress was made in dealing with electronic correlation effects in the ground state energy of molecular systems, and with topological concepts to classify the electronic state of molecules and materials, including excitation and transport properties. The physical and chemical properties of molecules and materials derive from their electronic structure, but the latter cannot be calculated exactly even with the most powerful computers because the computational cost of solving the exact equations of quantum mechanics increases exponentially with the number of electrons.more » The exponential cost originates from the correlations among the electrons that repel each other via Coulombic forces. In this project we have developed a new functional approximation for the ground state electronic energy that includes explicitly, and in a controllable way, the effects of the interelectronic correlations. In addition we have further developed topological concepts for classifying the electronic states of periodic ring molecules and solids. Topological concepts are very powerful because they allow us to predict subtle properties of materials and molecules using very general geometrical properties of the electron wavefunctions that do not depend on the quantitative details of the electronic interactions, which are very difficult to calculate with high accuracy. The development of a new class of controlled functional approximations for the ground state energy of molecules and materials was the main goal of the project. It has been fulfilled with the formulation of the occupation-probabilities natural orbital functional theory (OP-NOFT). This approach introduces new theoretical concepts but practical application has proved to be harder than anticipated. So far it has been utilized only at its lowest level of approximation in the context of relatively small molecules (with up to 16 atoms). The study of topological properties of the electron wavefunctions in materials was not proposed in the original proposal but was prompted during the funding period by our interaction with leading experimental groups in materials chemistry and physics at Princeton University.« less
Ground-Based Lidar Measurements During the CALIPSO and Twilight Zone (CATZ) Campaign
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Berkoff, Timothy; Qian, Li; Kleidman, Richard; Stewart, Sebastian; Welton, Ellsworth; Li, Zhu; Holbem, Brent
2008-01-01
The CALIPSO and Twilight Zone (CATZ) field campaign was carried out between June 26th and August 29th of 2007 in the multi-state Maryland-Virginia-Pennsylvania region of the U.S. to study aerosol properties and cloud-aerosol interactions during overpasses of the CALIPSO satellite. Field work was conducted on selected days when CALIPSO ground tracks occurred in the region. Ground-based measurements included data from multiple Cimel sunphotometers that were placed at intervals along a segment of the CALIPSO ground-track. These measurements provided sky radiance and AOD measurements to enable joints inversions and comparisons with CALIPSO retrievals. As part of this activity, four ground-based lidars provided backscatter measurements (at 523 nm) in the region. Lidars at University of Maryland Baltimore County (Catonsville, MD) and Goddard Space Flight Center (Greenbelt, MD) provided continuous data during the campaign, while two micro-pulse lidar (MPL) systems were temporarily stationed at various field locations directly on CALIPSO ground-tracks. As a result, thirteen on-track ground-based lidar observations were obtained from eight different locations in the region. In some cases, nighttime CALIPSO coincident measurements were also obtained. In most studies reported to date, ground-based lidar validation efforts for CALIPSO rely on systems that are at fixed locations some distance away from the satellite ground-track. The CATZ ground-based lidar data provide an opportunity to examine vertical structure properties of aerosols and clouds both on and off-track simultaneously during a CALIPSO overpass. A table of available ground-based lidar measurements during this campaign will be presented, along with example backscatter imagery for a number of coincident cases with CALIPSO. Results indicate that even for a ground-based measurements directly on-track, comparisons can still pose a challenge due to the differing spatio-temporal properties of the ground and satellite observations. The multiple-lidar data during the CATZ campaign is expected to provide additional information on regional aerosol and cloud dynamics for give overpass, and enable a more realistic assessment of ground-to-satellite correlations. Future work is anticipated to finalize calibrated lidar backscatter profiles and utilization of wind trajectory information to further enable comparisons to CALIPS data.
Banks, W.S.; Smith, B.S.; Donnelly, C.A.
1996-01-01
The U.S. Army disposed chemical agents, laboratory materials, and unexploded ordnance at O-Field in the Edgewood area of Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, from before World War II until at least the 1950's. Soil, ground water, surface water,and wetland sediments in the O-Field area were contaminated from the disposal activity. A ground-water-flow model of the O-Field area was constructed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in 1989 to simulate flow in the central and southern part of the Gunpowder Neck. The USGS began an additional study of the contamination in the O-Field area in cooperation with the U.S. Army in 1990 to (1) further define the hydrogeologic framework of the O-Field area, (2) characterize the hydraulic properties of the aquifers and confining units, and (3) define ground-water flow paths at O-Field based on the current data and simulations of ground-water flow. A water-table aquifer, an upper confining unit, and an upper confined aquifer comprise the shallow ground-water aquifer system of the O-Field area. A lower confining unit, through which ground-water movement is negligible, is considered a lower boundary to the shallow aquifer system. These units are all part of the Pleistocene Talbot Formation. The model developed in the previous study was redesigned using the data collected during this study and emphasized New O-Field. The current steady-state model was calibrated to water levels of June 1993. The rate of ground-water flow calculated by the model was approximately 0.48 feet per day (ft/d) and the rate determined from chlorofluorocarbon dates was approximately 0.39 ft/d.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gálisová, Lucia
2018-05-01
Ground-state properties of a hybrid double-tetrahedral chain, in which the localized Ising spins regularly alternate with triangular plaquettes occupied by a variable number of mobile electrons, are exactly investigated. We demonstrate that the zero-temperature phase diagram of the model involves several non-degenerate, two-fold degenerate and macroscopically degenerate chiral phases. Low-temperature dependencies of the entropy and specific heat are also examined in order to gain a deeper insight into the degeneracy of individual ground-state phases and phase transitions. It is shown that a diversity of the ground-state degeneracy manifests itself in multiple-peak structures of both thermodynamic quantities. A remarkable temperature dependencies of the specific heat with two and three Schottky-type maxima are discussed in detail.
Structural properties of lead-lithium alloys
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khambholja, S. G.; Satikunvar, D. D.; Abhishek, Agraj; Thakore, B. Y.
2018-05-01
Lead-Lihtium alloys have found large number of applications as liquid metal coolants in nuclear reactors. Large number of experimental work is reported for this system. However, complete theoretical description is still rare. In this scenario, we in the present work report the study of ground state properties of Lead-Lithium system. The present study is performed using plane wave pseudopotential density functional theory as implemented in Quantum ESPRESSO package. The theoretical findings are in agreement with previously reported experimental data. Some conclusions are drawn based on present study, which will be helpful for a comprehensive study.
Structure of the exotic He 9 nucleus from the no-core shell model with continuum
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Vorabbi, Matteo; Calci, Angelo; Navratil, Petr
2018-03-13
Here, the exotic 9He nucleus, which presents one of the most extreme neutron-to-proton ratios, belongs to the N = 7 isotonic chain famous for the phenomenon of ground-state parity inversion with decreasing number of protons. Consequently, it would be expected to have an unnatural (positive) parity ground state similar to 11Be and 10Li. Despite many experimental and theoretical investigations, its structure remains uncertain. Apart from the fact that it is unbound, other properties including the spin and parity of its ground state, and the very existence of additional low-lying resonances are still a matter of debate
Ayers, Paul W; Parr, Robert G
2008-08-07
Higher-order global softnesses, local softnesses, and softness kernels are defined along with their hardness inverses. The local hardness equalization principle recently derived by the authors is extended to arbitrary order. The resulting hierarchy of equalization principles indicates that the electronegativity/chemical potential, local hardness, and local hyperhardnesses all are constant when evaluated for the ground-state electron density. The new equalization principles can be used to test whether a trial electron density is an accurate approximation to the true ground-state density and to discover molecules with desired reactive properties, as encapsulated by their chemical reactivity indicators.
The g Factors of Ground State of Ruby and Their Pressure-Induced Shifts
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ma, Dongping; Zhang, Hongmei; Chen, Jurong; Liu, Yanyun
1998-12-01
By using the theory of pressure-induced shifts and the eigenfunctions at normal and various pressures obtained from the diagonalization of the complete d3 energy matrix adopting C3v symmetry, g factors of the ground state of ruby and their pressure-induced shifts have been calculated. The results are in very good agreement with the experimental data. For the precise calculation of properties of the ground skate, it is necessary to take into account the effects of all the excited states by the diagonalization of the complete energy matrix. The project (Grant No. 19744001) supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China
Phase Diagram of Spin-1/2 Alternating Ferromagnetic Chain with XY-Like Anisotropy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yoshida, Satoru; Okamoto, Kiyomi
1989-12-01
By the use of the numerical method we investigate the ground state phase diagram of spin-1/2 alternating ferromagnetic chain. We numerically diagonalized the Hamiltonian of finite systems (up to 20 spins) and analyzed the numerical data for various physical quantities using the finite size scaling and the extrapolation methods. The ground state is either the effective singlet (ES) state or the spin fluid (SF) state depending on the value of the alternation parameter δ and the anisotropy parameter \\varDelta{\\equiv}Jz/J\\bot(\\varDelta{=}{-}1 for the isotropic ferromagnetic case and \\varDelta{=}0 for the XY case). The phase diagram obtained in this work strongly stupports the theoretical studies of Kohmoto-den Nijs-Kadanoff and Okamoto-Sugiyama. We also discuss the critical properties near the ES-SF transition line.
Pulsed radiolysis of model aromatic polymers and epoxy based matrix materials
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Gupta, A.; Moacanin, J.; Liang, R.; Coulter, D.
1982-01-01
Models of primary processes leading to deactivation of energy deposited by a pulse of high energy electrons were derived for epoxy matrix materials and polyl-vinyl naphthalene. The basic conclusion is that recombination of initially formed charged states is complete within 1 nanosecond, and subsequent degradation chemistry is controlled by the reactivity of these excited states. Excited states in both systems form complexes with ground state molecules. These excimers or exciplexes have their characteristics emissive and absorptive properties and may decay to form separated pairs of ground state molecules, cross over to the triplet manifold or emit fluorescence. ESR studies and chemical analyses subsequent to pulse radiolysis were performed in order to estimate bond cleavage probabilities and net reaction rates. The energy deactivation models which were proposed to interpret these data have led to the development of radiation stabilization criteria for these systems.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mishra, S. K.; Ahlawat, A.; Khosla, D.; Sharma, C.; Prasad, M. V. S. N.; Singh, Sukhvir; Gupta, B.; Tulsi; Sethi, D.; Sinha, P. R.; Ojha, D. K.; Wiedensohler, A.; Kotnala, R. K.
2018-07-01
The morphology, composition, and complex mixing states of aerosol are extremely important physico-chemical properties which are the major inputs to the optical/radiative models. Though, ground based observations of the said properties are abundant but the vertical profiles of the same are very much limited throughout the globe. The information on the vertical heterogeneity of the aforementioned properties over a polluted environment like Delhi will be very helpful to develop a better understanding of the thermodynamics of the lower atmosphere. In present study, we carried out a tethered balloon based field campaign in National Physical Laboratory (28° 38‧ 10″ N, 77° 10‧ 17″ E) from 21 to 27 February 2014 to explore the vertical distribution of the said properties. Based on the microscopic observations, the bubbly shaped sulfate particles number percentage is less (5%) on the ground, abundant (49%) on altitude <350 m and nearly absent on altitude >350 m. At 500 m altitude, particles were majorly of spiked shape with elongated dimension ∼ 3-4 μm. The number percentage of the aged fractals has been found to increase by 4% in the 100-350 m range against the ground observations. Based on the bulk composition of non-carbonaceous species, at 200 m altitude, we observed significant amount (74%) of the oxides of sulfur compared to that of ground observations (30%) that could be due to temperature inversion and air parcel movement from IGP (Indo Gangetic Plain). Various core-shell type particle configurations have been observed at different altitudes. At 200 m altitude, particles were majorly aged with anionic species (like S, Cl and HSO4) and cationic species (like C2H5). The bulk and individual particle level data generated over Delhi environment in this experiment may improve our understanding of boundary layer aerosol and could provide the scientific insights of their probable effects on low level cloud formation.
Ground-state properties of H 5 from the He 6 ( d , He 3 ) H 5 reaction
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wuosmaa, A. H.; Bedoor, S.; Brown, K. W.
2017-01-01
We have studied the ground state of the unbound, very neutron-rich isotope of hydrogen 5H, using the 6He(d,3He)5H reaction in inverse kinematics at a bombarding energy of E(6He)=55A MeV. The present results suggest a ground-state resonance energy ER=2.4±0.3 MeV above the 3H+2n threshold, with an intrinsic width of Γ=5.3±0.4 MeV in the 5H system. Both the resonance energy and width are higher than those reported in some, but not all previous studies of 5H. The previously unreported 6He(d,t)5Heg.s. reaction is observed in the same measurement, providing a check on the understanding of the response of the apparatus. The data aremore » compared to expectations from direct two-neutron and dineutron decay. The possibility of excited states of 5H populated in this reaction is discussed using different calculations of the 6He→5H+p spectroscopic overlaps from shell-model and ab initio nuclear-structure calculations.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dupuy, Nicolas; Casula, Michele
2018-04-01
By means of the Jastrow correlated antisymmetrized geminal power (JAGP) wave function and quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods, we study the ground state properties of the oligoacene series, up to the nonacene. The JAGP is the accurate variational realization of the resonating-valence-bond (RVB) ansatz proposed by Pauling and Wheland to describe aromatic compounds. We show that the long-ranged RVB correlations built in the acenes' ground state are detrimental for the occurrence of open-shell diradical or polyradical instabilities, previously found by lower-level theories. We substantiate our outcome by a direct comparison with another wave function, tailored to be an open-shell singlet (OSS) for long-enough acenes. By comparing on the same footing the RVB and OSS wave functions, both optimized at a variational QMC level and further projected by the lattice regularized diffusion Monte Carlo method, we prove that the RVB wave function has always a lower variational energy and better nodes than the OSS, for all molecular species considered in this work. The entangled multi-reference RVB state acts against the electron edge localization implied by the OSS wave function and weakens the diradical tendency for higher oligoacenes. These properties are reflected by several descriptors, including wave function parameters, bond length alternation, aromatic indices, and spin-spin correlation functions. In this context, we propose a new aromatic index estimator suitable for geminal wave functions. For the largest acenes taken into account, the long-range decay of the charge-charge correlation functions is compatible with a quasi-metallic behavior.
Organic Polymers with Magneto-Dielectric Properties
2007-03-28
bromination and Suzuki coupling, S = I aminyl diradical 2 was cleanly obtained (Figure 6). The magnetic studies and EPR spectroscopy show S I ground state with...polybenzoxazines, derived from 3,4-dihydro-2H- 1,3- 4 benzoxazines, are thermosetting resins for polymer composites with superior mechanical, flame ... retardant , and superhydrophobic properties, including aerospace applications.) FR= CH:, or (cIH2)11cH3 Y. Z = selected combinations of H. alkyl, aryl R
Pannipara, Mehboobali; Asiri, Abdullah M; Alamry, Khalid A; Salem, Ibrahim A; El-Daly, Samy A
2015-01-01
The spectral and photophysical properties of a new chalcone derivative (2E)-3-[4-(dimethylamino) phenyl]-1-(naphthalen-1-yl) prop-2-en-1-one (DPNP) containing donor-acceptor group has been synthesized and characterized on the basis of the spectral (IR, (1)HNMR & (13)C NMR) and X- ray crystallographic data. The effect of solvents on photophysical parameters such as singlet absorption, molar absorptivity, oscillator strength, dipole moment, fluorescence spectra, and fluorescence quantum yield of DPNP have been investigated comprehensively. Significant red shift was observed in the emission spectrum of DPNP compared to the absorption spectrum upon increasing the solvent polarity, indicating a higher dipole moment in the excited state than in the ground state. The difference between the excited and ground state dipole moments (Δμ) were obtained from Lippert-Mataga and Reichardts correlations by means of solvatochromic shift method. The effects of medium acidity on the electronic absorption and emission spectra of DPNP were studied. The interaction of DPNP with colloidal silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) was also studied in ethanol and ethylene glycol using steady state fluorescence quenching measurements. The fluorescence quenching data reveal that dynamic quenching and energy transfer play a major role in the fluorescence quenching of DPNP by Ag NPs.
Structure, strain, and the ground state of the LaTiO3/LaAlO3 superlattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, Alex Taekyung; Han, Myung Joon
2014-03-01
The first-principles density functional theory calculations have been performed to understand LaTiO3/LaAlO3 superlattice. By taking into account of the structural distortions, U dependence, and the exchange correlation functional dependence, we show that the ferromagnetic spin and antiferro-orbital ordering is stabilized in the wide range of strains, which is notably different from the previous reports on the titanate systems. The ground-state spin and orbital configurations critically depend on the structural properties. Our results suggest a possible strain control of the magnetic property in transition-metal oxide heterostructures.
Structural and magnetic properties of the 5d 2 double perovskites Sr 2 BReO 6 ( B = Y, In)
Aczel, A. A.; Zhao, Z.; Calder, S.; ...
2016-06-01
With this study, we have performed magnetic susceptibility, heat capacity, neutron powder diffraction, and muon spin relaxation experiments to investigate the magnetic ground states of the 5more » $d^2$ double perovskites Sr$$_2$$YReO$$_6$$ and Sr$$_2$$InReO$$_6$$. We find that Sr$$_2$$YReO$$_6$$ is a spin glass, while Sr$$_2$$InReO$$_6$$ hosts a non-magnetic singlet state. By making detailed comparisons with other 5$d^2$ double perovskites, we argue that a delicate interplay between spin-orbit coupling, non-cubic crystal fields, and exchange interactions plays a key role in the great variation of magnetic ground states observed for this family of materials.« less
Ab-initio calculations of the Ruddlesden Popper phases CaMnO3, CaO(CaMnO3) and CaO(CaMnO3)2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cardoso, C.; Borges, R. P.; Gasche, T.; Godinho, M.
2008-01-01
The present work reports ab-initio density functional theory calculations for the Ruddlesden-Popper phase CaO(CaMnO3)n compounds. In order to study the evolution of the properties with the number of perovskite layers, a detailed analysis of the densities of states calculated for each compound and for several magnetic configurations was performed. The effect of distortions of the crystal structure on the magnetic ground state is also analysed and the exchange constants and transition temperatures are calculated for the three compounds using a mean field model. The calculated magnetic ground state structures and magnetic moments are in good agreement with experimental results and previous calculations.
Puzzle of magnetic moments of Ni clusters revisited using quantum Monte Carlo method.
Lee, Hung-Wen; Chang, Chun-Ming; Hsing, Cheng-Rong
2017-02-28
The puzzle of the magnetic moments of small nickel clusters arises from the discrepancy between values predicted using density functional theory (DFT) and experimental measurements. Traditional DFT approaches underestimate the magnetic moments of nickel clusters. Two fundamental problems are associated with this puzzle, namely, calculating the exchange-correlation interaction accurately and determining the global minimum structures of the clusters. Theoretically, the two problems can be solved using quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) calculations and the ab initio random structure searching (AIRSS) method correspondingly. Therefore, we combined the fixed-moment AIRSS and QMC methods to investigate the magnetic properties of Ni n (n = 5-9) clusters. The spin moments of the diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) ground states are higher than those of the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof ground states and, in the case of Ni 8-9 , two new ground-state structures have been discovered using the DMC calculations. The predicted results are closer to the experimental findings, unlike the results predicted in previous standard DFT studies.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Miura, Shinichi
2018-03-01
In this paper, the ground state of para-hydrogen clusters for size regime N ≤ 40 has been studied by our variational path integral molecular dynamics method. Long molecular dynamics calculations have been performed to accurately evaluate ground state properties. The chemical potential of the hydrogen molecule is found to have a zigzag size dependence, indicating the magic number stability for the clusters of the size N = 13, 26, 29, 34, and 39. One-body density of the hydrogen molecule is demonstrated to have a structured profile, not a melted one. The observed magic number stability is examined using the inherent structure analysis. We also have developed a novel method combining our variational path integral hybrid Monte Carlo method with the replica exchange technique. We introduce replicas of the original system bridging from the structured to the melted cluster, which is realized by scaling the potential energy of the system. Using the enhanced sampling method, the clusters are demonstrated to have the structured density profile in the ground state.
The valence-fluctuating ground state of plutonium
Janoschek, Marc; Das, Pinaki; Chakrabarti, Bismayan; ...
2015-07-10
A central issue in material science is to obtain understanding of the electronic correlations that control complex materials. Such electronic correlations frequently arise because of the competition of localized and itinerant electronic degrees of freedom. Although the respective limits of well-localized or entirely itinerant ground states are well understood, the intermediate regime that controls the functional properties of complex materials continues to challenge theoretical understanding. We have used neutron spectroscopy to investigate plutonium, which is a prototypical material at the brink between bonding and nonbonding configurations. In addition, our study reveals that the ground state of plutonium is governed bymore » valence fluctuations, that is, a quantum mechanical superposition of localized and itinerant electronic configurations as recently predicted by dynamical mean field theory. Our results not only resolve the long-standing controversy between experiment and theory on plutonium’s magnetism but also suggest an improved understanding of the effects of such electronic dichotomy in complex materials.« less
Miura, Shinichi
2018-03-14
In this paper, the ground state of para-hydrogen clusters for size regime N ≤ 40 has been studied by our variational path integral molecular dynamics method. Long molecular dynamics calculations have been performed to accurately evaluate ground state properties. The chemical potential of the hydrogen molecule is found to have a zigzag size dependence, indicating the magic number stability for the clusters of the size N = 13, 26, 29, 34, and 39. One-body density of the hydrogen molecule is demonstrated to have a structured profile, not a melted one. The observed magic number stability is examined using the inherent structure analysis. We also have developed a novel method combining our variational path integral hybrid Monte Carlo method with the replica exchange technique. We introduce replicas of the original system bridging from the structured to the melted cluster, which is realized by scaling the potential energy of the system. Using the enhanced sampling method, the clusters are demonstrated to have the structured density profile in the ground state.
Exact differential equation for the density and ionization energy of a many-particle system
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Levy, M.; Perdew, J. P.; Sahni, V.
1984-01-01
The present investigation is concerned with relations studied by Hohenberg and Kohn (1964) and Kohn and Sham (1965). The properties of a ground-state many-electron system are determined by the electron density. The correct differential equation for the density, as dictated by density-functional theory, is presented. It is found that the ground-state density n of a many-electron system obeys a Schroedinger-like differential equation which may be solved by standard Kohn-Sham programs. Results are connected to the traditional exact Kohn-Sham theory. It is pointed out that the results of the current investigations are readily extended to spin-density functional theory.
Spectrum of Elementary Excitations in Galilean-Invariant Integrable Models
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Petković, Aleksandra; Ristivojevic, Zoran
2018-04-01
The spectrum of elementary excitations in one-dimensional quantum liquids is generically linear at low momenta. It is characterized by the sound velocity that can be related to the ground-state energy. Here we study the spectrum at higher momenta in Galilean-invariant integrable models. Somewhat surprisingly, we show that the spectrum at arbitrary momentum is fully determined by the properties of the ground state. We find general exact relations for the coefficients of several terms in the expansion of the excitation energy at low momenta and arbitrary interaction and express them in terms of the Luttinger liquid parameter. We apply the obtained formulas to the Lieb-Liniger model and obtain several new results.
Lofrumento, C; Arci, F; Carlesi, S; Ricci, M; Castellucci, E; Becucci, M
2015-02-25
The analysis of ground state structural and vibrational properties of Safranin-O is presented. The experimental results, obtained by FTIR, Raman and SERS spectroscopy, are discussed in comparison to the results of DFT calculations carried out at the B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory. The calculated spectra reproduce quite satisfactorily the experimental data. The calculated Safranin-O equilibrium structure and the assignment of the vibrational spectra are reported as well. From the changes between Raman and SERS spectra a model is presented for the interaction of Safranin-O with silver nanoparticles. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ektarawong, A.
2018-05-01
The phase stability of icosahedral boron subselenide B12(B1-xSex) 2 , where 0.5 ≤x ≤1 , is explored using a first-principles cluster expansion. The results shows that, instead of a continuous solid solution, B12(B1-xSex) 2 is thermodynamically stable as an individual line compound at the composition of B9.5Se . The ground-state configuration of B9.5Se is represented by a mixture of B12(Se-Se), B12(B-Se), and B12(Se-B) with a ratio of 1:1:1, where they form a periodic A B C A B C ⋯ stacking sequence of B12(Se-Se), B12(B-Se), and B12(Se-B) layers along the c axis of the hexagonal conventional unit cell. The structural and electronic properties of the ground-state B9.5Se are also derived and discussed. By comparing the derived ground-state properties of B9.5Se to the existing experimental data of boron subselenide B˜13Se , I proposed that the as-synthesized boron subselenide B˜13Se , as reported in the literature, has the actual composition of B9.5Se .
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kohler, Lars; Hadt, Ryan G.; Hayes, Dugan
In this paper we describe the synthesis of a new phenanthroline ligand, 2,9-di(2,4,6-tri-isopropyl-phenyl)-1,10-phenanthroline (bL2) and its use as the blocking ligand in the preparation of two new heteroleptic Cu(I)diimine complexes. Analysis of the CuHETPHEN single crystal structures shows a distinct distortion from an ideal tetrahedral geometry around the Cu(I) center, forced by the secondary phenanthroline ligand rotating to accommodate the isopropyl groups of bL2. The increased steric bulk of bL2 as compared to the more commonly used 2,9-dimesityl-1,10-phenanthroline blocking ligand prohibits intramolecular ligand–ligand interaction, which is unique among CuHETPHEN complexes. The ground state optical and redox properties of CuHETPHEN complexesmore » are responsive to the substitution on the blocking ligand even though the differences in structure are far removed from the Cu(I) center. Transient optical spectroscopy was used to understand the excited state kinetics in both coordinating and non-coordinating solvents following visible excitation. Substitution of the blocking phenanthroline ligand has a significant impact on the 3MLCT decay and can be used to increase the excited state lifetime by 50%. Electronic structure calculations established relationships between ground and excited state properties, and general entatic state concepts are discussed for copper photosensitizers. This work contributes to the growing library of CuHETPHEN complexes and broadens the fundamental understanding of their ground and excited state properties.« less
An ab-initio study of mechanical, dynamical and electronic properties of MgEu intermetallic
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kumar, S. Ramesh; Jaiganesh, G.; Jayalakshmi, V.
2018-04-01
The theoretical investigation on the mechanical, dynamical and electronic properties of MgEu in CsCl-type structure has been carried out through the ab-initio calculations within the framework of the density functional theory and the density functional perturbation theory. For the purpose, Vienna Ab initio Simulation Package and Phonopy packages were used. Our calculated ground-state properties of MgEu are in good agreement with other available results. Our computed elastic constants and phonon spectrum results suggest that MgEu is mechanically and dynamically stable up to 5 GPa. The thermodynamic quantities as a function of temperatures are also reported and discussed. The band structure, density of states and charge density also calculated to understand the electronic properties of MgEu.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ding, Xiaobin; Sun, Rui; Koike, Fumihiro; Kato, Daiji; Murakami, Izumi; Sakaue, Hiroyuki A.; Dong, Chenzhong
2017-03-01
The electron correlation effects and Breit interaction as well as Quantum Electro-Dynamics (QED) effects were expected to have important contribution to the energy level and transition properties of heavy highly charged ions. The ground states [Ne]3s23p63d2 and first excited states [Ne]3s23p53d3 of W54+ ion have been studied by using Multi-Configuration Dirac-Fock method with the implementation of Grasp2K package. A restricted active space method was employed to investigate the correlation contribution from different models. The Breit interaction and QED effects were taken into account in the relativistic configuration interaction calculation with the converged wavefunction. It is found that the correlation contribution from 3s and 3p orbital have important contribution to the energy level, transition wavelength and probability of the ground and the first excited state of W54+ ion. Contribution to the Topical Issue "Atomic and Molecular Data and their Applications", edited by Gordon W.F. Drake, Jung-Sik Yoon, Daiji Kato, Grzegorz Karwasz.
Biochemical processes in sagebrush ecosystems: Interactions with terrain
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Matson, P. (Principal Investigator); Reiners, W.; Strong, L.
1985-01-01
The objectives of a biogeochemical study of sagebrush ecosystems in Wyoming and their interactions with terrain are as follows: to describe the vegetational pattern on the landscape and elucidate controlling variables, to measure the soil properties and chemical cycling properties associated with the vegetation units, to associate soil properties with vegetation properties as measured on the ground, to develop remote sensing capabilities for vegetation and surface characteristics of the sagebrush landscape, to develop a system of sensing snow cover and indexing seasonal soil to moisture; and to develop relationships between temporal Thematic Mapper (TM) data and vegetation phenological state.
Optical properties of InAs/GaAs quantum dot superlattice structures
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Imran, Ali; Jiang, Jianliang; Eric, Deborah; Zahid, M. Noaman; Yousaf, M.; Shah, Z. H.
2018-06-01
Quantum dot (QD) structure has potential applications in modern highly efficient optoelectronic devices due to their band-tuning. The device dimensions have been miniatured with increased efficiencies by virtue of this discovery. In this research, we have presented modified analytical and simulation results of InAs/GaAs QD superlattice (QDSL). We have applied tight binding model for the investigation of ground state energies using timeindependent Schrödinger equation (SE) with effective mass approximation. It has been investigated that the electron energies are confined due to wave function delocalization in closely coupled QD structures. The minimum ground state energy can be obtained by increasing the periodicity and decreasing the barrier layer thickness. We have calculated electronics and optical properties which includes ground state energies, transition energies, density of states (DOS), absorption coefficient and refractive index, which can be tuned by structure modification. In our results, the minimum ground state energy of QDSL is achieved to be 0.25 eV with a maximum period of 10 QDs. The minimum band to band and band to continuum transition energies are 63 meV and 130 meV with 2 nm barrier layer thickness respectively. The absorption coefficient of our proposed QDSL model is found to be maximum 1.2 × 104 cm-1 and can be used for highly sensitive infrared detector and high efficiency solar cells.
Origin and Manipulation of Stable Vortex Ground States in Permalloy Nanotubes.
Zimmermann, Michael; Meier, Thomas Norbert Gerhard; Dirnberger, Florian; Kákay, Attila; Decker, Martin; Wintz, Sebastian; Finizio, Simone; Josten, Elisabeth; Raabe, Jörg; Kronseder, Matthias; Bougeard, Dominique; Lindner, Jürgen; Back, Christian Horst
2018-05-09
We present a detailed study on the static magnetic properties of individual permalloy nanotubes (NTs) with hexagonal cross-sections. Anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) measurements and scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM) are used to investigate their magnetic ground states and its stability. We find that the magnetization in zero applied magnetic field is in a very stable vortex state. Its origin is attributed to a strong growth-induced anisotropy with easy axis perpendicular to the long axis of the tubes. AMR measurements of individual NTs in combination with micromagnetic simulations allow the determination of the magnitude of the growth-induced anisotropy for different types of NT coatings. We show that the strength of the anisotropy can be controlled by introducing a buffer layer underneath the magnetic layer. The magnetic ground states depend on the external magnetic field history and are directly imaged using STXM. Stable vortex domains can be introduced by external magnetic fields and can be erased by radio-frequency magnetic fields applied at the center of the tubes via a strip line antenna.
Structural and electronic properties Te62+ and Te82+: A DFT study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sharma, Tamanna; Tamboli, Rohit; Kanhere, D. G.; Sharma, Raman
2018-05-01
Structural and electronic properties of Tellurium cluster (Ten) and their cations (Ten2+) (n = 6, 8) have been studied theoretically using VASP within generalized gradient approximation. Ground state geometries and higher energy isomers of these clusters have been examined on the basis of total free energy calculations. Lowest energy isomers of neutral clusters are ring like structures whereas the lowest energy isomers of cations are polyhedral cages. HOMO-LUMO gap in cationic clusters is small compared to its neutral clusters. Removal of two electrons from the neutral cluster raises the free energy. Analysis of free energy, HOMO-LUMO gap and density of states (DOS) show that neutral cluster are more stable than their cations.
Casanova, David
2012-08-28
The restricted active space spin-flip CI (RASCI-SF) performance is tested in the electronic structure computation of the ground and the lowest electronically excited states in the presence of near-degeneracies. The feasibility of the method is demonstrated by analyzing the avoided crossing between the ionic and neutral singlet states of LiF along the molecular dissociation. The two potential energy surfaces (PESs) are explored by means of the energies of computed adiabatic and approximated diabatic states, dipole moments, and natural orbital electronic occupancies of both states. The RASCI-SF methodology is also used to study the ground and first excited singlet surface crossing involved in the double bond isomerization of ethylene, as a model case. The two-dimensional PESs of the ground (S(0)) and excited (S(1)) states are calculated for the complete configuration space of torsion and pyramidalization molecular distortions. The parameters that define the state energetics in the vicinity of the S(0)/S(1) conical intersection region are compared to complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) results. These examples show that it is possible to describe strongly correlated electronic states using a single reference methodology without the need to expand the wavefunction to high levels of collective excitations. Finally, RASCI is also examined in the electronic structure characterization of the ground and 2(1)A(g)(-), 1(1)B(u)(+), 1(1)B(u)(-), and 1(3)B(u)(-) states of all-trans polyenes with two to seven double bonds and beyond. Transition energies are compared to configuration interaction singles, time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT), CASSCF, and its second-order perturbation correction calculations, and to experimental data. The capability of RASCI-SF to describe the nature and properties of each electronic state is discussed in detail. This example is also used to expose the properties of different truncations of the RASCI wavefunction and to show the possibility to use an excitation operator with any number of α-to-β electronic promotions.
Fluorescent molecular probes based on excited state prototropism in lipid bilayer membrane
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mohapatra, Monalisa; Mishra, Ashok K.
2012-03-01
Excited state prototropism (ESPT) is observed in molecules having one or more ionizable protons, whose proton transfer efficiency is different in ground and excited states. The interaction of various ESPT molecules like naphthols and intramolecular ESPT (ESIPT) molecules like hydroxyflavones etc. with different microheterogeneous media have been studied in detail and excited state prototropism as a probe concept has been gaining ground. The fluorescence of different prototropic forms of such molecules, on partitioning to an organized medium like lipid bilayer membrane, often show sensitive response to the local environment with respect to the local structure, physical properties and dynamics. Our recent work using 1-naphthol as an ESPT fluorescent molecular probe has shown that the incorporation of monomeric bile salt molecules into lipid bilayer membranes composed from dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC, a lung surfactant) and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), in solid gel and liquid crystalline phases, induce appreciable wetting of the bilayer up to the hydrocarbon core region, even at very low (<= 1 mM) concentrations of the bile salts. The incorporation and location of fisetin, an ESIPT molecule having antioxidant properties, in lipid bilayer membrane has been sensitively monitored from its intrinsic fluorescence behaviour.
Static electric dipole polarizabilities of tri- and tetravalent U, Np, and Pu ions.
Parmar, Payal; Peterson, Kirk A; Clark, Aurora E
2013-11-21
High-quality static electric dipole polarizabilities have been determined for the ground states of the hard-sphere cations of U, Np, and Pu in the III and IV oxidation states. The polarizabilities have been calculated using the numerical finite field technique in a four-component relativistic framework. Methods including Fock-space coupled cluster (FSCC) and Kramers-restricted configuration interaction (KRCI) have been performed in order to account for electron correlation effects. Comparisons between polarizabilities calculated using Dirac-Hartree-Fock (DHF), FSCC, and KRCI methods have been made using both triple- and quadruple-ζ basis sets for U(4+). In addition to the ground state, this study also reports the polarizability data for the first two excited states of U(3+/4+), Np(3+/4+), and Pu(3+/4+) ions at different levels of theory. The values reported in this work are the most accurate to date calculations for the dipole polarizabilities of the hard-sphere tri- and tetravalent actinide ions and may serve as reference values, aiding in the calculation of various electronic and response properties (for example, intermolecular forces, optical properties, etc.) relevant to the nuclear fuel cycle and material science applications.
Importance of strong-correlation on the lattice dynamics of light-actinides Th-Pa alloy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
de La Peã+/-A Seaman, Omar; Heid, Rolf; Bohnen, Klaus-Peter
We have studied the structural, electronic, and lattice dynamics of the Th1-xPax actinide alloy. This system have been analyzed within the framework of density functional perturbation theory, using a mixed-basis pseudopotential method and the virtual crystal approximation (VCA) for modeling the alloy. In particular, the energetics is analyzed as the ground-state crystal structure is changed form fcc to bct, as well as the electronic density of states (DOS), and the phonon frequencies. Such properties have been calculated with and without strong correlations effects through the LDA+U formalism. Although the strong-correlation does not influence on a great manner the Th properties, such effects are more important as the content increases towards Pa, affecting even the definition of the ground-state crystal structure for Pa (experimentally determined as bct). The evolution of the density of states at the Fermi level (N (EF)) and the phonon frequencies as a function of Pa-content are presented and discussed in detail, aiming to understand their influence on the electron-phonon coupling for the Th-Pa alloy. This research was supported by Conacyt-México under project No. CB2013-221807-F.
[Studies on organic protective coatings for anti-atomic oxygen effects by spectrum analysis].
Zhang, Lei
2004-11-01
This paper describes organic protective coatings on space material for anti-AO effects and the experiments to assess properties of the coatings. Organic protection was analyzed after exposures to ground state fast atomic (AO) radiation in the atomic oxygen beam facility for ground simulation experiments. The tests results have been analyzed with advanced FTIR, XPS and SEM. The test indicated that epoxy, alkyd and urethane organic coatings were highly reactive to AO with a strong degradation and changed in morphology of the surface layer. It is evident that siloxane coatings have excellent properties for anti-AO effects. The erosion product has SiO2 left on the surface, thus providing protection from further attack by the energetic oxygen atoms.
Quantum Correlation Properties in Two Qubits One-axis Spin Squeezing Model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Guo-Hui, Yang
2017-02-01
Using the concurrence (C) and quantum discord (QD) criterions, the quantum correlation properties in two qubits one-axis spin squeezing model with an external magnetic field are investigated. It is found that one obvious difference in the limit case T → 0 (ground state) is the sudden disappearance phenomenon (SDP) occured in the behavior of C, while not in QD. In order to further explain the SDP, we obtain the analytic expressions of ground state C and QD which reveal that the SDP is not really "entanglement sudden disappeared", it is decayed to zero very quickly. Proper tuning the parameters μ(the spin squeezing interaction in x direction) and Ω(the external magnetic field in z direction) not only can obviously broaden the scope of ground state C exists but also can enhance the value of ground state QD. For the finite temperature case, one evident difference is that the sudden birth phenomenon (SBP) is appeared in the evolution of C, while not in QD, and decreasing the coupling parameters μ or Ω can obviously prolong the time interval before entanglement sudden birth. The value of C and QD are both enhanced by increasing the parameters μ or Ω in finite temperature case. In addition, through investigating the effects of temperature T on the quantum correlation properties with the variation of Ω and μ, one can find that the temperature scope of C and QD exists are broadened with increasing the parameters μ or Ω, and one can obtain the quantum correlation at higher temperature through changing these parameters.
Catalysis of Photochemical Reactions.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Albini, A.
1986-01-01
Offers a classification system of catalytic effects in photochemical reactions, contrasting characteristic properties of photochemical and thermal reactions. Discusses catalysis and sensitization, examples of catalyzed reactions of excepted states, complexing ground state substrates, and catalysis of primary photoproducts. (JM)
Kohler, Lars; Hadt, Ryan G.; Hayes, Dugan; ...
2017-09-25
In this paper we describe the synthesis of a new phenanthroline ligand, 2,9-di(2,4,6-tri-isopropyl-phenyl)-1,10-phenanthroline (bL2) and its use as the blocking ligand in the preparation of two new heteroleptic Cu(I)diimine complexes. Analysis of the CuHETPHEN single crystal structures shows a distinct distortion from an ideal tetrahedral geometry around the Cu(I) center, forced by the secondary phenanthroline ligand rotating to accommodate the isopropyl groups of bL2. The increased steric bulk of bL2 as compared to the more commonly used 2,9-dimesityl-1,10-phenanthroline blocking ligand prohibits intramolecular ligand–ligand interaction, which is unique among CuHETPHEN complexes. The ground state optical and redox properties of CuHETPHEN complexesmore » are responsive to the substitution on the blocking ligand even though the differences in structure are far removed from the Cu(I) center. Transient optical spectroscopy was used to understand the excited state kinetics in both coordinating and non-coordinating solvents following visible excitation. Substitution of the blocking phenanthroline ligand has a significant impact on the 3MLCT decay and can be used to increase the excited state lifetime by 50%. Electronic structure calculations established relationships between ground and excited state properties, and general entatic state concepts are discussed for copper photosensitizers. This work contributes to the growing library of CuHETPHEN complexes and broadens the fundamental understanding of their ground and excited state properties.« less
A grounded theory of young tennis players use of music to manipulate emotional state.
Bishop, Daniel T; Karageorghis, Costas I; Loizou, Georgios
2007-10-01
The main objectives of this study were (a) to elucidate young tennis players' use of music to manipulate emotional states, and (b) to present a model grounded in present data to illustrate this phenomenon and to stimulate further research. Anecdotal evidence suggests that music listening is used regularly by elite athletes as a preperformance strategy, but only limited empirical evidence corroborates such use. Young tennis players (N = 14) were selected purposively for interview and diary data collection. Results indicated that participants consciously selected music to elicit various emotional states; frequently reported consequences of music listening included improved mood, increased arousal, and visual and auditory imagery. The choice of music tracks and the impact of music listening were mediated by a number of factors, including extramusical associations, inspirational lyrics, music properties, and desired emotional state. Implications for the future investigation of preperformance music are discussed.
Introducing Students to a Synthetic and Spectroscopic Study of the Free Radical Chlorine Dioxide
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sutton, Sarah C.; Cleland, Walter E.; Hammer, Nathan I.
2017-01-01
This advanced undergraduate chemistry laboratory exercise takes advantage of the unique spectroscopic properties of the free radical chlorine dioxide to allow for a direct comparison of its symmetric stretch in both the ground and excited states. It incorporates several subject areas covered in an undergraduate chemistry degree (synthesis,…
Nuclear Data Sheets for A = 136
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sonzogni, A. A.
2002-04-01
Experimental data on ground-- and excited--state properties for all known nuclei with mass number A=136 have been compiled and evaluated. States populated in radioactive decay as well as in nuclear reactions have been considered. For these nuclei, level and decay schemes, as well as tables of nuclear properties are presented. This work supersedes the 1994 evaluation by J.K. Tuli (1994Tu01).
Hole pairing and ground state properties of high-Tc superconductivity within the t-t'-J-V model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Roy, Krishanu; Pal, Papiya; Nath, Subhadip; Ghosh, Nanda Kumar
2018-04-01
The t-t'-J-V model, one of the realistic models for studying high-Tc cuprates, has been investigated to explore the hole pairing and other ground state properties using exact diagonalization (ED) technique with 2 holes in a small 8-site cluster. The role of next-nearest-neighbor (NNN) hopping and nearest-neighbor (NN) Coulomb repulsion has been considered. It appears that qualitative behavior of the ground state energies of an 8-site and 16- or 18-site cluster is similar. Results show that a small short-ranged antiferromagnetic (AF) correlation exists in the 2 hole case which is favored by large V/t. A superconducting phase emerges at 0 ≤ V/t ≤ 4J. Hole-hole correlation calculation also suggests that the two holes of the pair are either at |i - j| = 1 or √2. Negative t'/t suppresses the possibility of pairing of holes. Though s-wave pairing susceptibility is dominant, pairing correlation length calculation indicates that the long range pairing, which is suitable for superconductivity, is in the d-wave channel. Both s- and d-wave pairing susceptibility gets suppressed by V/t while d-(s-) wave susceptibility gets favored (suppressed) by t'/t. The charge gap shows a gapped behavior while a spin-gapless region exists at small V/t for finite t'/t.
Exact Solution of a Two-Species Quantum Dimer Model for Pseudogap Metals
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Feldmeier, Johannes; Huber, Sebastian; Punk, Matthias
2018-05-01
We present an exact ground state solution of a quantum dimer model introduced by Punk, Allais, and Sachdev [Quantum dimer model for the pseudogap metal, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 112, 9552 (2015)., 10.1073/pnas.1512206112], which features ordinary bosonic spin-singlet dimers as well as fermionic dimers that can be viewed as bound states of spinons and holons in a hole-doped resonating valence bond liquid. Interestingly, this model captures several essential properties of the metallic pseudogap phase in high-Tc cuprate superconductors. We identify a line in parameter space where the exact ground state wave functions can be constructed at an arbitrary density of fermionic dimers. At this exactly solvable line the ground state has a huge degeneracy, which can be interpreted as a flat band of fermionic excitations. Perturbing around the exactly solvable line, this degeneracy is lifted and the ground state is a fractionalized Fermi liquid with a small pocket Fermi surface in the low doping limit.
Correlation between ground state and orbital anisotropy in heavy fermion materials
Willers, Thomas; Strigari, Fabio; Hu, Zhiwei; ...
2015-02-09
The interplay of structural, orbital, charge, and spin degrees of freedom is at the heart of many emergent phenomena, including superconductivity. We find that unraveling the underlying forces of such novel phases is a great challenge because it not only requires understanding each of these degrees of freedom, it also involves accounting for the interplay between them. Cerium-based heavy fermion compounds are an ideal playground for investigating these interdependencies, and we present evidence for a correlation between orbital anisotropy and the ground states in a representative family of materials. We have measured the 4f crystal-electric field ground-state wave functions ofmore » the strongly correlated materials CeRh 1₋xIr xIn 5 with great accuracy using linear polarization-dependent soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy. These measurements show that these wave functions correlate with the ground-state properties of the substitution series, which covers long-range antiferromagnetic order, unconventional superconductivity, and coexistence of these two states.« less
Macroscopic Source Properties from Dynamic Rupture Styles in Plastic Media
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gabriel, A.; Ampuero, J. P.; Dalguer, L. A.; Mai, P. M.
2011-12-01
High stress concentrations at earthquake rupture fronts may generate an inelastic off-fault response at the rupture tip, leading to increased energy absorption in the damage zone. Furthermore, the induced asymmetric plastic strain field in in-plane rupture modes may produce bimaterial interfaces that can increase radiation efficiency and reduce frictional dissipation. Off-fault inelasticity thus plays an important role for realistic predictions of near-fault ground motion. Guided by our previous studies in the 2D elastic case, we perform rupture dynamics simulations including rate-and-state friction and off-fault plasticity to investigate the effects on the rupture properties. We quantitatively analyze macroscopic source properties for different rupture styles, ranging from cracks to pulses and subshear to supershear ruptures, and their transitional mechanisms. The energy dissipation due to off-fault inelasticity modifies the conditions to obtain each rupture style and alters macroscopic source properties. We examine apparent fracture energy, rupture and healing front speed, peak slip and peak slip velocity, dynamic stress drop and size of the process and plastic zones, slip and plastic seismic moment, and their connection to ground motion. This presentation focuses on the effects of rupture style and off-fault plasticity on the resulting ground motion patterns, especially on characteristic slip velocity function signatures and resulting seismic moments. We aim at developing scaling rules for equivalent elastic models, as function of background stress and frictional parameters, that may lead to improved "pseudo-dynamic" source parameterizations for ground-motion calculation. Moreover, our simulations provide quantitative relations between off-fault energy dissipation and macroscopic source properties. These relations might provide a self-consistent theoretical framework for the study of the earthquake energy balance based on observable earthquake source parameters.
Quantum Yang-Mills Dark Energy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pasechnik, Roman
2016-02-01
In this short review, I discuss basic qualitative characteristics of quantum non-Abelian gauge dynamics in the non-stationary background of the expanding Universe in the framework of the standard Einstein--Yang--Mills formulation. A brief outlook of existing studies of cosmological Yang--Mills fields and their properties will be given. Quantum effects have a profound impact on the gauge field-driven cosmological evolution. In particular, a dynamical formation of the spatially-homogeneous and isotropic gauge field condensate may be responsible for both early and late-time acceleration, as well as for dynamical compensation of non-perturbative quantum vacua contributions to the ground state of the Universe. The main properties of such a condensate in the effective QCD theory at the flat Friedmann--Lema\\'itre--Robertson--Walker (FLRW) background will be discussed within and beyond perturbation theory. Finally, a phenomenologically consistent dark energy can be induced dynamically as a remnant of the QCD vacua compensation arising from leading-order graviton-mediated corrections to the QCD ground state.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rakshit, Arpita; Ghanmi, Chedli; Berriche, Hamid; Deb, Bimalendu
2016-05-01
We study theoretically interaction potentials and low-energy collisions between different alkali atoms and alkali ions. Specifically, we consider systems such as X + {{{Y}}}+, where X({{{Y}}}+) is either Li(Cs+) or Cs(Li+), Na(Cs+) or Cs(Na+) and Li(Rb+) or Rb(Li+). We calculate the molecular potentials of the ground and first two excited states of these three systems using a pseudopotential method and compare our results with those obtained by others. We derive ground-state scattering wave functions and analyze the cold collisional properties of these systems for a wide range of energies. We find that, in order to get convergent results for the total scattering cross sections for energies of the order 1 K, one needs to take into account at least 60 partial waves. The low-energy scattering properties calculated in this paper may serve as a precursor for experimental exploration of quantum collisions between an alkali atom and an alkali ion of a different nucleus.
Ground-state candidate for the classical dipolar kagome Ising antiferromagnet
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chioar, I. A.; Rougemaille, N.; Canals, B.
2016-06-01
We have investigated the low-temperature thermodynamic properties of the classical dipolar kagome Ising antiferromagnet using Monte Carlo simulations, in the quest for the ground-state manifold. In spite of the limitations of a single-spin-flip approach, we managed to identify certain ordering patterns in the low-temperature regime and we propose a candidate for this unknown state. This configuration presents some intriguing features and is fully compatible with the extrapolations of the at-equilibrium thermodynamic behavior sampled so far, making it a very likely choice for the dipolar long-range ordered state of the classical kagome Ising antiferromagnet.
Schumann Resonances on Mars - a Two-layer Ground Case
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kozakiewicz, J.; Kulak, A.; Mlynarczyk, J.
2012-04-01
Schumann resonances (SR) are global resonances of electromagnetic waves in the range of extremely low frequencies (ELF) propagating in a cavity formed by a planetary surface and a lower ionosphere. SR are induced by electrical discharges, which on Earth are associated mainly with lightning. They were predicted by Winfried Otto Schumann in 1952. SR are supposed to occur on Mars, although many properties of the Martian environment are still unknown. One of the most important problems in modeling SR on Mars is to estimate electrical properties of the Martian ground and their influence on ELF waves propagation. The Martian crust is composed mainly of basaltic materials. Water, which causes significant increase in electrical conductivity of rocks, does not exist in liquid state at the surface of Mars. Therefore the Martian ground is believed to be a low conductive one. However, it is possible that some liquid water may be present at various depths below the surface. In our previous study we have developed an analytical model, based on the characteristic electric and magnetic altitudes' formalism, that has allowed us to take into consideration the Martian ground. Using this new model, we found that basaltic ground of low conductivity greatly influenced the SR parameters. In this work, we carried out simulations in order to characterize an influence of vertical changes in ground properties on the parameters of the Martian ground-ionosphere waveguide. We have considered several cases of a two-layer ground, in which the lower layer was of higher conductivity than the upper one. The obtained results indicate how the SR parameters depend on electrical conductivity, permittivity, and depth of the layers. The results also point out the importance of studying SR on Mars and the need for further research in propagation of ELF waves in the Martian environment. SR can be used as a remote sensing tool for exploration of the Martian crust. Furthermore, they can be especially useful for groundwater detection.
Identification and properties of the non-cubic phases of Mg 2Pb
Li, Yuwei; Bian, Guang; Singh, David J.
2016-12-20
Mg 2Pb occurs in the cubic fluorite structure and is a semimetal with a band structure strongly affected by spin-orbit interaction on the Pb p states. Its properties are therefore of interest in the context of topological materials. In addition a different phase of Mg 2Pb was experimentally reported, but its crystal structure and properties remain unknown. Here we determine the structure of this phase using ab initio evolutionary methods and report its properties. The energy of one tetragonal phase, space group P4/ nmm, is 2 meV per atom higher than that of the ground state structure supporting the experimentalmore » observation. We find this tetragonal phase to be a compenstated anisotropic metal with strong spin orbit effects. As a result, many other metastable structures have also been identified, especially one orthorhombic structure, space group Pnma, of which energy is 17 meV per atom higher than that of ground state structure and which perhaps could be the phase that was reported based on similarity of lattice parameters.« less
Perspective. Extremely fine tuning of doping enabled by combinatorial molecular-beam epitaxy
Wu, J.; Bozovic, I.
2015-04-06
Chemical doping provides an effective method to control the electric properties of complex oxides. However, the state-of-art accuracy in controlling doping is limited to about 1%. This hampers elucidation of the precise doping dependences of physical properties and phenomena of interest, such as quantum phase transitions. Using the combinatorial molecular beam epitaxy, we improve the accuracy in tuning the doping level by two orders of magnitude. We illustrate this novel method by two examples: a systematic investigation of the doping dependence of interface superconductivity, and a study of the competing ground states in the vicinity of the insulator-to-superconductor transition.
Endohedral fullerenes contaning transition-metal clusters
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bhusal, Shusil; Basurto, Luis; Zope, Rajendra; Baruah, Tunna
We report detailed investigation of structural, electronic, and spectroscopic properties of VSc2N-containing fullerenes in the size range C68 - C96. First, the candidate structures of the ground state are obtained using a systematic approach in which a large number of isomers of endohedral fullerenes were screened for their energetic stability. Stability of some of the most promising isomers were further studied using density functional theory at the all-electron level using large polarized Gaussian basis sets. The effect of the V doping is examined on the structure, spin states and the magnetic properties of the endohedral fullerenes. De-SC0002168, NSF-DMR 125302, DE-SC0006818.
Quantum size effects on the (0001) surface of double hexagonal close packed americium
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gao, D.; Ray, A. K.
2007-01-01
Electronic structures of double hexagonal close-packed americium and the (0001) surface have been studied via full-potential all-electron density-functional calculations with a mixed APW+lo/LAPW basis. The electronic and geometric properties of bulk dhcp Am as well as quantum size effects in the surface energies and the work functions of the dhcp Am (0001) ultra thin films up to seven layers have been examined at nonmagnetic, ferromagnetic, and antiferromagnetic configurations with and without spin orbit coupling. The anti-ferromagnetic state including spin-orbit coupling is found to be the ground state of dhcp Am with the 5f electrons primarily localized. Our results show that both magnetic configurations and spin-orbit coupling play important roles in determining the equilibrium lattice constant, the bulk modulus as well as the localized feature of 5f electrons for dhcp Am. Our calculated equilibrium lattice constant and bulk modulus at the ground state are in good agreement with the experimental values respectively. The work function of dhcp Am (0001) 7-layer surface at the ground state is predicted to be 2.90 eV. The surface energy for dhcp Am (0001) semi-infinite surface energy at the ground state is predicted to be 0.84 J/m2. Quantum size effects are found to be more pronounced in work functions than in surface energies.
Quantum critical point and spin fluctuations in lower-mantle ferropericlase
Lyubutin, Igor S.; Struzhkin, Viktor V.; Mironovich, A. A.; Gavriliuk, Alexander G.; Naumov, Pavel G.; Lin, Jung-Fu; Ovchinnikov, Sergey G.; Sinogeikin, Stanislav; Chow, Paul; Xiao, Yuming; Hemley, Russell J.
2013-01-01
Ferropericlase [(Mg,Fe)O] is one of the most abundant minerals of the earth’s lower mantle. The high-spin (HS) to low-spin (LS) transition in the Fe2+ ions may dramatically alter the physical and chemical properties of (Mg,Fe)O in the deep mantle. To understand the effects of compression on the ground electronic state of iron, electronic and magnetic states of Fe2+ in (Mg0.75Fe0.25)O have been investigated using transmission and synchrotron Mössbauer spectroscopy at high pressures and low temperatures (down to 5 K). Our results show that the ground electronic state of Fe2+ at the critical pressure Pc of the spin transition close to T = 0 is governed by a quantum critical point (T = 0, P = Pc) at which the energy required for the fluctuation between HS and LS states is zero. Analysis of the data gives Pc = 55 GPa. Thermal excitation within the HS or LS states (T > 0 K) is expected to strongly influence the magnetic as well as physical properties of ferropericlase. Multielectron theoretical calculations show that the existence of the quantum critical point at temperatures approaching zero affects not only physical properties of ferropericlase at low temperatures but also its properties at P-T of the earth’s lower mantle. PMID:23589892
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Watanabe, Shin; Minomo, Kosho; Shimada, Mitsuhiro; Tagami, Shingo; Kimura, Masaaki; Takechi, Maya; Fukuda, Mitsunori; Nishimura, Daiki; Suzuki, Takeshi; Matsumoto, Takuma; Shimizu, Yoshifumi R.; Yahiro, Masanobu
We analyze recently measured total reaction cross sections (σR) for 24-38Mg incident on 12C targets at 240 MeV/nucleon by using the microscopic framework based on the double folding model and antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD). The framework reproduces not only the measured σR but also other existing measured ground-state properties of Mg Isotopes (spin parity, total binding energy, one-neutron separation energy, and 2+ and 4+ excitation energies) quite well. AMD predicts large deformation from 31Mg19 to a drip-line nucleus 40Mg28, indicating that both the N = 20 and 28 magicities disappear.
Density Functional Calculations for the Neutron Star Matter at Subnormal Density
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kashiwaba, Yu; Nakatsukasa, Takashi
The pasta phases of nuclear matter, whose existence is suggested at low density, may influence observable properties of neutron stars. In order to investigate properties of the neutron star matter, we calculate self-consistent solutions for the ground states of slab-like phase using the microscopic density functional theory with Bloch wave functions. The calculations are performed at each point of fixed average density and proton fraction (\\bar{ρ },Yp), varying the lattice constant of the unit cell. For small Yp values, the dripped neutrons emerge in the ground state, while the protons constitute the slab (crystallized) structure. The shell effect of protons affects the thickness of the slab nuclei.
Ground state for a massive scalar field in the BTZ spacetime with Robin boundary conditions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bussola, Francesco; Dappiaggi, Claudio; Ferreira, Hugo R. C.; Khavkine, Igor
2017-11-01
We consider a real, massive scalar field in Bañados-Teitelboim-Zanelli spacetime, a 2 +1 -dimensional black hole solution of Einstein's field equations with a negative cosmological constant. First, we analyze the space of classical solutions in a mode decomposition, and we characterize the collection of all admissible boundary conditions of Robin type which can be imposed at infinity. Second, we investigate whether, for a given boundary condition, there exists a ground state by constructing explicitly its two-point function. We demonstrate that for a subclass of the boundary conditions it is possible to construct a ground state that locally satisfies the Hadamard property. In all other cases, we show that bound state mode solutions exist and, therefore, such construction is not possible.
Hou, Liyuan; Yang, Jucai; Liu, Yuming
2017-04-01
The structures and properties of Ho-doped Si clusters, including their adiabatic electron affinities (AEAs), simulated photoelectron spectra (PESs), stabilities, magnetic moments, and charge-transfer characteristics, were systematically investigated using four density-functional methods. The results show that the double-hybrid functional (which includes an MP2 correlation component) can accurately predict the ground-state structure and properties of Ho-doped Si clusters. The ground-state structures of HoSi n (n = 3-9) are sextuplet electronic states. The structures of these Ho-doped Si clusters (aside from HoSi 7 ) are substitutional. The ground-state structures of HoSi n - are quintuplet electronic states. Their predicted AEAs are in excellent agreement with the experimental ones. The mean absolute error in the theoretical AEAs of HoSi n (n = 4-9) is only 0.04 eV. The simulated PESs for HoSi n - (n = 5-9) are in good agreement with the experimental PESs. Based on its simulated PES and theoretical AEA, we reassigned the experimental PES of HoSi 4 - and obtained an experimental AEA of 2.2 ± 0.1 eV. The dissociation energies of Ho from HoSi n and HoSi n - (n = 3-9) were evaluated to test the relative stabilities of the clusters. HOMO-LUMO gap analysis indicated that doping the Si clusters with the rare-earth metal atom significantly increases their photochemical reactivity. Natural population analysis showed that the magnetic moments of HoSi n (n = 3-9) and their anions derive mainly from the Ho atom. It was also found that the magnetic moments of Ho in the HoSi n clusters are larger than the magnetic moment of an isolated Ho atom.
Microscopic evidence of a strain-enhanced ferromagnetic state in LaCoO3 thin films
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Park, S.; Ryan, P.; Karapetrova, E.; Kim, J. W.; Ma, J. X.; Shi, J.; Freeland, J. W.; Wu, Weida
2009-08-01
Strain-induced modification of magnetic properties of lightly hole doped epitaxial LaCoO3 thin films on different substrates were studied with variable temperature magnetic force microscopy (MFM). Real space observation at 10 K reveals the formation of the local magnetic clusters on a relaxed film grown on LaAlO3 (001). In contrast, a ferromagnetic ground state has been confirmed for tensile-strained film on SrTiO3 (001), indicating that strain is an important factor in creating the ferromagnetic state. Simultaneous atomic force microscopy and MFM measurements reveal nanoscale defect lines for the tensile-strained films, where the structural defects have a large impact on the local magnetic properties.
OMEGA{sup -}, XI*{sup -}, SIGMA*{sup -}, and DELTA{sup -} decuplet baryon magnetic moments
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Slaughter, Milton Dean
The properties of the ground-state U spin =(3/2) baryon decuplet magnetic moments DELTA{sup -}, XI*{sup -}, SIGMA*{sup -}, and OMEGA{sup -} and their ground-state spin-(1/2) cousins p, n, LAMBDA, SIGMA{sup +}, SIGMA{sup 0}, SIGMA{sup -}, XI{sup +}, and XI{sup -} have been studied for many years with a modicum of success. The magnetic moments of many are yet to be determined. Of the decuplet baryons, only the magnetic moment of the OMEGA{sup -} has been accurately determined. We calculate the magnetic moments of the physical decuplet U spin =(3/2) quartet members without ascribing any specific form to their quark structuremore » or intraquark interactions.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ryzhov, V. A.; Lazuta, A. V.; Molkanov, P. L.; Khavronin, V. P.; Kurbakov, A. I.; Runov, V. V.; Mukovskii, Ya. M.; Pestun, A. E.; Privezentsev, R. V.
2012-10-01
The magnetic, transport and structural properties are studied for La0.83Sr0.17MnO3 and La0.82Sr0.18CoO3 single crystals with nearly the same doping and the metallic ground state. Their comparisons have shown that ferromagnetic clusters originate in the paramagnetic matrix below Т*>TC in both samples and exhibit similar properties. This suggests the possible universality of such phenomena in doped mixed-valence oxides of transition metals with the perovskite-type structure. The cluster density increases on cooling and plays an important role on the physical properties of these systems. The differences in cluster evolutions and scenarios of their insulator-metal transitions are related to different magnetic behaviors of the matrixes in these crystals that is mainly due to distinct spin states of the Mn3+ and Co3+ ions.
Multicomponent Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory: Proton and Electron Excitation Energies.
Yang, Yang; Culpitt, Tanner; Hammes-Schiffer, Sharon
2018-04-05
The quantum mechanical treatment of both electrons and protons in the calculation of excited state properties is critical for describing nonadiabatic processes such as photoinduced proton-coupled electron transfer. Multicomponent density functional theory enables the consistent quantum mechanical treatment of more than one type of particle and has been implemented previously for studying ground state molecular properties within the nuclear-electronic orbital (NEO) framework, where all electrons and specified protons are treated quantum mechanically. To enable the study of excited state molecular properties, herein the linear response multicomponent time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) is derived and implemented within the NEO framework. Initial applications to FHF - and HCN illustrate that NEO-TDDFT provides accurate proton and electron excitation energies within a single calculation. As its computational cost is similar to that of conventional electronic TDDFT, the NEO-TDDFT approach is promising for diverse applications, particularly nonadiabatic proton transfer reactions, which may exhibit mixed electron-proton vibronic excitations.
Properties of solid and gaseous hydrogen, based upon anisotropic pair interactions
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Etters, R. D.; Danilowicz, R.; England, W.
1975-01-01
Properties of H2 are studied on the basis of an analytic anisotropic potential deduced from atomic orbital and perturbation calculations. The low-pressure solid results are based on a spherical average of the anisotropic potential. The ground state energy and the pressure-volume relation are calculated. The metal-insulator phase transition pressure is predicted. Second virial coefficients are calculated for H2 and D2, as is the difference in second virial coefficients between ortho and para H2 and D2.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dickel, T.; Plaß, W. R.; Ayet San Andres, S.; Ebert, J.; Geissel, H.; Haettner, E.; Hornung, C.; Miskun, I.; Pietri, S.; Purushothaman, S.; Reiter, M. P.; Rink, A.-K.; Scheidenberger, C.; Weick, H.; Dendooven, P.; Diwisch, M.; Greiner, F.; Heiße, F.; Knöbel, R.; Lippert, W.; Moore, I. D.; Pohjalainen, I.; Prochazka, A.; Ranjan, M.; Takechi, M.; Winfield, J. S.; Xu, X.
2015-05-01
211Po ions in the ground and isomeric states were produced via 238U projectile fragmentation at 1000 MeV/u. The 211Po ions were spatially separated in flight from the primary beam and other reaction products by the fragment separator FRS. The ions were energy-bunched, slowed-down and thermalized in a gas-filled cryogenic stopping cell (CSC). They were then extracted from the CSC and injected into a high-resolution multiple-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer (MR-TOF-MS). The excitation energy of the isomer and, for the first time, the isomeric-to-ground state ratio were determined from the measured mass spectrum. In the subsequent experimental step, the isomers were spatially separated from the ions in the ground state by an ion deflector and finally collected with a silicon detector for decay spectroscopy. This pioneering experimental result opens up unique perspectives for isomer-resolved studies. With this versatile experimental method new isomers with half-lives longer than a few milliseconds can be discovered and their decay properties can be measured with highest sensitivity and selectivity. These experiments can be extended to studies with isomeric beams in nuclear reactions.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Säkkinen, Niko; Leeuwen, Robert van; Peng, Yang
2015-12-21
We study ground-state properties of a two-site, two-electron Holstein model describing two molecules coupled indirectly via electron-phonon interaction by using both exact diagonalization and self-consistent diagrammatic many-body perturbation theory. The Hartree and self-consistent Born approximations used in the present work are studied at different levels of self-consistency. The governing equations are shown to exhibit multiple solutions when the electron-phonon interaction is sufficiently strong, whereas at smaller interactions, only a single solution is found. The additional solutions at larger electron-phonon couplings correspond to symmetry-broken states with inhomogeneous electron densities. A comparison to exact results indicates that this symmetry breaking is stronglymore » correlated with the formation of a bipolaron state in which the two electrons prefer to reside on the same molecule. The results further show that the Hartree and partially self-consistent Born solutions obtained by enforcing symmetry do not compare well with exact energetics, while the fully self-consistent Born approximation improves the qualitative and quantitative agreement with exact results in the same symmetric case. This together with a presented natural occupation number analysis supports the conclusion that the fully self-consistent approximation describes partially the bipolaron crossover. These results contribute to better understanding how these approximations cope with the strong localizing effect of the electron-phonon interaction.« less
Structural and low temperature transport properties of Fe2B and FeB systems at high pressure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kumar, P. Anand; Satya, A. T.; Reddy, P. V. Sreenivasa; Sekar, M.; Kanchana, V.; Vaitheeswaran, G.; Mani, Awadhesh; Kalavathi, S.; Shekar, N. V. Chandra
2017-10-01
The evolution of crystal structure and the ground state properties of Fe2B and FeB have been studied by performing high pressure X-ray diffraction up to a pressure of ∼24 GPa and temperature dependent (4.2-300 K range) high-pressure resistivity measurements up to ∼ 2 GPa. While a pressure induced reversible structural phase transition from tetragonal to orthorhombic structure is observed at ∼6.3 GPa in Fe2B, FeB has been found to be stable in its orthorhombic phase up to the pressure of 24 GPa. In the case of Fe2B, both parent and daughter phases coexist beyond the transition pressure. The bulk modulus of FeB and Fe2B (tetragonal) have been found to be 248 GPa and 235 GPa respectively. First principle electronic structure calculations have been performed using the present experimental inputs and the calculated ground state properties agree quite well with the major findings of the experiments. Debye temperature extracted from the analysis of low temperature resistivity data is observed to decrease with pressure indicating softening of phonons in both the systems.
Investigation of the RbCa molecule: Experiment and theory.
Pototschnig, Johann V; Krois, Günter; Lackner, Florian; Ernst, Wolfgang E
2015-04-01
We present a thorough theoretical and experimental study of the electronic structure of RbCa. The mixed alkali-alkaline earth molecule RbCa was formed on superfluid helium nanodroplets. Excited states of the molecule in the range of 13 000-23 000 cm -1 were recorded by resonance enhanced multi-photon ionization time-of-flight spectroscopy. The experiment is accompanied by high level ab initio calculations of ground and excited state properties, utilizing a multireference configuration interaction method based on multiconfigurational self consistent field calculations. With this approach the potential energy curves and permanent electric dipole moments of 24 electronic states were calculated. In addition we computed the transition dipole moments for transitions from the ground into excited states. The combination of experiment and theory allowed the assignment of features in the recorded spectrum to the excited [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], and [Formula: see text] states, where the experiment allowed to benchmark the calculation. This is the first experimental work giving insight into the previously unknown RbCa molecule, which offers great prospects in ultracold molecular physics due to its magnetic and electronic dipole moment in the [Formula: see text] ground state.
Analytical ground state for the Jaynes-Cummings model with ultrastrong coupling
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zhang Yuanwei; Institute of Theoretical Physics, Shanxi University, Taiyuan 030006; Chen Gang
2011-06-15
We present a generalized variational method to analytically obtain the ground-state properties of the Jaynes-Cummings model with the ultrastrong coupling. An explicit expression for the ground-state energy, which agrees well with the numerical simulation in a wide range of the experimental parameters, is given. In particular, the introduced method can successfully solve this Jaynes-Cummings model with the positive detuning (the atomic resonant level is larger than the photon frequency), which cannot be treated in the adiabatical approximation and the generalized rotating-wave approximation. Finally, we also demonstrate analytically how to control the mean photon number by means of the current experimentalmore » parameters including the photon frequency, the coupling strength, and especially the atomic resonant level.« less
24 CFR 882.401 - Eligible properties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
...) Ineligible properties. (1) Nursing homes, units within the grounds of penal, reformatory, medical, mental and similar public or private institutions, and facilities providing continual psychiatric, medical or nursing... State or unit of general local government is not eligible for assistance under this program. (3) High...
24 CFR 882.401 - Eligible properties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
...) Ineligible properties. (1) Nursing homes, units within the grounds of penal, reformatory, medical, mental and similar public or private institutions, and facilities providing continual psychiatric, medical or nursing... State or unit of general local government is not eligible for assistance under this program. (3) High...
24 CFR 882.401 - Eligible properties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
...) Ineligible properties. (1) Nursing homes, units within the grounds of penal, reformatory, medical, mental and similar public or private institutions, and facilities providing continual psychiatric, medical or nursing... State or unit of general local government is not eligible for assistance under this program. (3) High...
24 CFR 882.401 - Eligible properties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
...) Ineligible properties. (1) Nursing homes, units within the grounds of penal, reformatory, medical, mental and similar public or private institutions, and facilities providing continual psychiatric, medical or nursing... State or unit of general local government is not eligible for assistance under this program. (3) High...
Decay properties of Bk24397 and Bk24497
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ahmad, I.; Kondev, F. G.; Greene, J. P.; Zhu, S.
2018-01-01
Electron capture decays of 243Bk and 244Bk have been studied by measuring the γ -ray spectra of mass-separated sources and level structures of 243Cm and 244Cm have been deduced. In 243Cm, the electron capture population to the ground state, 1 /2+[631 ] , and 1 /2+[620 ] Nilsson states have been observed. The octupole Kπ=2- band was identified in 244Cm at 933.6 keV. In addition, spins and parities were deduced for several other states and two-quasiparticle configurations have been tentatively assigned to them.
Yin, Shi; Bernstein, Elliot R
2017-10-05
Iron sulfur cluster anions (FeS) m - (m = 2-8) are studied by photoelectron spectroscopy (PES) at 3.492 eV (355 nm) and 4.661 eV (266 nm) photon energies, and by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The most probable structures and ground state spin multiplicities for (FeS) m - (m = 2-8) clusters are tentatively assigned through a comparison of their theoretical and experiment first vertical detachment energy (VDE) values. Many spin states lie within 0.5 eV of the ground spin state for the larger (FeS) m - (m ≥ 4) clusters. Theoretical VDEs of these low lying spin states are in good agreement with the experimental VDE values. Therefore, multiple spin states of each of these iron sulfur cluster anions probably coexist under the current experimental conditions. Such available multiple spin states must be considered when evaluating the properties and behavior of these iron sulfur clusters in real chemical and biological systems. The experimental first VDEs of (FeS) m - (m = 1-8) clusters are observed to change with the cluster size (number m). The first VDE trends noted can be related to the different properties of the highest singly occupied molecular orbitals (NBO, HSOMOs) of each cluster anion. The changing nature of the NBO/HSOMO of these (FeS) m - (m = 1-8) clusters from a p orbital on S, to a d orbital on Fe, and to an Fe-Fe bonding orbital is probably responsible for the observed increasing trend for their first VDEs with respect to m.
Spectroscopic and structural investigation for the ground and excited states of CaNa+ molecular ion
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jellali, Soulef; Habli, Héla; Mejrissi, Leila; Hamdi, Rafika; Oujia, Brahim; Xavier Gadéa, Florent
2018-04-01
In the current theoretical study, we investigated several electronic states correlated with the {Ca+Na+} and {Ca++Na} asymptotic limits of different symmetries (Σ+, Π, Δ). Our calculations were based on ab intio method using semi-empirical pseudo-potential theory of both cores Na+ and Ca2+ and Full Configuration Interaction (FCI). Hence, we computed the adiabatic potential energy curves (PECs) and vibrational levels of the ground state along with several higher states of (CaNa)+ molecular ion. From these curves, we extracted all related spectroscopic parameters (De, D0, Te, Re, Be, ωe and ωeχe). Dipolar properties of (CaNa)+ such as Permanent and Transition Dipole Moments (PDM, TDM) were determined and analyzed. Numerous Avoided Crossings (ACs) were detected in PECs and their reflections were clearly observed in PDM and TDM functions. The strong interactions could lead to significant charge or excitation transfer for atom-ion collisions in the diverse charge or excited states.
Electronic conduction in doped multiferroic BiFeO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Chan-Ho; Seidel, Jan; Kim, Sang-Yong; Gajek, M.; Yu, P.; Holcomb, M. B.; Martin, L. W.; Ramesh, R.; Chu, Y. H.
2009-03-01
Competition between multiple ground states, that are energetically similar, plays a key role in many interesting material properties and physical phenomena as for example in high-Tc superconductors (electron kinetic energy vs. electron-electron repulsion), colossal magnetoresistance (metallic state vs. charge ordered insulating state), and magnetically frustrated systems (spin-spin interactions). We are exploring the idea of similar competing phenomena in doped multiferroics by control of band-filling. In this paper we present systematic investigations of divalent Ca doping of ferroelectric BiFeO3 in terms of structural and electronic conduction properties as well as diffusion properties of oxygen vacancies.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Liu, Qi-Jun, E-mail: dianerliu@yahoo.com.cn; Liu, Zheng-Tang; Feng, Li-Ping
2012-12-15
On the plane-wave ultrasoft pseudopotential technique based on the first-principles density functional theory (DFT), we calculated the structural, elastic, electronic and optical properties of the seven different phases of SrZrO{sub 3}. The obtained ground-state properties are in good agreement with previous experiments and calculations, which indicate that the most stable phase is orthorhombic Pnma structure. Seven phases of SrZrO{sub 3} are mechanically stable with cubic, tetragonal and orthorhombic structures. The mechanical and thermodynamic properties have been obtained by using the Voigt-Reuss-Hill approach and Debye-Grueneisen model. The electronic structures and optical properties are obtained and compared with the available experimental andmore » theoretical data. - Graphical abstract: Energy versus volume of seven phases SrZrO{sub 3} shows the Pnma phase has the minimum ground-state energy. Highlights: Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer We calculated the physical and chemical properties of seven SrZrO{sub 3} polymorphs. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer The order of stability is Pnma>Imma>Cmcm>I4/mcm>P4/mbm>P4mm>Pm3-bar m. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer The most stable phase is orthorhombic Pnma structure. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer Seven phases of SrZrO{sub 3} are mechanically stable. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer The relationship between n and {rho}{sub m} is n=1+0.18{rho}{sub m}.« less
Construction of ground-state preserving sparse lattice models for predictive materials simulations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Huang, Wenxuan; Urban, Alexander; Rong, Ziqin; Ding, Zhiwei; Luo, Chuan; Ceder, Gerbrand
2017-08-01
First-principles based cluster expansion models are the dominant approach in ab initio thermodynamics of crystalline mixtures enabling the prediction of phase diagrams and novel ground states. However, despite recent advances, the construction of accurate models still requires a careful and time-consuming manual parameter tuning process for ground-state preservation, since this property is not guaranteed by default. In this paper, we present a systematic and mathematically sound method to obtain cluster expansion models that are guaranteed to preserve the ground states of their reference data. The method builds on the recently introduced compressive sensing paradigm for cluster expansion and employs quadratic programming to impose constraints on the model parameters. The robustness of our methodology is illustrated for two lithium transition metal oxides with relevance for Li-ion battery cathodes, i.e., Li2xFe2(1-x)O2 and Li2xTi2(1-x)O2, for which the construction of cluster expansion models with compressive sensing alone has proven to be challenging. We demonstrate that our method not only guarantees ground-state preservation on the set of reference structures used for the model construction, but also show that out-of-sample ground-state preservation up to relatively large supercell size is achievable through a rapidly converging iterative refinement. This method provides a general tool for building robust, compressed and constrained physical models with predictive power.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pototschnig, Johann V.; Hauser, Andreas W.; Ernst, Wolfgang E.
2016-06-01
n the present study the ground state as well as the lowest ^4Σ^+ state were determined for 16 AK-AKE molecules. Multireference configuration interaction calculations were carried out in order to understand the bonding of diatomic alkali-alkaline earth (AK-AKE) molecules. The correlations between molecular properties (disociation energy, bond distances, electric dipole moment) and atomic properties (electronegativity, polarizability) will be discussed. A correlation between the dissociation energy and the dipole moment of the lowest ^4Σ^+ state was observed, while the dipole moment of the lowest ^2Σ^+ state does not show such a simple dependency. In this case an empirical relation could be established. The class of AK-AKE molecules was selected for this investigation due to their possible applications in ultracold molecular physics. J. V. Pototschnig, A. W. Hauser and W. E. Ernst, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2016,18, 5964-5973
Zhao, Peiwen; Bu, Yuxiang
2016-01-14
In this work, we computationally design radical nucleobases which possess improved electronic properties, especially diradical properties through introducing a cyclopentadiene radical. We predict that the detailed electromagnetic features of base assemblies are based on the orientation of the extra five-membered cyclopentadiene ring. Broken symmetry DFT calculations take into account the relevant structures and properties. Our results reveal that both the radicalized DNA bases and the base pairs formed when they combine with their counterparts remain stable and display larger spin delocalization. The mode of embedding the cyclopentadiene free radical in the structures has some influence on the degree of π-conjugation, which results in various diradical characteristics. Single-layered radical base pairs all have an open-shell singlet ground state, but the energy difference between singlet and triplet is not significant. For two-layered radical base pairs, the situation is more complex. All of them have an open-shell state as their ground state, including an open-shell singlet state and an open-shell triplet state. That is, the majority of radical base pairs possess anti-ferromagnetic or ferromagnetic characteristics. We present here a more in-depth discussion and analyses to study the magnetic characteristics of radical bases and base pairs. As an important factor, two-layered radical base pairs also have been carefully analyzed. We hope that all the measurements and results presented here will stimulate further detailed insights into the related mechanisms in modified DNA bases and the design of better ring-expanded DNA magnetic materials.
Implicit and explicit host effects on excitons in pentacene derivatives.
Charlton, R J; Fogarty, R M; Bogatko, S; Zuehlsdorff, T J; Hine, N D M; Heeney, M; Horsfield, A P; Haynes, P D
2018-03-14
An ab initio study of the effects of implicit and explicit hosts on the excited state properties of pentacene and its nitrogen-based derivatives has been performed using ground state density functional theory (DFT), time-dependent DFT, and ΔSCF. We observe a significant solvatochromic redshift in the excitation energy of the lowest singlet state (S 1 ) of pentacene from inclusion in a p-terphenyl host compared to vacuum; for an explicit host consisting of six nearest neighbour p-terphenyls, we obtain a redshift of 65 meV while a conductor-like polarisable continuum model (CPCM) yields a 78 meV redshift. Comparison is made between the excitonic properties of pentacene and four of its nitrogen-based analogs, 1,8-, 2,9-, 5,12-, and 6,13-diazapentacene with the latter found to be the most distinct due to local distortions in the ground state electronic structure. We observe that a CPCM is insufficient to fully understand the impact of the host due to the presence of a mild charge-transfer (CT) coupling between the chromophore and neighbouring p-terphenyls, a phenomenon which can only be captured using an explicit model. The strength of this CT interaction increases as the nitrogens are brought closer to the central acene ring of pentacene.
Implicit and explicit host effects on excitons in pentacene derivatives
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Charlton, R. J.; Fogarty, R. M.; Bogatko, S.; Zuehlsdorff, T. J.; Hine, N. D. M.; Heeney, M.; Horsfield, A. P.; Haynes, P. D.
2018-03-01
An ab initio study of the effects of implicit and explicit hosts on the excited state properties of pentacene and its nitrogen-based derivatives has been performed using ground state density functional theory (DFT), time-dependent DFT, and ΔSCF. We observe a significant solvatochromic redshift in the excitation energy of the lowest singlet state (S1) of pentacene from inclusion in a p-terphenyl host compared to vacuum; for an explicit host consisting of six nearest neighbour p-terphenyls, we obtain a redshift of 65 meV while a conductor-like polarisable continuum model (CPCM) yields a 78 meV redshift. Comparison is made between the excitonic properties of pentacene and four of its nitrogen-based analogs, 1,8-, 2,9-, 5,12-, and 6,13-diazapentacene with the latter found to be the most distinct due to local distortions in the ground state electronic structure. We observe that a CPCM is insufficient to fully understand the impact of the host due to the presence of a mild charge-transfer (CT) coupling between the chromophore and neighbouring p-terphenyls, a phenomenon which can only be captured using an explicit model. The strength of this CT interaction increases as the nitrogens are brought closer to the central acene ring of pentacene.
Theoretical investigation of existence of meta-stability in iron and cobalt clusters
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Berry, Habte Dulla; Zhang, Qinfang; Wang, Baolin
2018-03-01
Nowadays considerable attention has been given for researches on magnetic properties of transition metal clusters (specifically FeN and CoN). This is because these clusters offer big hopes for the possibility of presenting significant magnetic anisotropy energy which is critical for technological applications. This study intends to find out the causes for the existence of the two states (ground and meta-stable) in Iron and Cobalt clusters. The study also explains the role of valence electrons for the existence of magnetism in the two states by using the concept of ionization potential, electron dipole polarizabilities, chemical hardness and softness of the clusters. Assuming that, when all itinerant electrons are at s-level and also at the d-level (ns = n andns → 0.) the ground state and meta-stable state energies with distinct energy minima are (Egs = l / 2 n +εc n - 2μB hn andEms =εd n - gμB hn) respectively. The findings also showed that polarizability of small cluster of the specified elements are increased compared with the bulk value, which means that there is an effective increase in the cluster radius due to the spilling out of the electronic charge. Furthermore, it is obvious that 4s electrons are more delocalized than the 3d electrons so that they spill out more than the 3d electrons. This leads to the conclusion that 4s electrons are primarily responsible for the enhanced polarizabilities and for shell structure effects. This indicates that polarizability at the meta-stable state is less than that of the ground state i.e. the meta-stable state loses its s electron. Therefore the two minima represent a ground state of configuration 3 d↑5 3 d↓ 2 + δ 4s 2 - δ with energy Egs and meta-stable state of configuration 3 d↑5 3 d↓ 3 + δ 4s 1 - δ with energy Ems for Co clusters and a ground state configuration 3 d↑5 3 d↓ 1 + δ 4s 2 - δ with energy Egs an meta-stable state of configuration 3 d↑5 3 d↓ 2 + δ 4s 1 - δ with energy Ems for Fe clusters. Hence, the existence of the two states (meta-stable & ground state) is due to the large disproportion in electronic configurations of the two clusters at their respective states. Furthermore, the chemical hardness and softness of the clusters also provide evidence for the existence of stability of the two states depending on the cluster size.
Trial densities for the extended Thomas-Fermi model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yu, An; Jimin, Hu
1996-02-01
A new and simplified form of nuclear densities is proposed for the extended Thomas-Fermi method (ETF) and applied to calculate the ground-state properties of several spherical nuclei, with results comparable or even better than other conventional density profiles. With the expectation value method (EVM) for microscopic corrections we checked our new densities for spherical nuclei. The binding energies of ground states almost reproduce the Hartree-Fock (HF) calculations exactly. Further applications to nuclei far away from the β-stability line are discussed.
Wolcott, Stephen W.; Snow, Robert F.
1995-01-01
An empirical technique was used to calculate the recharge to bedrock aquifers in northern Westchester County. This method requires delineation of ground-water divides within the aquifer area and values for (1) the extent of till and exposed bedrock within the aquifer area, and (2) mean annual runoff. This report contains maps and data needed for calculation of recharge in any given area within the 165square-mile study area. Recharge was computed by this technique for a 93-square-mile part of the study area and used a ground-water-flow model to evaluate the reliability of the method. A two-layer, steady-state model of the selected area was calibrated. The area consists predominantly of bedrock overlain by small localized deposits of till and stratified drill Ground-water-level and streamflow data collected in mid-November 1987 were used for model calibration. The data set approximates average annual conditions. The model was calibrated from (1) estimates of recharge as computed through the empirical technique, and (2) a range of values for hydrologic properties derived from aquifer tests and published literature. Recharge values used for model simulation appear to be reasonable for average steady-state conditions. Water-quality data were collected from 53 selected bedrock wells throughout northern Westchester County to define the background ground-water quality. The constituents and properties for which samples were analyzed included major cations and anions, temperature, pH, specific conductance, and hardness. Results indicate little difference in water quality among the bedrock aquifers within the study area. Ground water is mainly the calcium-bicarbonate type and is moderately hard. Average concentrations of sodium, sulfate, chloride, nitrate, iron, and manganese were within acceptable limits established by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for domestic water supply.
Anomalous bulk behavior in the free parafermion Z (N ) spin chain
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Alcaraz, Francisco C.; Batchelor, Murray T.
2018-06-01
We demonstrate using direct numerical diagonalization and extrapolation methods that boundary conditions have a profound effect on the bulk properties of a simple Z (N ) model for N ≥3 for which the model Hamiltonian is non-Hermitian. For N =2 the model reduces to the well-known quantum Ising model in a transverse field. For open boundary conditions, the Z (N ) model is known to be solved exactly in terms of free parafermions. Once the ends of the open chain are connected by considering the model on a ring, the bulk properties, including the ground-state energy per site, are seen to differ dramatically with increasing N . Other properties, such as the leading finite-size corrections to the ground-state energy, the mass gap exponent, and the specific-heat exponent, are also seen to be dependent on the boundary conditions. We speculate that this anomalous bulk behavior is a topological effect.
The ground state of two-dimensional silicon
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Borlido, Pedro; Rödl, Claudia; Marques, Miguel A. L.; Botti, Silvana
2018-07-01
We perform ab initio structure-prediction calculations of the low-energy crystal structures of two-dimensional silicon. Besides the well-known silicene and a few other allotropes proposed earlier in the literature, we discover a wealth of new phases with interesting properties. In particular, we find that the ground state of two-dimensional silicon is an unreported structure formed by a honeycomb lattice with dumbbell atoms arranged in a zigzag pattern. This material, that we call zigzag dumbbell silicene, is 218 meV/atom more stable than silicene and displays a quasi-direct band gap of around 1.11 eV, with a very dispersive electron band. These properties should make it easier to synthesize than silicene and interesting for a wealth of opto-electronic applications.
Nature of a single doped hole in two-leg Hubbard and t - J ladders
Liu, Shenxiu; Jiang, Hong -Chen; Devereaux, Thomas P.
2016-10-15
In this study, we have systematically studied the single-hole problem in two-leg Hubbard and t–J ladders by large-scale density-matrix renormalization-group calculations. We found that the doped holes in both models behave similarly, while the three-site correlated hopping term is not important in determining the ground-state properties. For more insights, we have also calculated the elementary excitations, i.e., the energy gaps to the excited states of the system. In the strong-rung limit, we found that the doped hole behaves as a Bloch quasiparticle in both systems where the spin and charge of the doped hole are tightly bound together. In themore » isotropic limit, while the hole still behaves like a quasiparticle in the long-wavelength limit, our results show that its spin and charge components are only loosely bound together inside the quasiparticle, whose internal structure can lead to a visible residual effect which dramatically changes the local structure of the ground-state wave function.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Liu, Shenxiu; Jiang, Hong -Chen; Devereaux, Thomas P.
In this study, we have systematically studied the single-hole problem in two-leg Hubbard and t–J ladders by large-scale density-matrix renormalization-group calculations. We found that the doped holes in both models behave similarly, while the three-site correlated hopping term is not important in determining the ground-state properties. For more insights, we have also calculated the elementary excitations, i.e., the energy gaps to the excited states of the system. In the strong-rung limit, we found that the doped hole behaves as a Bloch quasiparticle in both systems where the spin and charge of the doped hole are tightly bound together. In themore » isotropic limit, while the hole still behaves like a quasiparticle in the long-wavelength limit, our results show that its spin and charge components are only loosely bound together inside the quasiparticle, whose internal structure can lead to a visible residual effect which dramatically changes the local structure of the ground-state wave function.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khan, Amin; Ali, Zahid; Khan, Imad; Ahmad, Iftikhar
2018-03-01
Ternary palladates CdPd3O4 and TlPd3O4 have been studied theoretically using the generalized gradient approximation (GGA), modified Becke-Johnson, and spin-orbit coupling (GGA-SOC) exchange-correlation functionals in the density functional theory (DFT) framework. From the calculated ground-state properties, it is found that SOC effects are dominant in these palladates. Mechanical properties reveal that both compounds are ductile in nature. The electronic band structures show that CdPd3O4 is metallic, whereas TlPd3O4 is an indirect-bandgap semiconductor with energy gap of 1.1 eV. The optical properties show that TlPd3O4 is a good dielectric material. The dense electronic states, narrow-gap semiconductor nature, and Seebeck coefficient of TlPd3O4 suggest that it could be used as a good thermoelectric material. The magnetic susceptibility calculated by post-DFT treatment confirmed the paramagnetic behavior of these compounds.
Nuclear Data Sheets for A = 69
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nesaraja, C. D.
2014-01-01
Experimental data on ground- and excited-state properties for all known nuclei with mass number A = 69 have been compiled and evaluated. States populated in radioactive decay, as well as in nuclear reactions, have been considered. For these nuclei, level and decay schemes, as well as tables of nuclear properties, are given in detail. This work supersedes the 2000 evaluation by M.R. Bhat and J.K. Tuli (2000Bh05).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dun, Z. L.; Trinh, J.; Lee, M.; Choi, E. S.; Li, K.; Hu, Y. F.; Wang, Y. X.; Blanc, N.; Ramirez, A. P.; Zhou, H. D.
2017-03-01
We present a systematic study of the structural and magnetic properties of two branches of the rare-earth tripod-kagome-lattice (TKL) family A2R3Sb3O14 (A = Mg, Zn; R = Pr, Nd, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Yb; here, we use abbreviation A-R, as in MgPr for Mg2Pr3Sb3O14 ), which complements our previously reported work on MgDy, MgGd, and MgEr [Z. L. Dun et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 157201 (2016), 10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.157201]. The present susceptibility (χdc, χac) and specific-heat measurements reveal various magnetic ground states, including the nonmagnetic singlet state for MgPr, ZnPr; long-range orderings (LROs) for MgGd, ZnGd, MgNd, ZnNd, and MgYb; a long-range magnetic charge ordered state for MgDy, ZnDy, and potentially for MgHo; possible spin-glass states for ZnEr, ZnHo; the absence of spin ordering down to 80 mK for MgEr, MgTb, ZnTb, and ZnYb compounds. The ground states observed here bear both similarities as well as striking differences from the states found in the parent pyrochlore systems. In particular, while the TKLs display a greater tendency towards LRO, the lack of LRO in MgHo, MgTb, and ZnTb can be viewed from the standpoint of a balance among spin-spin interactions, anisotropies, and non-Kramers nature of single-ion state. While substituting Zn for Mg changes the chemical pressure, and subtly modifies the interaction energies for compounds with larger R ions, this substitution introduces structural disorder and modifies the ground states for compounds with smaller R ions (Ho, Er, Yb).
Head-on collision of multistate ultralight BEC dark matter configurations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Guzmán, F. S.; Avilez, Ana A.
2018-06-01
Density profiles of ultralight Bose-condensate dark matter inferred from numerical simulations of structure formation, ruled by the Gross-Pitaevskii-Poisson (GPP) system of equations, have a core-tail structure. Multistate equilibrium configurations of the GPP system, on the other hand, have a similar core-tail density profile. We now submit these multistate configurations to highly dynamical scenarios and show their potential as providers of appropriate density profiles of structures. We present the simulation of head-on collisions between two equilibrium configurations of the GPP system of equations, including the collision of ground state with multistate configurations. We study the regimes of solitonic and merger behavior and show generic properties of the dynamics of the system, including the relaxation process and attractor density profiles. We show that the merger of multistate configurations has the potential to produce core-tail density profiles, with the core dominated by the ground state and the halo dominated by an additional state.
Delocalization error and "functional tuning" in Kohn-Sham calculations of molecular properties.
Autschbach, Jochen; Srebro, Monika
2014-08-19
Kohn-Sham theory (KST) is the "workhorse" of numerical quantum chemistry. This is particularly true for first-principles calculations of ground- and excited-state properties for larger systems, including electronic spectra, electronic dynamic and static linear and higher order response properties (including nonlinear optical (NLO) properties), conformational or dynamic averaging of spectra and response properties, or properties that are affected by the coupling of electron and nuclear motion. This Account explores the sometimes dramatic impact of the delocalization error (DE) and possible benefits from the use of long-range corrections (LC) and "tuning" of functionals in KST calculations of molecular ground-state and response properties. Tuning refers to a nonempirical molecule-specific determination of adjustable parameters in functionals to satisfy known exact conditions, for instance, that the energy of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) should be equal to the negative vertical ionization potential (IP) or that the energy as a function of fractional electron numbers should afford straight-line segments. The presentation is given from the viewpoint of a chemist interested in computations of a variety of molecular optical and spectroscopic properties and of a theoretician developing methods for computing such properties with KST. In recent years, the use of LC functionals, functional tuning, and quantifying the DE explicitly have provided valuable insight regarding the performance of KST for molecular properties. We discuss a number of different molecular properties, with examples from recent studies from our laboratory and related literature. The selected properties probe different aspects of molecular electronic structure. Electric field gradients and hyperfine coupling constants can be exquisitely sensitive to the DE because it affects the ground-state electron density and spin density distributions. For π-conjugated molecules, it is shown how the DE manifests itself either in too strong or too weak delocalization of localized molecular orbitals (LMOs). Optical rotation is an electric-magnetic linear response property that is calculated in a similar fashion as the electric polarizability, but it is more sensitive to approximations and can benefit greatly from tuning and small DE. Hyperpolarizabilities of π-conjugated "push-pull" systems are examples of NLO properties that can be greatly improved by tuning of range-separated exchange (RSE) functionals, in part due to improved charge-transfer excitation energies. On-going work on band gap predictions is also mentioned. The findings may provide clues for future improvements of KST because different molecular properties exhibit varying sensitivity to approximations in the electronic structure model. The utility of analyzing molecular properties and the impact of the DE in terms of LMOs, representing "chemist's orbitals" such as individual lone pairs and bonds, is highlighted.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Maity, Amit; Sinha, Debopam; Rajak, Kajal Krishna
2018-04-01
One novel heteroleptic iridium(III) complex with cyclometalated 2-phenylquinoline(2-phq) was synthesized by the stoichiometric reaction of [Ir(2-phq)2Cl]2, i.e, Bis-[μ-chlorodi-(2-phenylquinoline)iridium(III)] and HL ligand, where L- is deprotonated form of azo ligand prepared from 8-hydroxyquinoline and aniline in a 1:1 proportion of dichloromethane and ethanol solvent at argon atmosphere in presence of mild base triethylamine in stoichiometric ratio. The prepared complex was characterized by 1H NMR, ESI-mass spectrometry, IR spectroscopy and most accurately by X-ray single crystallography. The photo physical properties like absorption and emission, i.e, photoluminescence in liquid state as well as solid state were studied exclusively. The experimental electrochemical study was also done with cyclic voltammetry. The theoretical investigations of the photo physical properties were done by DFT and TDDFT calculations. The ground state excitation transitions of the complex arise from 1ILCT and 1MLCT transition. The UV-Vis and photoluminescence transition was also investigated by NTO analysis. The triplet state emission transition was characterized by 3MLCT and some portion of 3ILCT transition.
Mechanical, electronic and thermodynamic properties of full Heusler compounds Fe2VX(X = Al, Ga)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khalfa, M.; Khachai, H.; Chiker, F.; Baki, N.; Bougherara, K.; Yakoubi, A.; Murtaza, G.; Harmel, M.; Abu-Jafar, M. S.; Omran, S. Bin; Khenata, R.
2015-11-01
The electronic structure, mechanical and thermodynamic properties of Fe2VX, (with X = Al and Ga), have been studied self consistently by employing state-of-the-art full-potential linearized approach of augmented plane wave plus local orbitals (FP-LAPW + lo) method. The exchange-correlation potential is treated with the local density and generalized gradient approximations (LDA and GGA). Our predicted ground state properties such as lattice constants, bulk modulus and elastic constants appear more accurate when we employed the GGA rather than the LDA, and these results are in very good agreement with the available experimental and theoretical data. Further, thermodynamic properties of Fe2VAl and Fe2VGa are predicted with pressure and temperature in the ranges of 0-40 GPa and 0-1500 K using the quasi-harmonic Debye model. We have obtained successfully the variations of the heat capacities, primitive cell volume and volume expansion coefficient.
Re-examination of the Cs2 ground singlet X1Σg+ and triplet a3Σu+ states
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sovkov, Vladimir B.; Xie, Feng; Lyyra, A. Marjatta; Ahmed, Ergin H.; Ma, Jie; Jia, Suotang
2017-09-01
This paper clarifies the disagreement in the depth of the potential energy curve of the cesium dimer singlet ground state which has lasted for nearly a decade. We point out that the origin of this disagreement must be a technical misprint in the values of the three binding energies reported by Danzl et al. [Science 321, 1062 (2008)], while the X1Σg+ state potential reported by Coxon and Hajigeorgiou [J. Chem. Phys. 132, 094105 (2010)], based on experimental data by Amiot and Dulieu [J. Chem. Phys. 117, 5155 (2002)], is quite correct. We have recalculated the potential energy function of the triplet ground state a3Σu+ by using the available experimental data spanning both the attractive and the repulsive branches so that the potential energy function complies asymptotically with the singlet ground state X1Σg+ potential energy function by Coxon and Hajigeorgiou. This is important for the simulation of the near dissociation properties such as Feshbach resonances, which are typically observed in modern experiments with ultracold atoms and molecules.
Uncertainties in Earthquake Loss Analysis: A Case Study From Southern California
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mahdyiar, M.; Guin, J.
2005-12-01
Probabilistic earthquake hazard and loss analyses play important roles in many areas of risk management, including earthquake related public policy and insurance ratemaking. Rigorous loss estimation for portfolios of properties is difficult since there are various types of uncertainties in all aspects of modeling and analysis. It is the objective of this study to investigate the sensitivity of earthquake loss estimation to uncertainties in regional seismicity, earthquake source parameters, ground motions, and sites' spatial correlation on typical property portfolios in Southern California. Southern California is an attractive region for such a study because it has a large population concentration exposed to significant levels of seismic hazard. During the last decade, there have been several comprehensive studies of most regional faults and seismogenic sources. There have also been detailed studies on regional ground motion attenuations and regional and local site responses to ground motions. This information has been used by engineering seismologists to conduct regional seismic hazard and risk analysis on a routine basis. However, one of the more difficult tasks in such studies is the proper incorporation of uncertainties in the analysis. From the hazard side, there are uncertainties in the magnitudes, rates and mechanisms of the seismic sources and local site conditions and ground motion site amplifications. From the vulnerability side, there are considerable uncertainties in estimating the state of damage of buildings under different earthquake ground motions. From an analytical side, there are challenges in capturing the spatial correlation of ground motions and building damage, and integrating thousands of loss distribution curves with different degrees of correlation. In this paper we propose to address some of these issues by conducting loss analyses of a typical small portfolio in southern California, taking into consideration various source and ground motion uncertainties. The approach is designed to integrate loss distribution functions with different degrees of correlation for portfolio analysis. The analysis is based on USGS 2002 regional seismicity model.
Spectral properties of subarctic plants for remote ecosystem assessment
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Golubeva, Elena; Tutubalina, Olga; Rees, Gareth; Zimin, Mikhail; Mikheeva, Anna
2014-05-01
Multispectral and hyperspectral satellite images are increasingly used to identify properties of vegetation, its state, dynamics and productivity. Arctic vegetation is sensitive to changing habitat conditions related to both natural causes (in particular climatic trends), and human impact (both direct and indirect, e.g. associated with air, soil and water pollution). Change in the state of individual plants and of vegetation cover in general enables their use as indicators of natural and anthropogenic processes, manifested in satellite images through change of their spectral reflectance properties. These processes can be studied by identifying significant links between spectral properties of objects in satellite images and corresponding properties of plants, recorded in situ. We focus on the spectral signatures of subarctic plants dominating treeline ecotone ecosystems to assess the feasibility of mapping the spatial structure and dynamics of vegetation using multispectral and hyperspectral satellite imagery. Our model objects are tundra plants and ecosystems in both natural and technogenically disturbed environments in the central part of the Kola Peninsula, Russia. We conducted ground spectroradiometry with two spectroradiometers: ASD FieldSpec 3 Hi-res (350-2500 nm range with resolution from 3 to 10 nm) and SkyeInstruments SpectroSense 2+ (bands centred at 480, 550, 680, 840 nm, 50-130 nm wide) for samples of different species: Betula pubescens S.L., B. tortuosa, Picea abies, Betula nana, Ledum palustre, Vaccinium uligimosum, V. myrtillus, V. vitis-idaea, Empetrum hermaphroditum, Cetraria islandica (L), Flavocetraria nivalis (Cetraria nivalis), Alectoria ochroleuca, Cladonia arbuscula S.L., Hylocomium splendens and Pleurozium Shreberi. The results demonstrate the ability of green vegetation to selectively reflect solar radiation, depending on the species composition and state of the plants. Our results will be included in a spectral library of northern plants, and will help to develop techniques to use 4-channel and hyperspectral ground-based measurements jointly with multispectral and hyperspectral satellite images to study the state and dynamics of northern vegetation. The studies were conducted with the support of Russian Foundation for Basic Research (project 13-05-12061).
Elastic Coulomb breakup of 34Na
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Singh, G.; Shubhchintak, Chatterjee, R.
2016-08-01
Background: 34Na is conjectured to play an important role in the production of seed nuclei in the alternate r -process paths involving light neutron rich nuclei very near the β -stability line, and as such, it is important to know its ground state properties and structure to calculate rates of the reactions it might be involved in, in the stellar plasma. Found in the region of `island of inversion', its ground state might not be in agreement with normal shell model predictions. Purpose: The aim of this paper is to study the elastic Coulomb breakup of 34Na on 208Pb to give us a core of 33Na with a neutron and in the process we try and investigate the one neutron separation energy and the ground state configuration of 34Na. Method: A fully quantum mechanical Coulomb breakup theory within the architecture of post-form finite range distorted wave Born approximation extended to include the effects of deformation is used to research the elastic Coulomb breakup of 34Na on 208Pb at 100 MeV/u. The triple differential cross section calculated for the breakup is integrated over the desired components to find the total cross-section, momentum, and angular distributions as well as the average momenta, along with the energy-angular distributions. Results: The total one neutron removal cross section is calculated to test the possible ground state configurations of 34Na. The average momentum results along with energy-angular calculations indicate 34Na to have a halo structure. The parallel momentum distributions with narrow full widths at half-maxima signify the same. Conclusion: We have attempted to analyze the possible ground state configurations of 34Na and in congruity with the patterns in the `island of inversion' conclude that even without deformation, 34Na should be a neutron halo with a predominant contribution to its ground state most probably coming from 33Na(3 /2+)⊗ 2 p3 /2ν configuration. We also surmise that it would certainly be useful and rewarding to test our predictions with an experiment to put stricter limits on its ground state configuration and binding energy.
Morisaki, Yasuhiro; Ueno, Shizue; Saeki, Akinori; Asano, Atsushi; Seki, Shu; Chujo, Yoshiki
2012-04-02
[2.2]Paracyclophane-based through-space conjugated oligomers and polymers were prepared, in which poly(p-arylene-ethynylene) (PAE) units were partially π-stacked and layered, and their properties in the ground state and excited state were investigated in detail. Electronic interactions among PAE units were effective through at least ten units in the ground state. Photoexcited energy transfer occurred from the stacked PAE units to the end-capping PAE moieties. The electrical conductivity of the polymers was estimated using the flash-photolysis time-resolved microwave conductivity (FP-TRMC) method and investigated together with time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations, showing that intramolecular charge carrier mobility through the stacked PAE units was a few tens of percentage larger than through the twisted PAE units. Copyright © 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Local convertibility of the ground state of the perturbed toric code
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Santra, Siddhartha; Hamma, Alioscia; Cincio, Lukasz; Subasi, Yigit; Zanardi, Paolo; Amico, Luigi
2014-12-01
We present analytical and numerical studies of the behavior of the α -Renyi entropies in the toric code in presence of several types of perturbations aimed at studying the simulability of these perturbations to the parent Hamiltonian using local operations and classical communications (LOCC)—a property called local convertibility. In particular, the derivatives, with respect to the perturbation parameter, present different signs for different values of α within the topological phase. From the information-theoretic point of view, this means that such ground states cannot be continuously deformed within the topological phase by means of catalyst assisted local operations and classical communications (LOCC). Such LOCC differential convertibility is on the other hand always possible in the trivial disordered phase. The non-LOCC convertibility is remarkable because it can be computed on a system whose size is independent of correlation length. This method can therefore constitute an experimentally feasible witness of topological order.
Frustration and thermalization in an artificial magnetic quasicrystal
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shi, Dong; Budrikis, Zoe; Stein, Aaron; Morley, Sophie A.; Olmsted, Peter D.; Burnell, Gavin; Marrows, Christopher H.
2018-03-01
Artificial frustrated systems offer a playground to study the emergent properties of interacting systems. Most work to date has been on spatially periodic systems, known as artificial spin ices when the interacting elements are magnetic. Here we have studied artificial magnetic quasicrystals based on quasiperiodic Penrose tiling patterns of interacting nanomagnets. We construct a low-energy configuration from a step-by-step approach that we propose as a ground state. Topologically induced emergent frustration means that this configuration cannot be constructed from vertices in their ground states. It has two parts, a quasi-one-dimensional `skeleton' that spans the entire pattern and is capable of long-range order, surrounding `flippable' clusters of macrospins that lead to macroscopic degeneracy. Magnetic force microscopy imaging of Penrose tiling arrays revealed superdomains that are larger for more strongly coupled arrays, especially after annealing the array above its blocking temperature.
Frustration and thermalization in an artificial magnetic quasicrystal
Shi, Dong; Budrikis, Zoe; Stein, Aaron; ...
2017-12-11
Here, artificial frustrated systems offer a playground to study the emergent properties of interacting systems. Most work to date has been on spatially periodic systems, known as artificial spin ices when the interacting elements are magnetic. Here we have studied artificial magnetic quasicrystals based on quasiperiodic Penrose tiling patterns of interacting nanomagnets. We construct a low-energy configuration from a step-by-step approach that we propose as a ground state. Topologically induced emergent frustration means that this configuration cannot be constructed from vertices in their ground states. It has two parts, a quasi-one-dimensional ‘skeleton’ that spans the entire pattern and is capablemore » of long-range order, surrounding ‘flippable’ clusters of macrospins that lead to macroscopic degeneracy. Magnetic force microscopy imaging of Penrose tiling arrays revealed superdomains that are larger for more strongly coupled arrays, especially after annealing the array above its blocking temperature.« less
Frustration and thermalization in an artificial magnetic quasicrystal
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Shi, Dong; Budrikis, Zoe; Stein, Aaron
Here, artificial frustrated systems offer a playground to study the emergent properties of interacting systems. Most work to date has been on spatially periodic systems, known as artificial spin ices when the interacting elements are magnetic. Here we have studied artificial magnetic quasicrystals based on quasiperiodic Penrose tiling patterns of interacting nanomagnets. We construct a low-energy configuration from a step-by-step approach that we propose as a ground state. Topologically induced emergent frustration means that this configuration cannot be constructed from vertices in their ground states. It has two parts, a quasi-one-dimensional ‘skeleton’ that spans the entire pattern and is capablemore » of long-range order, surrounding ‘flippable’ clusters of macrospins that lead to macroscopic degeneracy. Magnetic force microscopy imaging of Penrose tiling arrays revealed superdomains that are larger for more strongly coupled arrays, especially after annealing the array above its blocking temperature.« less
Influence of electron doping on the ground state of (Sr 1-xLa x) 2IrO 4
Chen, Xiang; Hogan, Tom; Walkup, D.; ...
2015-08-17
The evolution of the electronic properties of electron-doped (Sr 1-xLa x) 2IrO 4 is experimentally explored as the doping limit of La is approached. As electrons are introduced, the electronic ground state transitions from a spin-orbit Mott phase into an electronically phase separated state, where long-range magnetic order vanishes beyond x = 0:02 and charge transport remains percolative up to the limit of La substitution (x =0:06). In particular, the electronic ground state remains inhomogeneous even beyond the collapse of the parent state's long-range antiferromagnetic order, while persistent short-range magnetism survives up to the highest La-substitution levels. Furthermore, as electronsmore » are doped into Sr 2IrO 4, we observe the appearance of a low temperature magnetic glass-like state intermediate to the complete suppression of antiferromagnetic order. Universalities and di erences in the electron-doped phase diagrams of single layer and bilayer Ruddlesden-Popper strontium iridates are discussed.« less
Hyperfine interaction in K 2Ba[Fe(NO 2) 6
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Padmakumar, K.; Manoharan, P. T.
2000-04-01
Magnetic hyperfine splitting observed in the low temperature Mössbauer spectrum of potassium barium hexanitro ferrate(II), in the absence of any external field, is attributed to the 5T 2g state of the central metal atom further split into a ground 5E g state and a first excited 5B 2g state under a distorted octahedral symmetry in contrast to the earlier prediction of 1A 1g ground state on the basis of room temperature Mössbauer spectral and other properties. The central iron atom is co-ordianted to six nitrito groups (NO 2-), having an oxidation state of +2. The temperature dependence of Mössbauer spectra is explained on the basis of electronic relaxation among the spin-orbit coupled levels of the 5E g ground state. Various kinds of electronic relaxation mechanisms have been compared to explain the proposed mechanism. The observed temperature dependent spectra with varying internal magnetic field and line width can be explained by simple spin lattice relaxation.
Shape dependent electronic structure and exciton dynamics in small In(Ga)As quantum dots
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gomis, J.; Martínez-Pastor, J.; Alén, B.; Granados, D.; García, J. M.; Roussignol, P.
2006-12-01
We present a study of the primary optical transitions and recombination dynamics in InGaAs self-assembled quantum nanostructures with different shape. Starting from the same quantum dot seeding layer, and depending on the overgrowth conditions, these new nanostructures can be tailored in shape and are characterized by heights lower than 2 nm and base lengths around 100 nm. The geometrical shape strongly influences the electronic and optical properties of these nanostructuctures. We measure for them ground state optical transitions in the range 1.25 1.35 eV and varying energy splitting between their excited states. The temperature dependence of the exciton recombination dynamics is reported focusing on the intermediate temperature regime (before thermal escape begins to be important). In this range, an important increase of the effective photoluminescence decay time is observed and attributed to the state filling and exciton thermalization between excited and ground states. A rate equation model is also developed reproducing quite well the observed exciton dynamics.
Entanglement evolution across a conformal interface
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wen, Xueda; Wang, Yuxuan; Ryu, Shinsei
2018-05-01
For two-dimensional conformal field theories (CFTs) in the ground state, it is known that a conformal interface along the entanglement cut can suppress the entanglement entropy from to , where L is the length of the subsystem A, and is the effective central charge which depends on the transmission property of the conformal interface. In this work, by making use of conformal mappings, we show that a conformal interface has the same effect on entanglement evolution in non-equilibrium cases, including global, local and certain inhomogeneous quantum quenches. I.e. a conformal interface suppresses the time evolution of entanglement entropy by effectively replacing the central charge c with , where is exactly the same as that in the ground state case. We confirm this conclusion by a numerical study on a critical fermion chain. Furthermore, based on the quasi-particle picture, we conjecture that this conclusion holds for an arbitrary quantum quench in CFTs, as long as the initial state can be described by a regularized conformal boundary state.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
dos Santos, A. V.; Samudio Pérez, C. A.; Muenchen, D.; Anibele, T. P.
2015-01-01
The ground state properties of Fe/N/Fe and Fe/O/Fe multilayers were investigated using the first principles calculations. The calculations were performed using the Linearized Augmented Plane Wave (LAPW) method implemented in the Wien2k code. A supercell consisting of one layer of nitride (or oxide) between two layers of Fe in the bcc structure was used to model the structure of the multilayer. The research in new materials also stimulated theoretical and experimental studies of iron-based nitrides due to their variety of structural and magnetic properties for the potential applications as in high strength steels and for high corrosion resistance. It is obvious from many reports that magnetic iron nitrides such as γ-Fe4N and α-Fe16N2 have interesting magnetic properties, among these a high magnetisation saturation and a high density crimp. However, although Fe-N films and multilayers have many potential applications, they can be produced in many ways and are being extensively studied from the theoretical point of view there is no detailed knowledge of their electronic structure. Clearly, efforts to understand the influence of the nitrogen atoms on the entire electronic structure are needed as to correctly interpret the observed changes in the magnetic properties when going from Fe-N bulk compounds to multilayer structures. Nevertheless, the N atoms are not solely responsible for electronics alterations in solid compounds. Theoretical results showed that Fe4X bulk compounds, where X is a variable atom with increasing atomic number (Z), the nature of bonding between X and adjacent Fe atoms changes from more covalent to more ionic and the magnetic moments of Fe also increase for Z=7, i.e. N. This is an indicative that atoms with a Z number higher than 7, i.e., O, can produce several new alterations in the entire magnetic properties of Fe multilayers. This paper presents the first results of an ab-initio electronic structure calculations, performed for Fe-N and Fe-O multilayers. Firstly, the formation energy and the cohesive energy of the multilayers are discussed. For optimised values, the cohesive energy of the multilayers to obtain the lattice parameters at the equilibrium ground state was used, i.e. a new methodology for this calculus was applied. Secondly, the magnetic properties and hyperfine interactions (magnetic field, electric field gradient and the isomer shift) of the iron atoms of the multilayers are discussed.
Recoil ions from the β decay of 134Sb confined in a Paul trap
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Siegl, K.; Scielzo, N. D.; Czeszumska, A.; Clark, J. A.; Savard, G.; Aprahamian, A.; Caldwell, S. A.; Alan, B. S.; Burkey, M. T.; Chiara, C. J.; Greene, J. P.; Harker, J.; Marley, S. T.; Morgan, G. E.; Munson, J. M.; Norman, E. B.; Orford, R.; Padgett, S.; Galván, A. Perez; Sharma, K. S.; Strauss, S. Y.
2018-03-01
The low-energy recoiling ions from the β decay of 134Sb were studied by using the Beta-decay Paul Trap. Using this apparatus, singly charged ions were suspended in vacuum at the center of a detector array used to detect emitted β particles, γ rays, and recoil ions in coincidence. The recoil ions emerge from the trap with negligible scattering, allowing β -decay properties and the charge-state distribution of the daughter ions to be determined from the β -ion coincidences. First-forbidden β -decay theory predicts a β -ν correlation coefficient of nearly unity for the 0- to 0+ transition from the ground state of 134Sb to the ground state of 134Te. Although this transition was expected to have a nearly 100% branching ratio, an additional 17.2(52)% of the β -decay strength must populate high-lying excited states to obtain an angular correlation consistent with unity. The extracted charge-state distribution of the recoiling ions was compared with existing β -decay results and the average charge state was found to be consistent with the results from lighter nuclei.
Single-particle and collective motion in unbound deformed 39Mg
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fossez, K.; Rotureau, J.; Michel, N.; Liu, Quan; Nazarewicz, W.
2016-11-01
Background: Deformed neutron-rich magnesium isotopes constitute a fascinating territory where the interplay between collective rotation and single-particle motion is strongly affected by the neutron continuum. The unbound f p -shell nucleus 39Mg is an ideal candidate to study this interplay. Purpose: In this work, we predict the properties of low-lying resonant states of 39Mg, using a suite of realistic theoretical approaches rooted in the open quantum system framework. Method: To describe the spectrum and decay modes of 39Mg we use the conventional shell model, Gamow shell model, resonating group method, density matrix renormalization group method, and the nonadiabatic particle-plus-rotor model formulated in the Berggren basis. Results: The unbound ground state of 39Mg is predicted to be either a Jπ=7/2 - state or a 3/2 - state. A narrow Jπ=7/2 - ground-state candidate exhibits a resonant structure reminiscent of that of its one-neutron halo neighbor 37Mg, which is dominated by the f7 /2 partial wave at short distances and a p3 /2 component at large distances. A Jπ=3/2 - ground-state candidate is favored by the large deformation of the system. It can be associated with the 1/2 -[321 ] Nilsson orbital dominated by the ℓ =1 wave; hence its predicted width is large. The excited Jπ=1/2 - and 5 /2- states are expected to be broad resonances, while the Jπ=9/2 - and 11/2 - members of the ground-state rotational band are predicted to have very small neutron decay widths. Conclusion: We demonstrate that the subtle interplay between deformation, shell structure, and continuum coupling can result in a variety of excitations in an unbound nucleus just outside the neutron drip line.
In-medium similarity renormalization group for closed and open-shell nuclei
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hergert, H.
2017-02-01
We present a pedagogical introduction to the in-medium similarity renormalization group (IMSRG) framework for ab initio calculations of nuclei. The IMSRG performs continuous unitary transformations of the nuclear many-body Hamiltonian in second-quantized form, which can be implemented with polynomial computational effort. Through suitably chosen generators, it is possible to extract eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian in a given nucleus, or drive the Hamiltonian matrix in configuration space to specific structures, e.g., band- or block-diagonal form. Exploiting this flexibility, we describe two complementary approaches for the description of closed- and open-shell nuclei: the first is the multireference IMSRG (MR-IMSRG), which is designed for the efficient calculation of nuclear ground-state properties. The second is the derivation of non-empirical valence-space interactions that can be used as input for nuclear shell model (i.e., configuration interaction (CI)) calculations. This IMSRG+shell model approach provides immediate access to excitation spectra, transitions, etc, but is limited in applicability by the factorial cost of the CI calculations. We review applications of the MR-IMSRG and IMSRG+shell model approaches to the calculation of ground-state properties for the oxygen, calcium, and nickel isotopic chains or the spectroscopy of nuclei in the lower sd shell, respectively, and present selected new results, e.g., for the ground- and excited state properties of neon isotopes.
Finite Nuclei in the Quark-Meson Coupling Model.
Stone, J R; Guichon, P A M; Reinhard, P G; Thomas, A W
2016-03-04
We report the first use of the effective quark-meson coupling (QMC) energy density functional (EDF), derived from a quark model of hadron structure, to study a broad range of ground state properties of even-even nuclei across the periodic table in the nonrelativistic Hartree-Fock+BCS framework. The novelty of the QMC model is that the nuclear medium effects are treated through modification of the internal structure of the nucleon. The density dependence is microscopically derived and the spin-orbit term arises naturally. The QMC EDF depends on a single set of four adjustable parameters having a clear physics basis. When applied to diverse ground state data the QMC EDF already produces, in its present simple form, overall agreement with experiment of a quality comparable to a representative Skyrme EDF. There exist, however, multiple Skyrme parameter sets, frequently tailored to describe selected nuclear phenomena. The QMC EDF set of fewer parameters, derived in this work, is not open to such variation, chosen set being applied, without adjustment, to both the properties of finite nuclei and nuclear matter.
Nuclear Data Sheets for A = 138
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sonzogni, A. A.
2003-03-01
Experimental data on ground- and excited-state properties for all known nuclei with mass number A=138 have been compiled and evaluated. States populated in radioactive decay as well as in nuclear reactions have been considered. For these nuclei, level and decay schemes, as well as tables of nuclear properties are given. This work supersedes the 1995 evaluation by J.K. Tuli (1995Tu01). Manuscripts published before December 2002 have been included in this work.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Roy, Beas
This doctoral thesis emphasizes on the study of frustrated systems which form a very interesting class of compounds in physics. The technique used for the investigation of the magnetic properties of the frustrated materials is Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR). NMR is a very novel tool for the microscopic study of the spin systems. NMR enables us to investigate the local magnetic properties of any system exclusively. The NMR experiments on the different systems yield us knowledge of the static as well as the dynamic behavior of the electronic spins. Frustrated systems bear great possibilities of revelation of new physics through the new ground states they exhibit. The vandates AA'VO(PO4)2 [AA' ≡ Zn2 and BaCd] are great prototypes of the J1-J2 model which consists of magnetic ions sitting on the corners of a square lattice. Frustration is caused by the competing nearest-neighbor (NN) and next-nearest neighbor (NNN) exchange interactions. The NMR investigation concludes a columnar antiferromagnetic (AFM) state for both the compounds from the sharp peak of the nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate (1/T1) and a sudden broadening of the 31P-NMR spectrum. The important conclusion from our study is the establishment of the first H-P-T phase diagram of BaCdVO(PO4)2. Application of high pressure reduces the saturation field (HS) in BaCdVO(PO4)2 and decreases the ratio J2/J1, pushing the system more towards a questionable boundary (a disordered ground state) between the columnar AFM and a ferromagnetic ground state. A pressure up to 2.4 GPa will completely suppress HS. The Fe ions in the `122' iron-arsenide superconductors also sit on a square lattice thus closely resembling the J1-J2 model. The 75As-NMR and Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance (NQR) experiments are conducted in the compound CaFe2As2 prepared by two different heat treatment methods (`as-grown' and `annealed'). Interestingly the two samples show two different ground states. While the ground state of the `as-grown' sample shows a non-magnetic collapsed tetragonal phase (with no magnetic fluctuations), the ground state of the `annealed' sample shows a magnetically long-range ordered orthorhombic phase. The temperature dependence of 1/T1 and that of Knight shift showed that the electron correlations completely disappear in the nonsuperconducting collapsed tetragonal phase in `as-grown' sample of CaFe2As2 indicating quenching of Fe moments. The insulating A-site spinel compound CoAl2O4 exhibits frustration due to competing NN and NNN exchange interactions. This compound has been studied for a long time yet there has been a contradiction as to what the ground state of this compound is. The origin of this ambiguity was pointed out to be microstructure effects such as site-inversion between Co and Al. Thus depending on the value of degree of site inversion x [(Co{1-x}Alx)[Al{2-x}Cox]O4], the ground states differ. A very high quality sample was prepared (x ≈ 0.06) and 27Al and 59Co NMR were performed to study the ground state of this compound. Together with the results from heat capacity, magnetic measurements and neutron diffraction measurements we conclude that the ground state is collinear AFM. We settled a long debated problem for the ground state of CoAl2O4. The compound BiMn2PO6 is a magnetically frustrated system with three-dimensional magnetic ordering. Frustration in this compound is caused by the comparable values of the exchange interactions along the chain, along the rung and in between the ladders. Thus the magnetic structure of this compound is quite complex with the temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility exhibiting peak at 30 K, a jump at 43 K and a change of slope at 10 K. 31P-NMR study was done on this system to investigate the nature of transitions (if any) at these temperatures. NMR study suggested a long-range AFM transition at 30 K with a sharp peak in 1/T1. No signature of transition at 43 K suggested its origin is extrinsic. Between 10 K and 30 K the NMR spectra proved the existence of a commensurate magnetic order while below 10 K, the shape of the NMR spectrum changes either due to an incommensurate magnetic order or due to spin reorientation. In summary the work presented in this thesis focusses on the NMR investigation of the magnetic properties of various compounds frustrated by the competing exchange interactions. References. [1] A. Yogi, N. Ahmad, R. Nath, A. A. Tsirlin, J. Sichelschmidt, B. Roy and Y. Furukawa, arXiv:1409.3076 (submitted to Phys. Rev. B). [2] Beas Roy, Yuji Furukawa, Ramesh Nath, David C. Johnston, J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 320, 012048 (2011). [3] Beas Roy, Yuji Furukawa, David Johnston, Ramesh Nath, Yasuhiro Komaki, Hideto Fukazawa, and Yoh Kohori, ``Magnetic phase diagram of the two-dimensional frustrated square lattice compound BaCdVO(PO4)2 from high-pressure and low-temperature 31P-NMR study'', Paper to be submitted. [4] S. Ran, S. L. Bud'ko, D. K. Pratt, A. Kreyssig, M. G. Kim, M. J. Kramer, D. H. Ryan, W. N. Rowan-Weetaluktuk, Y. Furukawa, B. Roy, A. I. Goldman, and P. C. Canfield, Phys. Rev. B 83, 144517 (2011). [5] Y. Furukawa, B. Roy, S. Ran, S. L. Bud'ko and P. C. Canfield, Phys. Rev. B 89, 121109 (R) (2014). [6] B. Roy, Abhishek Pandey, Q. Zhang, T. W. Heitmann, D. Vaknin, D. C. Johnston, and Y. Furukawa, Phys. Rev. B 88, 174415 (2013). [7] R. Nath, K. M. Ranjith, B. Roy, D. C. Johnston, Y. Furukawa, and A. A. Tsirlin, Phys. Rev. B 90, 024431 (2014).
Ground-state properties of anyons in a one-dimensional lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tang, Guixin; Eggert, Sebastian; Pelster, Axel
2015-12-01
Using the Anyon-Hubbard Hamiltonian, we analyze the ground-state properties of anyons in a one-dimensional lattice. To this end we map the hopping dynamics of correlated anyons to an occupation-dependent hopping Bose-Hubbard model using the fractional Jordan-Wigner transformation. In particular, we calculate the quasi-momentum distribution of anyons, which interpolates between Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac statistics. Analytically, we apply a modified Gutzwiller mean-field approach, which goes beyond a classical one by including the influence of the fractional phase of anyons within the many-body wavefunction. Numerically, we use the density-matrix renormalization group by relying on the ansatz of matrix product states. As a result it turns out that the anyonic quasi-momentum distribution reveals both a peak-shift and an asymmetry which mainly originates from the nonlocal string property. In addition, we determine the corresponding quasi-momentum distribution of the Jordan-Wigner transformed bosons, where, in contrast to the hard-core case, we also observe an asymmetry for the soft-core case, which strongly depends on the particle number density.
Effects of stuffing on the atomic and electronic structure of the pyrochlore Yb2Ti2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ghosh, Soham S.; Manousakis, Efstratios
2018-06-01
There are reasons to believe that the ground state of the magnetic rare-earth pyrochlore Yb2Ti2O7 is on the boundary between competing ground states. We have carried out ab initio density functional calculations to determine the most stable chemical formula as a function of the oxygen chemical potential and the likely location of the oxygen atoms in the unit cell of the "stuffed" system. We find that it is energetically favorable in the stuffed crystal (with an Yb replacement on a Ti site) to contain oxygen vacancies which dope the Yb 4 f orbitals and qualitatively change the electronic properties of the system. In addition, with the inclusion of the contribution of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on top of the GGA + U approach, we investigated the electronic structure and the magnetic moments of the most stable stuffed system. In our determined stuffed structure the valence bands as compared to those of the pure system are pushed down and a change in hybridization between the O 2 p orbitals and the metal ion states is found. Our first-principle findings should form a foundation for effective models describing the low-temperature properties of this material whose true ground state remains controversial.
Interpolation of property-values between electron numbers is inconsistent with ensemble averaging
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Miranda-Quintana, Ramón Alain; Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4M1; Ayers, Paul W.
2016-06-28
In this work we explore the physical foundations of models that study the variation of the ground state energy with respect to the number of electrons (E vs. N models), in terms of general grand-canonical (GC) ensemble formulations. In particular, we focus on E vs. N models that interpolate the energy between states with integer number of electrons. We show that if the interpolation of the energy corresponds to a GC ensemble, it is not differentiable. Conversely, if the interpolation is smooth, then it cannot be formulated as any GC ensemble. This proves that interpolation of electronic properties between integermore » electron numbers is inconsistent with any form of ensemble averaging. This emphasizes the role of derivative discontinuities and the critical role of a subsystem’s surroundings in determining its properties.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Singh, T. Sanjoy; Moyon, N. S.; Mitra, Sivaprasad
2009-08-01
Intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) behavior of trans-ethyl p-(dimethylamino) cinamate (EDAC) and 4-(dimethylamino) cinnamic acid (DMACA) were studied by steady state absorption and emission, picosecond time-resolved fluorescence experiments in various pure and mixed solvent systems. The large fluorescence spectral shift in more polar solvents indicates an efficient charge transfer from the donor site to the acceptor moiety in the excited state compared to the ground state. The energy for 0,0 transition ( ν0,0) for EDAC shows very good linear correlation with static solvent dielectric property; however, fluorescence emission maximum, stokes shift and fluorescence quantum yield show significant deviation from linearity in polar protic solvents, indicating a large contribution of solvent hydrogen bonding on the excited state relaxation mechanism. A quantitative estimation of contribution from different solvatochromic parameters was made using linear free energy relationship based on Kamlet-Taft equation.
Decay properties of Bk 97 243 and Bk 97 244
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Ahmad, I.; Kondev, F. G.; Greene, J. P.
2018-01-01
Electron capture decays of Bk-243 and Bk-244 have been studied by measuring the gamma-ray spectra of mass-separated sources and level structures of Cm-243 and Cm-244 have been deduced. In Cm-243, the electron capture population to the ground state, 1/2(+)[631], and 1/2(+)[620] Nilsson states have been observed. The octupole K-pi = 2(-) band was identified in Cm-244 at 933.6 keV. In addition, spins and parities were deduced for several other states and two-quasiparticle configurations have been tentatively assigned to them
An Investigation for Ground State Features of Some Structural Fusion Materials
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aytekin, H.; Tel, E.; Baldik, R.; Aydin, A.
2011-02-01
Environmental concerns associated with fossil fuels are creating increased interest in alternative non-fossil energy sources. Nuclear fusion can be one of the most attractive sources of energy from the viewpoint of safety and minimal environmental impact. When considered in all energy systems, the requirements for performance of structural materials in a fusion reactor first wall, blanket or diverter, are arguably more demanding or difficult than for other energy system. The development of fusion materials for the safety of fusion power systems and understanding nuclear properties is important. In this paper, ground state properties for some structural fusion materials as 27Al, 51V, 52Cr, 55Mn, and 56Fe are investigated using Skyrme-Hartree-Fock method. The obtained results have been discussed and compared with the available experimental data.
Wetting and layering transitions in a nano-dendrimer PAMAM structure: Monte Carlo study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aouini, S.; Ziti, S.; Labrim, H.; Bahmad, L.
2016-10-01
This study is based on a nano-model of the dendrimer polyamidoamine (PAMAM). The idea is to examine the magnetic properties of such models in the context of wetting and the layering transitions. The studied system consists of spins σ ={1/2} Ising ferromagnetic in real nanostructure found in different scientific domains. To study this system, we perform Monte Carlo simulations leading to interesting results recapitulated in two classes. The former is the ground state phase diagrams study. The latter is the magnetic properties at non null temperatures. Also, we analyzed the effect of the terms present in the Hamiltonian governing our system such as the external magnetic field and the exchange couplings interactions.
Magnetic refrigeration capabilities of magnetocaloric Ni2Mn:75Cu:25Ga
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mishra, S. K.; Jenkins, C. A.; Dubenko, I.; Samanta, T.; Ali, N.; Roy, S.
2013-03-01
Doping-driven competition between energetically similar ground states leads to many exciting materials phenomena such as the emergence of high-Tc superconductivity, diluted magnetic semiconductors, and colossal magnetoresistance. Doped Ni2MnGa Heusler alloy, which is a multifunctional ferromagnetic alloy with various exotic physical properties demonstrates this notion of rich phenomenology via modified ground spin states. Adopting this generic concept, here we will present a novel doped Ni2Mn.75Cu.25Ga alloy that offers unprecedented co-existence of the magnetocaloric effect and fully controlled ferromagnetism at room temperature. Application of site engineering enables us to manipulate the ground spin state that leads to the decrease in magnetic transition temperature and also increases the delocalization of the Mn magnetism. SQUID magnetometery suggests that Cu doping enhances the saturation magnetization, coercive field and clarity of magnetic hysteresis loops. By exploiting x-ray absorption techniques and measuring element specific magnetic hysteresis loops, here we will describe the microscopic origin of enhnaced magnetocaloric properties and d-d interaction driven charge transfer effects in Ni2Mn.75Cu.25Ga This work was supported by DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-06ER46291
Hirano, Tsuneo; Andaloussi, Mounir Ben Dahman; Nagashima, Umpei; Jensen, Per
2014-09-07
The three-dimensional ground-state potential energy surface of ZnOH has been calculated ab initio at the MR-SDCI+Q_DK3/[QZP ANO-RCC (Zn, O, H)] level of theory and used as basis for a study of the rovibrational properties carried out by means of the program MORBID (Morse Oscillator Rigid Bender Internal Dynamics). The electronic ground state is (2)A' (correlating with (2)Σ(+) at the linear configuration). The equilibrium structure has r(e)(Zn-O) = 1.8028 Å, r(e)(O-H) = 0.9606 Å, and ∠e(Zn-O-H) = 114.9°. The Zn-O bond is essentially ionic, with appreciable covalency. The bonding character is compared with those of FeOH (quasi-linear) and CsOH (linear). The rovibrationally averaged structural parameters, determined as expectation values over MORBID wavefunctions, are ⟨r(Zn-O)⟩0 = 1.8078 Å, ⟨r(O-H)⟩0 = 0.9778 Å, and ⟨∠(Zn-O-H)⟩0 = 117°. The Yamada-Winnewisser quasi-linearity parameter is found to be γ0 = 0.84, which is close to 1.0 as expected for a bent molecule. Since no experimental rovibrational spectrum has been reported thus far, this spectrum has been simulated from the ab initio potential energy and dipole moment surfaces. The amphoteric character of ZnOH is also discussed.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schütz, Martin; Hutter, Jürg; Lüthi, Hans Peter
1995-10-01
The ground- and first excited state of s-tetrazine arising from a π*←n excitation (1Ag,1B3u) have been studied using the complete active space (CASSCF) and the second order multiconfiguration perturbation theory (CASPT2) ab initio methods. The focus of this study is on the effect of the electronic excitation on the molecular structure and on those electronic properties which are important to model the solvatochromatic behavior of the molecule in polymer matrices as used in permanent hole burning experiments. Since the accurate computation of excited state molecular properties represents a major challenge for today's numerical quantum chemistry, some technical aspects are also considered. The present study shows that the change in geometry upon electronic excitation is small. This is in partial contradiction with the experimental studies which however disagree among themselves [see K. K. Innes, I. G. Ross, and W. R. Moomaw, J. Mol. Spectrosc. 132, 492 (1988), and R. E. Smalley, L. Wharton, and D. H. Levi, ibid. 66, 375 (1977)]. This study also confirms that the first excited state equilibrium structure is of D2h symmetry. In an earlier theoretical study it was found that the D2h symmetry structure may represent a saddle point rather than a minimum on the excited state potential surface [see A. C. Scheiner and H. F. Schaefer III, J. Chem. Phys. 87, 3539 (1987)]. In the first excited state, we observe an increase of the mean polarizability of s-tetrazine along with an enhanced anisotropy. The change in the polarizability is almost exclusively in the ``in-plane'' components of the tensor; the polarizability in the vertical direction is nearly unchanged. This observation questions recent experimental results reported for this molecule [see S. Heitz, D. Weidnauer, and A. Hese, J. Chem. Phys. 95, 7952 (1991)].
Diamond lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Oitmaa, J.
2018-04-01
We investigate ground-state and high-temperature properties of the nearest-neighbour Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the three-dimensional diamond lattice, using series expansion methods. The ground-state energy and magnetization, as well as the magnon spectrum, are calculated and found to be in good agreement with first-order spin-wave theory, with a quantum renormalization factor of about 1.13. High-temperature series are derived for the free energy, and physical and staggered susceptibilities for spin S = 1/2, 1 and 3/2, and analysed to obtain the corresponding Curie and Néel temperatures.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Megala, M.; Rajkumar, Beulah J. M., E-mail: beulah-rajkumar@yahoo.co.in
The electronic and optical transfer properties of Benzene, Benzoic Acid (BA), Nitrobenzene (NB) and Para Nitro Benzoic Acid (PNBA) at ground and first excited state has been investigated by the Density functional theory (DFT)and Time Dependent Density Functional Theory (TDDFT) using SVWN functional/3-21G basis set respectively. Possible intra-molecular charge transfer and n to π* transitions in the ground and the first excitation states have been predicted by the molecular orbitals and the Natural Bond Orbital (NBO) analysis. The simulated absorption spectra have been generated and the result compared with existing experimental results.
Wave packet dynamics, time scales and phase diagram in the IBM-Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Castaños, Octavio; de los Santos, Francisco; Yáñez, Rafael; Romera, Elvira
2018-02-01
We derive the phase diagram of a scalar two-level boson model by studying the equilibrium and stability properties of its energy surface. The plane of control parameters is enlarged with respect to previous studies. We then analyze the time evolution of wave packets centered around the ground state at various quantum phase transition boundary lines. In particular, classical and revival times are computed numerically.
Stress and magnetism in LaCoO3 films
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Demkov, Alex
2012-02-01
Cobaltates exhibit a wide variety of exciting electronic properties resulting from strong electron correlations; these include superconductivity, giant magnetoresistance, metal-insulator transition, and strong thermoelectric effects. This makes them an excellent platform to study correlated electron physics, as well as being useful for various applications in electronics and sensors. In the ground state in the bulk, the prototypical complex cobalt oxide LaCoO3 is in a spin-compensated low-spin state (t2g^6), which results in the ground state being nonmagnetic. In a recent experiment, Fuchs et al. (Phys. Rev. B 75, 144402 (2007)) have demonstrated that a ferromagnetic ground state could be stabilized by epitaxial tensile strain resulting in a Curie temperature (TC) of ˜90 K when LaCoO3 (LCO) is grown on SrTiO3 (STO) using pulsed laser deposition. In this talk I will discuss our recent successful attempt to integrate a LCO/STO heterostructure with Si (001) using molecular beam epitaxy. We have grown strained, epitaxial LaCoO3 on (100)-oriented silicon using a single crystal STO buffer (Appl.Phys. Lett. 98, 053104 (2011)). SQUID magnetization measurements confirm that the ground state of the strained LaCoO3 is ferromagnetic with a TC of 85 K. Our first-principles calculations of strained LaCoO3 using the LSDA+U method show that beyond biaxial tensile strain of 2.5% local magnetic moments, originating from the high spin state of Co^3+, emerge in a low spin Co^3+ matrix. Ferromagnetism found in tensile-strained LaCoO3 is tightly coupled to the material's orbital and structural response to applied strain. Theoretical calculations show how LaCoO3 accommodates tensile strain via spin state disproportionation, resulting in an unusual sublattice structure.
Kee, Tak W
2014-09-18
Conjugated polymers are an important class of soft materials that exhibit a wide range of applications. The excited states of conjugated polymers, often referred to as excitons, can either deactivate to yield the ground state or dissociate in the presence of an electron acceptor to form charge carriers. These interesting properties give rise to their luminescence and the photovoltaic effect. Femtosecond spectroscopy is a crucial tool for studying conjugated polymers. Recently, more elaborate experimental configurations utilizing three optical pulses, namely, pump-push-probe and pump-dump-probe, have been employed to investigate the properties of excitons and charge-transfer states of conjugated polymers. These studies have revealed new insight into femtosecond torsional relaxation and detrapping of bound charge pairs of conjugated polymers. This Perspective highlights (1) the recent achievements by several research groups in using pump-push-probe and pump-dump-probe spectroscopy to study conjugated polymers and (2) future opportunities and potential challenges of these techniques.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aoki, Haruyoshi; Kimura, Noriaki; Terashima, Taichi
2014-07-01
This article describes the Fermi surface properties of CeRu2Si2 and its alloy systems CeRu2(SixGe1-x)2 and CexLa1-xRu2Si2 studied by the de Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) effect. We pay particular attention to how the Fermi surface properties and the f electron state change with magnetic properties, in particular how they change associated with metamagnetic transition and quantum phase transition. After summarizing the important physical properties of CeRu2Si2, we present the magnetic phase diagrams of CeRu2(SixGe1-x)2 and CexLa1-xRu2Si2 as a function of temperature, magnetic field and concentration x. From the characteristic features of the magnetic phase diagram, we argue that the ferromagnetic interaction in addition to the antiferromagnetic interaction and the Kondo effect is responsible for the magnetic properties and that the metamagnetic transitions in these systems are relevant to the ferromagnetic interaction. We summarize the Fermi surface properties of CeRu2Si2 in fields below the metamagnetic transition where the f electron state is now well understood theoretically as well as experimentally. We present experimental results in fields above the metamagnetic transitions in CeRu2(SixGe1-x)2 and CexLa1-xRu2Si2 as well as CeRu2Si2 to show that the Fermi surface properties above the metamagnetic transitions are significantly different from those below in many important aspects. We argue that the Fermi surface properties above the metamagnetic transitions are not appropriately described in terms of either itinerant or localized f electron. The experimental results in fields below the metamagnetic transitions in CeRu2(SixGe1-x)2 and CexLa1-xRu2Si2 are presented to discuss the f electron state in the ground state. The Fermi surface properties of dilute Kondo alloys of CexLa1-xRu2Si2 have been revealed as a function of Ce concentration and temperature. We show that the f electron state can be regarded as itinerant in the ground state together with the definition of the term "itinerant" in this case. The Fermi surface properties are measured also in high concentration alloys of CeRu2(SixGe1-x)2 and CexLa1-xRu2Si2 as a function of x. With the help of the angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy studies, we show that the f electron nature does not change at the quantum phase transition between the paramagnetic and antiferromagnetic phases. However, the picture for the f electron state may be ambiguous and depend on which property one considers in the magnetic states of these systems. The ambiguity and confusion of the f electron state may come from the inherent dual nature of the f electron and we would like to point out that it is sometimes misleading and may not be fruitful to discriminate the f electron state either as itinerant or localized without any clear definition for the terms "itinerant" and "localized".
Low-Spin States From Decay Studies in the Mass 80 Region
Döring, J.; Aprahamian, A.; Wiescher, M.
2000-01-01
Neutron-deficient nuclei in the mass 80 region are known to exhibit strongly deformed ground states deduced mainly from yrast-state properties measured in-beam via heavy-ion fusion-evaporation reactions. Vibrational excitations and non-yrast states as well as their interplay with the observed rotational collectivity have been less studied to date within this mass region. Thus, several β-decay experiments have been performed to populate low-spin states in the neutron-deficient 80,84Y and 80,84Sr nuclei. An overview of excited 0+ states in Sr and Kr nuclei is given and conclusions about shape evolution at low-spins are presented. In general, the non-yrast states in even-even Sr nuclei show mainly vibration-like collectivity which evolves to rotational behavior with increasing spin and decreasing neutron number. PMID:27551586
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Mevada, A. D., E-mail: adwait.mevada@gmail.com; Mehsana Urban Institute of Sciences, Ganpat University, Mehsana-Gozaria Highway, Kherva 384 001, Gujarat; Pandya, N. Y., E-mail: nirav-physics85@yahoo.com
Mg{sub 70}Zn{sub 30} is simplest of metallic glasses having good mechanical properties, biocompatibility with human body and is biodegradable, so it is widely studied material in its class. We present in this paper first principle calculations showing the change in the structure of the system with temperature. The computations are performed using PWSCF tool of Quantum ESPRESSO package, which uses density functional theory for calculations of electronic ground state properties and dynamical structures. With increasing temperature the number of peaks in RDFs reduce in number leaving only a single peak,the system thus makes a transition from non-crystalline solid to liquidmore » state within the range of 300–1000K. First coordination number was found to decrease with rising temperature.« less
Quantum approach to classical statistical mechanics.
Somma, R D; Batista, C D; Ortiz, G
2007-07-20
We present a new approach to study the thermodynamic properties of d-dimensional classical systems by reducing the problem to the computation of ground state properties of a d-dimensional quantum model. This classical-to-quantum mapping allows us to extend the scope of standard optimization methods by unifying them under a general framework. The quantum annealing method is naturally extended to simulate classical systems at finite temperatures. We derive the rates to assure convergence to the optimal thermodynamic state using the adiabatic theorem of quantum mechanics. For simulated and quantum annealing, we obtain the asymptotic rates of T(t) approximately (pN)/(k(B)logt) and gamma(t) approximately (Nt)(-c/N), for the temperature and magnetic field, respectively. Other annealing strategies are also discussed.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Matar, Samir F.
2013-03-01
The electronic structure of UCoC2, a di-carbide with the C-C units is examined from ab initio with an assessment of the properties of chemical bonding. The energy-volume equation of state shows large anisotropy effects due to C-C alignment along tetragonal c-axis leading to high linear incompressibility. Relevant features of selective bonding of uranium and cobalt with carbon at two different Wyckoff sites and strong C-C interactions are remarkable. The vibrational frequencies for C⋯C stretching modes indicate closer behavior to aliphatic C-C rather than Cdbnd C double bond. A ferromagnetic ground state is proposed from the calculations.
Frenkel-Kontorova model with a transversal degree of freedom: Static properties of kinks
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Braun, Oleg M.; Chubykalo, Oksana A.; Kivshar, Yuri S.; Vázquez, Luis
1993-08-01
We consider a generalized Frenkel-Kontorova (FK) model with a transversal degree of freedom proposed by Braun and Kivshar [Phys. Rev. B 44, 7694 (1991)]. The model describes an atomic chain subjected to a two-dimensional (2D) substrate potential that is periodic in one direction and parabolic in the transversal direction, the interatomic interaction being exponentially repulsive. The ground state of the system undergoes a phase transition from the trivial one-dimensional (1D) to a quasi-2D state when the repulsion exceeds a certain critical value. The quasi-2D ground state admits two different types of kinks, ``massive,'' kinks which may be considered as a generalization of the kinks of the standard 1D FK chain, and ``nonmassive'' (phase) kinks, which appear to be due to dimerization of the ground state. We investigate the static characteristics of these two kinds of the kinks (the kink effective mass, the kink rest energy, and the height of the Peierls-Nabarro potential) analytically as well as by means of numerical simulations when the chain with the periodic boundary conditions contains a single kink. In particular, we show that the ``massive'' kinks may be described in the continuum approximation by a perturbed sine-Gordon equation while properties of the ``nonmassive'' kinks may be analyzed within the framework of an effective φ4 model derived for translational displacements. The role of the transversal degree of freedom in mass-transport properties of the generalized FK model applied to describe surface diffusion is also discussed.
Protonation states and pH titration in the photocycle of photoactive yellow protein.
Demchuk, E; Genick, U K; Woo, T T; Getzoff, E D; Bashford, D
2000-02-08
Photoactive yellow protein (PYP) undergoes a light-driven cycle of color and protonation states that is part of a mechanism of bacterial phototaxis. This article concerns functionally important protonation states of PYP and the interactions that stabilize them, and changes in the protonation state during the photocycle. In particular, the chromophore pK(a) is known to be shifted down so that the chromophore is negatively charged in the ground state (dark state) even though it is buried in the protein, while nearby Glu46 has an unusually high pK(a). The photocycle involves changes of one or both of these protonation states. Calculations of pK(a) values and protonation states using a semi-macroscopic electrostatic model are presented for the wild-type and three mutants, in both the ground state and the bleached (I(2)) intermediate state. Calculations allowing multiple H-bonding arrangements around the chromophore also have been carried out. In addition, ground-state pK(a) values of the chromophore have been measured by UV-visible spectroscopy for the wild-type and the same three mutants. Because of the unusual protonation states and strong electrostatic interactions, PYP represents a severe test of the ability of theoretical models to yield correct calculations of electrostatic interactions in proteins. Good agreement between experiment and theory can be obtained for the ground state provided the protein interior is assumed to have a relatively low dielectric constant, but only partial agreement between theory and experiment is obtained for the bleached state. We also present a reinterpretation of previously published data on the pH-dependence of the recovery of the ground state from the bleached state. The new analysis implies a pK(a) value of 6.37 for Glu46 in the bleached state, which is consistent with other available experimental data, including data that only became available after this analysis. The new analysis suggests that signal transduction is modulated by the titration properties of the bleached state, which are in turn determined by electrostatic interactions. Overall, the results of this study provide a quantitative picture of the interactions responsible for the unusual protonation states of the chromophore and Glu46, and of protonation changes upon bleaching.
The bound states of ultracold KRb molecules
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Julienne, Paul; Hanna, Thomas
2009-03-01
Recently ultracold vibrational ground state ^40K^87Rb polar molecules have been made using magnetoassociation of two cold atoms to a weakly bound Feshbach molecule, followed by a two-color optical STIRAP process to transfer molecules to the molecular ground state [1]. We have used accurate potential energy curves for the singlet and triplet states of the KRb molecule [2] with coupled channels calculations to calculate all of the bound states of the ^40K^87Rb molecule as a function of magnetic field from the cold atom collision threshold to the v=0 ground state. We have also developed approximate models for understanding the changing properties of the molecular bound states as binding energy increases. Some overall conclusions from these calculations will be presented. [1] K.-K. Ni, S. Ospelkaus, M. H. G. de Miranda, A. Peer, B. Neyenhuis, J. J. Zirbel, S. Kotochigova, P. S. Julienne, D. S. Jin, and J. Ye, Science, 2008, 322, 231--235. [2] A. Pashov, O. Docenko, M. Tamanis, R. Ferber, H. Kn"ockel, and E. Tiemann, Phys. Rev. A, 2007, 76, 022511.
Entanglement entropy for the long-range Ising chain in a transverse field.
Koffel, Thomas; Lewenstein, M; Tagliacozzo, Luca
2012-12-28
We consider the Ising model in a transverse field with long-range antiferromagnetic interactions that decay as a power law with their distance. We study both the phase diagram and the entanglement properties as a function of the exponent of the interaction. The phase diagram can be used as a guide for future experiments with trapped ions. We find two gapped phases, one dominated by the transverse field, exhibiting quasi-long-range order, and one dominated by the long-range interaction, with long-range Néel ordered ground states. We determine the location of the quantum critical points separating those two phases. We determine their critical exponents and central charges. In the phase with quasi-long-range order the ground states exhibit exotic corrections to the area law for the entanglement entropy coexisting with gapped entanglement spectra.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gálisová, Lucia; Strečka, Jozef
2018-05-01
The ground state, zero-temperature magnetization process, critical behaviour and isothermal entropy change of the mixed-spin Ising model on a decorated triangular lattice in a magnetic field are exactly studied after performing the generalized decoration-iteration mapping transformation. It is shown that both the inverse and conventional magnetocaloric effect can be found near the absolute zero temperature. The former phenomenon can be found in a vicinity of the discontinuous phase transitions and their crossing points, while the latter one occurs in some paramagnetic phases due to a spin frustration to be present at zero magnetic field. The inverse magnetocaloric effect can also be detected slightly above continuous phase transitions following the power-law dependence | - ΔSisomin | ∝hn, where n depends basically on the ground-state spin ordering.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sze, M. W. C.; Sykes, A. G.; Blume, D.; Bohn, J. L.
2018-03-01
We study the ground-state properties of a system of N harmonically trapped bosons of mass m interacting with two-body contact interactions, from small to large scattering lengths. This is accomplished in a hyperspherical coordinate system that is flexible enough to describe both the overall scale of the gas and two-body correlations. By adapting the lowest-order constrained-variational method, we are able to semiquantitatively attain Bose-Einstein condensate ground-state energies even for gases with infinite scattering length. In the large-particle-number limit, our method provides analytical estimates for the energy per particle E0/N ≈2.5 N1 /3ℏ ω and two-body contact C2/N ≈16 N1 /6√{m ω /ℏ } for a Bose gas on resonance, where ω is the trap frequency.
Garg, Komal; Fujita, Etsuko; Matsubara, Yasuo; ...
2015-11-16
Here, we prepared two geometric isomers of [Ir(tpy)(ppy)H] +, previously proposed as a key intermediate in the photochemical reduction of CO 2 to CO, and characterized their notably different ground- and excited-state interactions with CO 2 and their hydricities using experimental and computational methods. Only one isomer, C-trans-[Ir(tpy)(ppy)H] +, reacts with CO 2 to generate the formato complex in the ground state, consistent with its calculated hydricity. Under photocatalytic conditions in CH 3CN/TEOA, a common reactive C-trans-[Ir(tpy)(ppy)] 0 species, irrespective of the starting isomer or monodentate ligand (such as hydride or Cl), reacts with CO 2 and produces CO withmore » the same catalytic efficiency.« less
Structural, electronic and elastic properties of heavy fermion YbRh2 Laves phase compound
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pawar, Harsha; Shugani, Mani; Aynyas, Mahendra; Sanyal, Sankar P.
2018-05-01
The structural, electronic and elastic properties of YbRh2 Laves phase intermetallic compound which crystallize in cubic (MgCu2-type) structure have been investigated using ab-initio full potential linearized augmented plane wave (FP- LAPW) method with LDA and LDA+U approximation. The calculated ground state properties such as lattice parameter (a0), bulk modulus (B) and its pressure derivative (B') are in good agreement with available experimental and theoretical data. The electronic properties are analyzed from band structures and density of states. Elastic constants are predicted first time for this compound which obeys the stability criteria for cubic system.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Nazemi, Sanaz; Soleimani, Ebrahim Asl; Pourfath, Mahdi, E-mail: pourfath@ut.ac.ir, E-mail: pourfath@iue.tuwien.ac.at
2015-11-28
Silicon nano-crystals (NCs) are potential candidates for enhancing and tuning optical properties of silicon for optoelectronic and photo-voltaic applications. Due to the high surface-to-volume ratio, however, optical properties of NC result from the interplay of quantum confinement and surface effects. In this work, we show that both the spatial position of surface terminants and their relative positions have strong effects on NC properties as well. This is accomplished by investigating the ground-state HOMO-LUMO band-gap, the photo-absorption spectra, and the localization and overlap of HOMO and LUMO orbital densities for prototype ∼1.2 nm Si{sub 32–x}H{sub 42–2x}O{sub x} hydrogenated silicon NC with bridgedmore » oxygen atoms as surface terminations. It is demonstrated that the surface passivation geometry significantly alters the localization center and thus the overlap of frontier molecular orbitals, which correspondingly modifies the electronic and optical properties of NC.« less
Mixtures of bosonic and fermionic atoms in optical lattices
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Albus, Alexander; Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita di Salerno, Via S. Allende, I-84081 Baronissi; Illuminati, Fabrizio
2003-08-01
We discuss the theory of mixtures of bosonic and fermionic atoms in periodic potentials at zero temperature. We derive a general Bose-Fermi Hubbard Hamiltonian in a one-dimensional optical lattice with a superimposed harmonic trapping potential. We study the conditions for linear stability of the mixture and derive a mean-field criterion for the onset of a bosonic superfluid transition. We investigate the ground-state properties of the mixture in the Gutzwiller formulation of mean-field theory, and present numerical studies of finite systems. The bosonic and fermionic density distributions and the onset of quantum phase transitions to demixing and to a bosonic Mott-insulatormore » are studied as a function of the lattice potential strength. The existence is predicted of a disordered phase for mixtures loaded in very deep lattices. Such a disordered phase possessing many degenerate or quasidegenerate ground states is related to a breaking of the mirror symmetry in the lattice.« less
Chou, Chia-Chun; Kouri, Donald J
2013-04-25
We show that there exist spurious states for the sector two tensor Hamiltonian in multidimensional supersymmetric quantum mechanics. For one-dimensional supersymmetric quantum mechanics on an infinite domain, the sector one and two Hamiltonians have identical spectra with the exception of the ground state of the sector one. For tensorial multidimensional supersymmetric quantum mechanics, there exist normalizable spurious states for the sector two Hamiltonian with energy equal to the ground state energy of the sector one. These spurious states are annihilated by the adjoint charge operator, and hence, they do not correspond to physical states for the original Hamiltonian. The Hermitian property of the sector two Hamiltonian implies the orthogonality between spurious and physical states. In addition, we develop a method for construction of a specific form of the spurious states for any quantum system and also generate several spurious states for a two-dimensional anharmonic oscillator system and for the hydrogen atom.
Is the ground state of Yang-Mills theory Coulombic?
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Heinzl, T.; Ilderton, A.; Langfeld, K.; Lavelle, M.; Lutz, W.; McMullan, D.
2008-08-01
We study trial states modelling the heavy quark-antiquark ground state in SU(2) Yang-Mills theory. A state describing the flux tube between quarks as a thin string of glue is found to be a poor description of the continuum ground state; the infinitesimal thickness of the string leads to UV artifacts which suppress the overlap with the ground state. Contrastingly, a state which surrounds the quarks with non-Abelian Coulomb fields is found to have a good overlap with the ground state for all charge separations. In fact, the overlap increases as the lattice regulator is removed. This opens up the possibility that the Coulomb state is the true ground state in the continuum limit.
Impact of petrophysical uncertainty on Bayesian hydrogeophysical inversion and model selection
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Brunetti, Carlotta; Linde, Niklas
2018-01-01
Quantitative hydrogeophysical studies rely heavily on petrophysical relationships that link geophysical properties to hydrogeological properties and state variables. Coupled inversion studies are frequently based on the questionable assumption that these relationships are perfect (i.e., no scatter). Using synthetic examples and crosshole ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data from the South Oyster Bacterial Transport Site in Virginia, USA, we investigate the impact of spatially-correlated petrophysical uncertainty on inferred posterior porosity and hydraulic conductivity distributions and on Bayes factors used in Bayesian model selection. Our study shows that accounting for petrophysical uncertainty in the inversion (I) decreases bias of the inferred variance of hydrogeological subsurface properties, (II) provides more realistic uncertainty assessment and (III) reduces the overconfidence in the ability of geophysical data to falsify conceptual hydrogeological models.
Hydrogen-bond formation between isoindolo[2,1-a]indol-6-one and aliphatic alcohols in n-hexane.
Demeter, Attila; Bérces, Tibor
2005-03-17
The spectroscopic, kinetic, and equilibrium properties of isoindolo[2,1-a]indol-6-one (I) were studied in n-hexane in the presence and absence of alcohols (X). Hydrogen-bonded-complex formation was found to occur between the alcohol and the ground state as well as the excited state of the I molecule. The spectra of I and its singly complexed derivative (IX) are similar; however, that of IX is red shifted. The extent of red shift increases with the hydrogen-bonding ability of the alcohol. Equilibrium constant measurements were made to determine the hydrogen-bond basicity (beta(2)(H)) for I and the singlet excited (1)I. The beta(2)(H) value for (1)I is found to be about twice that of the ground-state I. Time-resolved fluorescence decay measurements indicate that the reaction of singlet excited I with fluorinated alcohols is diffusion controlled, while the rate of complexation with nonfluorinated (weaker hydrogen bonding) aliphatic alcohols depends on the Gibbs energy change in the complexation reaction. The quantitative correlation between the rate coefficient of complexation of (1)I with alcohols and the Gibbs energy change in the complexation process allowed us to estimate the rate coefficient for the complexation of the ground-state I with alcohols. The formation of the singlet excited hydrogen-bonded complex is irreversible; (1)IX disappears in a first order and an alcohol induced second order reaction. The first order decay is predominantly due to internal conversion to the ground state, the rate of which depends on the ionization energy of the complexing alcohol.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yamashita, Tetsuro; Miyazaki, Ryoichi; Aoki, Yuji; Ohara, Shigeo
2012-03-01
We have succeeded in synthesizing a new Yb-based Kondo lattice system, YbNi3X9 (X = Al, Ga). Our study reveals that YbNi3Al9 shows typical features of a heavy-fermion antiferromagnet with a Néel temperature of TN = 3.4 K. All of the properties reflect a competition between the Kondo effect and the crystalline electric field (CEF) effect. The moderate heavy-fermion state leads to an enhanced Sommerfeld coefficient of 100 mJ/(mol\\cdotK2), even if ordered antiferromagnetically. On the other hand, the isostructural gallide YbNi3Ga9 is an intermediate-valence system with a Kondo temperature of TK = 570 K. A large hybridization scale can overcome the CEF splitting energy, and a moderately heavy Fermi-liquid ground state with high local moment degeneracy should form at low temperatures. Note that the quality of single-crystalline YbNi3X9 is extremely high compared with those of other Yb-based Kondo lattice compounds. We conclude that YbNi3X9 is a suitable system for investigating the electronic structure of Yb-based Kondo lattice systems from a heavy-fermion system with an antiferromagnetically ordered ground state to an intermediate-valence system.
Relativity-Induced Bonding Pattern Change in Coinage Metal Dimers M2 (M = Cu, Ag, Au, Rg).
Li, Wan-Lu; Lu, Jun-Bo; Wang, Zhen-Ling; Hu, Han-Shi; Li, Jun
2018-05-07
The periodic table provides a fundamental protocol for qualitatively classifying and predicting chemical properties based on periodicity. While the periodic law of chemical elements had already been rationalized within the framework of the nonrelativistic description of chemistry with quantum mechanics, this law was later known to be affected significantly by relativity. We here report a systematic theoretical study on the chemical bonding pattern change in the coinage metal dimers (Cu 2 , Ag 2 , Au 2 , Rg 2 ) due to the relativistic effect on the superheavy elements. Unlike the lighter congeners basically demonstrating ns- ns bonding character and a 0 g + ground state, Rg 2 shows unique 6d-6d bonding induced by strong relativity. Because of relativistic spin-orbit (SO) coupling effect in Rg 2 , two nearly degenerate SO states, 0 g + and 2 u , exist as candidate of the ground state. This relativity-induced change of bonding mechanism gives rise to various unique alteration of chemical properties compared with the lighter dimers, including higher intrinsic bond energy, force constant, and nuclear shielding. Our work thus provides a rather simple but clear-cut example, where the chemical bonding picture is significantly changed by relativistic effect, demonstrating the modified periodic law in heavy-element chemistry.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Moller, Peter; Pereira, J; Hennrich, S
Measurements of the {beta}-decay properties of A {approx}< 110 r-process nuclei have been completed at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, at Michigan State University. {beta}-decay half-lives for {sup 105}Y, {sup 106,107}Zr and {sup 108,111}Mo, along with ,B-delayed neutron emission probabilities of 104Y, 109,11OMo and upper limits for 105Y, 103-107Zr and 108,111 Mo have been measured for the first time. Studies on the basis of the quasi-random phase approximation are used to analyze the ground-state deformation of these nuclei.
Staples, Christopher R.; Dhawan, Ish K.; Finnegan, Michael G.; Dwinell, Derek A.; Zhou, Zhi Hao; Huang, Heshu; Verhagen, Marc F. J. M.; Adams, Michael W. W.; Johnson, Michael K.
1997-12-03
The ground- and excited-state properties of heterometallic [CuFe(3)S(4)](2+,+), [CdFe(3)S(4)](2+,+), and [CrFe(3)S(4)](2+,+) cubane clusters assembled in Pyrococcus furiosus ferredoxin have been investigated by the combination of EPR and variable-temperature/variable-field magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) studies. The results indicate Cd(2+) incorporation into [Fe(3)S(4)](0,-) cluster fragments to yield S = 2 [CdFe(3)S(4)](2+) and S = (5)/(2) [CdFe(3)S(4)](+) clusters and Cu(+) incorporation into [Fe(3)S(4)](+,0) cluster fragments to yield S = (1)/(2) [CuFe(3)S(4)](2+) and S = 2 [CuFe(3)S(4)](+) clusters. This is the first report of the preparation of cubane type [CrFe(3)S(4)](2+,+) clusters, and the combination of EPR and MCD results indicates S = 0 and S = (3)/(2) ground states for the oxidized and reduced forms, respectively. Midpoint potentials for the [CdFe(3)S(4)](2+,+), [CrFe(3)S(4)](2+,+), and [CuFe(3)S(4)](2+,+) couples, E(m) = -470 +/- 15, -440 +/- 10, and +190 +/- 10 mV (vs NHE), respectively, were determined by EPR-monitored redox titrations or direct electrochemistry at a glassy carbon electrode. The trends in redox potential, ground-state spin, and electron delocalization of [MFe(3)S(4)](2+,+) clusters in P. furiosus ferredoxin are discussed as a function of heterometal (M = Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, and Tl).
First-principles studies of electronic, transport and bulk properties of pyrite FeS2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Banjara, Dipendra; Mbolle, Augustine; Malozovsky, Yuriy; Franklin, Lashounda; Bagayoko, Diola
We present results of ab-initio, self-consistent density functional theory (DFT) calculations of electronic, transport, and bulk properties of pyrite FeS2. We employed a local density approximation (LDA) potential and the linear combination of atomic orbitals (LCAO) formalism, following the Bagayoko, Zhao and Williams (BZW) method, as enhanced by Ekuma and Franklin (BZW-EF). The BZW-EF method requires successive, self consistent calculations with increasing basis sets to reach the ground state of the system under study. We report the band structure, the band gap, total and partial densities of states, effective masses, and the bulk modulus. Work funded in part by the US Department of Energy (DOE), National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) (Award No.DE-NA0002630), the National Science Foundation (NSF) (Award No, 1503226), LaSPACE, and LONI-SUBR.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Petersen, John; Spinks, Michael; Borges, Pablo; Scolfaro, Luisa
2012-03-01
Lead chalcogenides, most notably PbTe and PbSe, have become an active area of research due to their thermoelectric (TE) properties. The high figure of merit (ZT) of these materials has brought much attention to them, due to their ability to convert waste heat into electricity, with a possible application being in engine exhaust. Here, we examine the effects of altering the lattice parameter on total ground state energy and the band gap using first principles calculations performed within Density Functional Theory and the Projector Augmented Wave approach and the Vienna Ab-initio Simulation Package (VASP-PAW) code. Both PbTe and PbSe, in NaCl, orthorhombic, and CsCl structures are considered. It is found that altering the lattice parameter, which is analogous to applying external pressure on the material experimentally, has notable effects on both ground state energy and the band gap. The implications of this behavior in the TE properties of these materials are analyzed.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Glover, R. M.; Weinhold, F.
1977-01-01
Variational functionals of Braunn and Rebane (1972) for the imagery-frequency polarizability (IFP) have been generalized by the method of Gramian inequalities to give rigorous upper and lower bounds, valid even when the true (but unknown) unperturbed wavefunction must be represented by a variational approximation. Using these formulas in conjunction with flexible variational trial functions, tight error bounds are computed for the IFP and the associated two- and three-body van der Waals interaction constants of the ground 1(1S) and metastable 2(1,3S) states of He and Li(+). These bounds generally establish the ground-state properties to within a fraction of a per cent and metastable properties to within a few per cent, permitting a comparative assessment of competing theoretical methods at this level of accuracy. Unlike previous 'error bounds' for these properties, the present results have a completely a priori theoretical character, with no empirical input data.
MacDonald, Justin A; Storey, Kenneth B
2002-12-15
Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (F1,6P(2)) aldolase was purified to homogeneity from skeletal muscle of the golden-mantled ground squirrel, Spermophilus lateralis. Enzyme properties were examined at temperatures characteristic of euthermia (37 degrees C) and hibernation (5 degrees C); parallel studies assessed rabbit muscle aldolase for comparison. Kinetic properties of each enzyme were differentially affected by assay temperature. For example, the K(m) for F1,6P(2) of ground squirrel aldolase was 0.9+/-0.05 microM at 37 degrees C and 50% higher (1.45+/-0.04 microM) at 5 degrees C, whereas the K(m) of rabbit aldolase increased threefold over the same temperature range. The inhibitory effects of adenylates were similar at both temperatures for the ground squirrel enzyme, but inhibition by adenosine 5(')-diphosphate, adenosine 5(')-monophosphate, and inosine 5(')-monophosphate was substantially reduced at 5 degrees C for rabbit aldolase. Inhibition by inorganic phosphate increased at lower temperatures for both enzymes; for ground squirrel aldolase, the K(i) was 1.18+/-0.1mM at 37 degrees C and 0.23+/-0.05 mM at 5 degrees C. Inhibition of aldolase by inorganic phosphate could be one factor that helps to shut down glycolysis during hibernation. Thus, mammalian hibernators may exploit low-temperature characteristics of aldolase to benefit the metabolic needs of the hibernating state.
Calvello, Simone; Piccardo, Matteo; Rao, Shashank Vittal; Soncini, Alessandro
2018-03-05
We have developed and implemented a new ab initio code, Ceres (Computational Emulator of Rare Earth Systems), completely written in C++11, which is dedicated to the efficient calculation of the electronic structure and magnetic properties of the crystal field states arising from the splitting of the ground state spin-orbit multiplet in lanthanide complexes. The new code gains efficiency via an optimized implementation of a direct configurational averaged Hartree-Fock (CAHF) algorithm for the determination of 4f quasi-atomic active orbitals common to all multi-electron spin manifolds contributing to the ground spin-orbit multiplet of the lanthanide ion. The new CAHF implementation is based on quasi-Newton convergence acceleration techniques coupled to an efficient library for the direct evaluation of molecular integrals, and problem-specific density matrix guess strategies. After describing the main features of the new code, we compare its efficiency with the current state-of-the-art ab initio strategy to determine crystal field levels and properties, and show that our methodology, as implemented in Ceres, represents a more time-efficient computational strategy for the evaluation of the magnetic properties of lanthanide complexes, also allowing a full representation of non-perturbative spin-orbit coupling effects. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Effects of Magnetic Field and Rotation on 3P2 Superfluidity in Neutron Stars
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Masuda, Kota; Nitta, Muneto
2014-09-01
It is believed that an anisotropic 3P2 superfluid state is realized in the core of neutron stars. Historically, a lot of works (Anderson et al. (1961), Hoffberg et al. (1970) and Tamagaki (1970)) discussed the properties of 3P2 superfluid state. Ginzburg-Landau (GL) equation was derived by Fujita, Tsuneto (1972) and Richardson (1972). After that, Mermin (1974) solved the problem of minimizing GL free energy density for d-wave pairing and showed what ground states are realized. By using these results, Sauls and Serene (1978) concluded that the unitary phase is realized in BCS limit, and Sauls et al. (1982) showed 3P2 vortices have a spontaneous magnetization. In this presentation, we firstly introduce GL equation and show some analogy to that of spin2-BEC. In BCS limit, degenerate ground states are parameterized by one parameter. We show effects of gradient terms, magnetic field and rotation on ground states and half-quantized 3P2 vortices are the most stable states under certain conditions. Next, by using an anisotropic GL equation, we discuss a spontaneous magnetization caused by half-quantized 3P2 vortices and compare results with that of integer vortices. Finally, we comment on possible effects of 3P2 superfluid state on neutron star observables. It is believed that an anisotropic 3P2 superfluid state is realized in the core of neutron stars. Historically, a lot of works (Anderson et al. (1961), Hoffberg et al. (1970) and Tamagaki (1970)) discussed the properties of 3P2 superfluid state. Ginzburg-Landau (GL) equation was derived by Fujita, Tsuneto (1972) and Richardson (1972). After that, Mermin (1974) solved the problem of minimizing GL free energy density for d-wave pairing and showed what ground states are realized. By using these results, Sauls and Serene (1978) concluded that the unitary phase is realized in BCS limit, and Sauls et al. (1982) showed 3P2 vortices have a spontaneous magnetization. In this presentation, we firstly introduce GL equation and show some analogy to that of spin2-BEC. In BCS limit, degenerate ground states are parameterized by one parameter. We show effects of gradient terms, magnetic field and rotation on ground states and half-quantized 3P2 vortices are the most stable states under certain conditions. Next, by using an anisotropic GL equation, we discuss a spontaneous magnetization caused by half-quantized 3P2 vortices and compare results with that of integer vortices. Finally, we comment on possible effects of 3P2 superfluid state on neutron star observables. JSPS Research Fellowship for Young Scientists and Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (No. 25400268 and 25103720) from MEXT of Japan.
Lattice stability and thermal properties of Fe2VAl and Fe2TiSn Heusler compounds
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shastri, Shivprasad S.; Pandey, Sudhir K.
2018-04-01
Fe2VAl and Fe2TiSn are two full-Heusler compounds with non-magnetic ground states. They have application as potential thermoelectric materials. Along with first-principles electronic structure calculations, phonon calculation is one of the important tools in condensed matter physics and material science. Phonon calculations are important in understanding mechanical properties, thermal properties and phase transitions of periodic solids. A combination of electronic structure code and phonon calculation code - phonopy is employed in this work. The vibrational spectra, phonon DOS and thermal properties are studied for these two Heusler compounds. Two compounds are found to be dynamically stable with absence of negative frequencies (energy) in the phonon band structure.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Tarighi Ahmadpour, Mahdi; Rostamnejadi, Ali; Hashemifar, S. Javad
2016-07-07
We use density functional computations to study the zero temperature structural, electronic, magnetic, and optical properties of (5,0) finite carbon nanotubes (FCNT), with length in the range of 4–44 Å. It is found that the structural and electronic properties of (5,0) FCNTs, in the ground state, converge at a length of about 30 Å, while the excited state properties exhibit long-range edge effects. We discuss that curvature effects enhance energy gap of FCNTs, in contrast to the known trend in the periodic limit. It is seen that compensation of curvature effects in two special small sizes may give rise to spontaneous magnetization.more » The obtained cohesive energies provide some insights into the effects of environment on the growth of FCNTs. The second-order difference of the total energies reveals an important magic size of about 15 Å. The optical and dynamical magnetic responses of the FCNTs to polarized electromagnetic pulses are studied by time dependent density functional theory. The results show that the static and dynamic magnetic properties mainly come from the edge carbon atoms. The optical absorption properties are described in terms of local field effects and characterized by Casida linear response method.« less
Molecular vibrational states during a collision
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Recamier, Jose A.; Jauregui, Rocio
1995-01-01
Alternative algebraic techniques to approximate a given Hamiltonian by a harmonic oscillator are described both for time-independent and time-dependent systems. We apply them to the description of a one dimensional atom-diatom collision. From the resulting evolution operator, we evaluate vibrational transition probabilities as well as other time-dependent properties. As expected, the ground vibrational state becomes a squeezed state during the collision.
Strain effect on the magnetic and transport properties of LaCoO3 thin films
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, Y.; Peng, S. J.; Wang, D. J.; Wu, K. M.; Wang, S. H.
2018-05-01
LaCoO3 (LCO) has attracted much attention due to the unique magnetic transition and spin transition of Co3+ ions. Epitaxial LCO film exhibits an unexpected ferromagnetism, in contrast to the non-magnetism of bulk LCO. An in-depth study on the property of strained LCO film is of great importance. We have fabricated 30 nm LCO films on various substrates and studied the magnetic and transport properties of films in different strain states (compressed strain for LCO/LaAlO3, tensile strain for LCO/(LaAlO3)0.3(Sr2TaAlO6)0.35, SrTiO3). The in-plane tensiled LCO films exhibit ferromagnetic ground state at 5K and magnetic transition with TC around 85K, while compressed LCO/LaAlO3 film has a negligibly small moment signal. Our results reveal that in-plane tensile strain and tetragonal distortion are much more favorable for stabilizing the FM order in LCO films.
Chen, Xi; Xue, Long-Xin; Ju, Chun-Chuan; Wang, Ke-Zhi
2013-07-01
A novel Ru(II) complex of [Ru(bpy)2(Hbcpip)](ClO4)2 {where bpy=2,2-bipyridine, Hbcpip=2-(4-(9H-3,9'-bicarbazol-9-yl)phenyl)-1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline} is synthesized and characterized. Calf-thymus DNA-binding properties of the complex were studied by UV-vis absorption and luminescence titrations, steady-state emission quenching by [Fe(CN)6](4-), DNA competitive binding with ethidium bromide, thermal denaturation and DNA viscosity measurements. The results indicate that the complex partially intercalated into the DNA with a binding constant of (5.5±1.4)×10(5) M(-1) in buffered 50 mM NaCl. The acid-base properties of the complex were also studied by UV-visible and luminescence spectrophotometric pH titrations, and ground- and excited-state acidity ionization constant values were derived. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bhat, Tahir Mohiuddin; Gupta, Dinesh C.
2018-03-01
The ground state properties along with thermodynamic and thermoelectric properties of quaternary CoFeCrAs alloy within the ordered LiMgPdSn-type structure have been investigated by employing first-principles calculations. The alloy offers half-metallic ferromagnet character with an indirect band gap of 1.12 eV in the minority spin state with total spin magnetic moment of 4μB and follows Slater-Pauling relation. Effects on various properties of the material has been studied by the variation of the pressure and temperature. CoFeCrAs tenders large value of the Grüneisen parameter and small value for the thermal expansion coefficient. The materials present high Seebeck coefficient and huge power factor with the room temperature value of ∼-40 μV/K and 18 (1014 μWcm-1 K-2 s-1) respectively, which make CoFeCrAs promising candidate for efficient thermoelectric material.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Naeem, Kashif; Naseem, Bushra; Shah, S. S.; Shah, Syed W. H.
2017-11-01
The optical properties of amphiphilic hemicyanine dyes with variable hydrophobicity, confined within anionic micelles of sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (NaDDBS) have been studied by UV-visible absorption spectroscopy. The confinement constant, K conf has been determined for each entrapped dye. The ion-pair formation between dye and surfactant causes a decline in electronic transition energy (ΔE T) when dye alkyl chains are smaller due to stabilization of both the ground and excited state. ΔE T values gradually increase with increase in dye hydrophobicity that hampers the electrostatic interaction with dialkylammonium moiety and consequently excited state stabilization is compromised. The average number of dye molecules trapped in a single micelle was also determined. The negative values of Gibbs free energy indicate that the dye entrapment within micelles is energetically favored. These findings have significance for developing functional materials with peculiar luminescent properties, especially for more effective probing of complex biological systems.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Jain, Ekta, E-mail: jainekta05@gmail.com; Pagare, Gitanjali, E-mail: gita-pagare@yahoo.co.in; Sanyal, S. P., E-mail: sps.physicsbu@gmail.com
2016-05-06
The structural, electronic, elastic, mechanical and thermal properties of AlFe intermetallic compound in B{sub 2}-type (CsCl) structure have been investigated using first-principles calculations. The exchange-correlation term was treated within generalized gradient approximation. Ground state properties i.e. lattice constants (a{sub 0}), bulk modulus (B) and first-order pressure derivative of bulk modulus (B’) are presented. The density of states are derived which show the metallic character of present compound. Our results for C{sub 11}, C{sub 12} and C{sub 44} agree well with previous theoretical data. Using Pugh’s criteria (B/G{sub H} < 1.75), brittle character of AlFe is satisfied. In addition shear modulusmore » (G{sub H}), Young’s modulus (E), sound wave velocities and Debye temperature (θ{sub D}) have also been estimated.« less
Ground-state magnetic phase diagram of bow-tie graphene nanoflakes in external magnetic field
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Szałowski, Karol
2013-12-01
The magnetic phase diagram of a ground state is studied theoretically for graphene nanoflakes of bow-tie shape and various sizes in external in-plane magnetic field. The tight-binding Hamiltonian supplemented with Hubbard term is used to model the electronic structure of the systems in question. The existence of the antiferromagnetic phase with magnetic moments localized at the sides of the bow-tie is found for low field and a field-induced spin-flip transition to ferromagnetic state is predicted to occur in charge-undoped structures. For small nanoflake doped with a single charge carrier, the low-field phase is ferrimagnetic and a metamagnetic transition to ferromagnetic ordering can be forced by the field. The critical field is found to decrease with increasing size of the nanoflake. The influence of diagonal and off-diagonal disorder on the mentioned magnetic properties is studied. The effect of off-diagonal disorder is found to be more important than that of diagonal disorder, leading to significantly widened distribution of critical fields for disordered population of nanoflakes.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hong, Sung Y.; Song, Jung M.
1997-12-01
A theoretical study of a variety of tricyclic polymers [-(C8H2X2Y)n-] with two different types of bridging groups was performed, X=S and Y=CH2, SiH2, C=O, C=S, or C=CH2 for the fused bithiophene system and vice versa for the thieno-bicyclic system. These two types of the bridging groups are different from each other in that S favors the aromatic form of a cyclic polymer and the other groups prefer the quinonoid form. Geometrical structures of the polymers were obtained from semiempirical self-consistent-field (SCF) band calculations and the electronic properties from the modified extended Hückel band calculations. It is found that the ground-state geometrical structures of the tricyclic polymers are determined by the bridging groups in the outer rings. That is, the fused bithiophene system is aromatic in the ground state and the thieno-bicyclic system is quinonoid. The ground-state band gaps (which correspond to the absorption peaks of π-π* band transition) of the polymers were estimated to be in the range of 0.7-2.0 eV. The band gaps were analyzed in terms of the bond-length alternation along the conjugated carbon backbone, the C1-C4 interactions, and the electronic effect of the bridging groups. We also investigated the geometrical and electronic structures of polydicyanomethylene-cyclopenta-dicyclopentadiene (PDICNCY). Unlike the theoretical predictions of Toussaint and Bredas [Synth. Met. 69, 637 (1995)], PDICNCY in the ground state was estimated to be of the quinonoid form and to possess a large band gap (2.55 eV) comparable with the gap of polythiophene.
Linear canonical transformations of coherent and squeezed states in the Wigner phase space
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Han, D.; Kim, Y. S.; Noz, Marilyn E.
1988-01-01
It is shown that classical linear canonical transformations are possible in the Wigner phase space. Coherent and squeezed states are shown to be linear canonical transforms of the ground-state harmonic oscillator. It is therefore possible to evaluate the Wigner functions for coherent and squeezed states from that for the harmonic oscillator. Since the group of linear canonical transformations has a subgroup whose algebraic property is the same as that of the (2+1)-dimensional Lorentz group, it may be possible to test certain properties of the Lorentz group using optical devices. A possible experiment to measure the Wigner rotation angle is discussed.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lemal, Sébastien; Nguyen, Ngoc; de Boor, Johannes
2015-11-16
In this paper, using a combination of first-principles calculations and experimental transport measurements, we study the electronic and magnetic structure of the unfilled skutterudite FeSb 3. We employ the hybrid functional approach for exchange correlation. The ground state is determined to be antiferromagnetic with an atomic magnetic moment of 1.6μ B/Fe. The Néel temperature T N is estimated at 6 K, in agreement with experiments which found a paramagnetic state down to 10 K. The ground state is semiconducting, with a small electronic gap of 33meV, also consistent with previous experiments on films. Charge carrier concentrations are estimated from Hallmore » resistance measurements. The Seebeck coefficient is measured and mapped using a scanning probe at room temperature that yields an average value of 38.6μVK -1, slightly lower than the theoretical result. Finally, the theoretical conductivity is analyzed as a function of temperature and concentration of charge carriers.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kurzydłowski, D.; Grochala, W.
2017-10-01
Hybrid density functional calculations are performed for a variety of systems containing d9 ions (C u2 + and A g2 + ) and exhibiting quasi-one-dimensional magnetic properties. In particular, we study fluorides containing these ions in a rarely encountered compressed octahedral coordination that forces the unpaired electron into the local d (z2) orbital. We predict that such systems should exhibit exchange anisotropies surpassing that of S r2Cu O3 , one of the best realizations of a one-dimensional system known to date. In particular, we predict that the interchain coupling in the A g2 + -containing [AgF ] [B F4 ] system should be nearly four orders of magnitude smaller than the intrachain interaction. Our results indicate that quasi-one-dimensional spin-1/2 systems containing chains with spin sites in the d (z2)1 local ground state could constitute a versatile model for testing modern theories of quantum many-body physics in the solid state.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gavrilov, Nemanja; Salzmann, Susanne; Marian, Christel M.
2008-06-01
Minimum nuclear arrangements of the ground and low-lying excited electronic states of furan were obtained by means of (time dependent) Kohn-Sham density functional theory. A combined density functional/multi-reference configuration interaction method (DFT/MRCI) was employed to compute the spectral properties at these points. Multiple minima were found on the first excited singlet (S 1) potential energy hypersurface with electronic structures S1, S2, S3 corresponding to the 1 1A 2 (π → 3s-Ryd), 1 1B 2 (π → π ∗), and 2 1A 1 (π → π ∗) states in the vertical absorption spectrum, respectively. In analogy to recently published studies in thiophene [S. Salzmann, M. Kleinschmidt, J. Tatchen, R. Weinkauf, C.M. Marian, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 10 (2008) 380] a deactivation mechanism for electronically excited furan was detected that involves the opening of the pentacyclic ring. We found a nearly barrierless relaxation pathway from the Franck-Condon region along a C-O bond-breaking coordinate. Hereby the initially excited 1B 2 (π → π ∗) state undergoes a conical intersection with a 1B 1 (π → σ ∗) state. The system can return to the electronic ground state through a second conical intersection of the 1(π → σ ∗) state before the minimum of that B 1 state is reached.
Electric Quadrupole E2- Transitions of 170-174 Yb Isotopes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Abu El Sheikh, Mohd Kh. M.; Okhunov, Abdurahim A.; Usmanov, Ph. N.; Hassan, Torla HJ
2017-12-01
The non-adiabatic effects which is manifested in the electric properties of low-lying states of even-even deformed nuclei are studied. A simple phenomenological model which takes into account the Coriolis mixing of {K}π ={0}n+,{2}n+ and {K}π ={1}ν + state bands. The Calculations for isotopes 170-174 Yb, are carried out. The reduced probability of electric quadrupole transitions from the states {0}ν + and {2}ν + - bands to the ground (gr) state band is calculated and non adiabatic effect is discussed. The ratio of E2- transitions RIK from {0}2+, {0}3+, {2}1+, and {2}2+ bands are calculated and compared with the experimental data.
Realization of ground-state artificial skyrmion lattices at room temperature
Gilbert, Dustin A.; Maranville, Brian B.; Balk, Andrew L.; ...
2015-10-08
We report that the topological nature of magnetic skyrmions leads to extraordinary properties that provide new insights into fundamental problems of magnetism and exciting potentials for novel magnetic technologies. Prerequisite are systems exhibiting skyrmion lattices at ambient conditions, which have been elusive so far. We demonstrate the realization of artificial Bloch skyrmion lattices over extended areas in their ground state at room temperature by patterning asymmetric magnetic nanodots with controlled circularity on an underlayer with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA). Polarity is controlled by a tailored magnetic field sequence and demonstrated in magnetometry measurements. The vortex structure is imprinted from themore » dots into the interfacial region of the underlayer via suppression of the PMA by a critical ion-irradiation step. In conclusion, the imprinted skyrmion lattices are identified directly with polarized neutron reflectometry and confirmed by magnetoresistance measurements. Our results demonstrate an exciting platform to explore room-temperature ground-state skyrmion lattices.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Keutsch, Frank N.; Goldman, Nir; Harker, Heather A.; Leforestier, Claude; Saykally, Richard J.
We report the observation of extensive a- and c-type rotation-tunnelling (RT) spectra of (H2O)2 for Ka =0-3, and (D2O)2 for Ka =0-4. These data allow a detailed characterization of the vibrational ground state to energies comparable to those of the low-lying (70-80 cm-1) intermolecular vibrations. We present a comparison of the experimentally determined molecular constants and tunnelling splittings with those calculated on the VRT(ASP-W)III, SAPT-5st, and VRT(MCY-5f) intermolecular potential energy surfaces. The SAPT-5st potential reproduces the vibrational ground state properties of the water dimer very well. The VRT(MCY-5f) and especially the VRT(ASP-W)III potentials show larger disagreements, in particular for the bifurcation tunnelling splitting.
Tailoring the Crystal Structure Toward Optimal Super Conductors
2016-06-23
AFRL-AFOSR-VA-TR-2016-0210 TAILORING THE CRYSTAL STRUCTURE TOWARD OPTIMAL SUPERCONDUCTORS Emilia Morosan WILLIAM MARSH RICE UNIV HOUSTON TX Final...TAILORING THE CRYSTAL STRUCTURE TOWARD OPTIMAL SUPERCONDUCTORS 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER FA9550-11-1-0023 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6...studied the properties of layered transition metal compounds in search of unconventional superconductors . The aim is to identify ground states competing
Temperature-driven Phase Transformation in Y3Co: Neutron Scattering and DFT Studies
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Podlesnyak, A.; Ehlers, G.; Cao, H.; Matsuda, M.; Frontzek, M.; Zaharko, O.; Kazantsev, V. A.; Gubkin, A. F.; Baranov, N. V.
2013-03-01
The effects of a crystal structure deformation due to subtle atomic displacements have attracted much attention because they can result in colossal changes of the electronic and magnetic properties of solids. The R3Co binary intermetallic systems exhibit a number of complicated phenomena, including field-induced magnetic phase transitions (R=Er, Ho, Tb), giant magnetoresistance (R=Dy), a substantial magnetocaloric effect (R=Gd) and superconductivity (R=La). Contrary to previous studies that defined the ground state crystal structure of the entire R3Co series as orthorhombic Pnma, we find that Y3Co undergoes a structural phase transition upon cooling around Tc 160K. Density functional theory calculations reveal a dynamical instability of the Pnma structure of Y3Co. Employing inelastic neutron scattering measurements we find a strong damping of the (00 ξ) acoustic phonon mode below the critical temperature Tc. We suggest that some other members of the R3Co series (or even all of them) have ground state crystal symmetry lower than reported Pnma. This raises a question about the true magnetic structures and hence the influence of magnetic properties of the entire R3Co series. The research at ORNL was sponsored by the Scientific User Facilities Division, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, US Department of Energy.
Core structure of two-dimensional Fermi gas vortices in the BEC-BCS crossover region
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Madeira, Lucas; Gandolfi, Stefano; Schmidt, Kevin E.
2017-05-02
We report T = 0 diffusion Monte Carlo results for the ground-state and vortex excitation of unpolarized spin-1/2 fermions in a two-dimensional disk. We investigate how vortex core structure properties behave over the BEC-BCS crossover. We calculate the vortex excitation energy, density pro les, and vortex core properties related to the current. We nd a density suppression at the vortex core on the BCS side of the crossover and a depleted core on the BEC limit. Size-effect dependencies in the disk geometry were carefully studied.
Electronic topological transitions in the AgPd system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Skorodumova, N. V.; Simak, S. I.; Smirnova, E. A.; Vekilov, Yu. Kh.
1995-02-01
“First-principles” LMTO-CPA calculations of the Fermi surfaces and thermodynamic properties of AgPd random alloys are presented. We show that there are at least four electronic topological transitions (ETT) in the system. The changes of the Fermi surface topology lead to the appearance of peculiarities in the concentration dependence of the thermodynamic (ground state) properties.
Aspects of the RVB Luttinger Liquid Theory of the High Temperature Superconductivity
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ren, Yong
1992-01-01
This thesis describes work on a large-U Hubbard model theory for high temperature superconductors. After an introduction to the Hubbard model and the normal state properties of the high T_{rm c} superconductors, we briefly examine the definition of the Fermi liquid and its breakdown. Then we explain why the 1D Hubbard model is the best starting point to approach our problem. In one dimension, the exact Lieb-Wu solution is available. We discuss the Lieb-Wu solution, and calculate various asymptotic correlation functions in the ground state. This clarifies the nature of the ground state which has not been known before. Instead of simply getting the exponents of the correlation functions from the Bethe Ansatz integral equations, we establish the connection between phase shifts at different Fermi points and the asymptotic correlation functions. We believe that this connection contains the most important physics and it can be readily generalized into higher dimensions. We then discuss bosonization in two dimensions and define the 2D RVB-Luttinger liquid theory, proposing that the ground state of the 2D Hubbard model belongs to a different fixed point than the Landau Fermi liquid-Luttinger liquid. Finally we apply the understanding of the 1D result to explain the normal state properties of the high T_ {c} superconductors, putting emphasis on how the non-Fermi liquid correlation functions explain the "anomalous" experimental results. In the Appendix, several issues related to the 1D and 2D Hubbard model are discussed.
Stress Drop and Depth Controls on Ground Motion From Induced Earthquakes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Baltay, A.; Rubinstein, J. L.; Terra, F. M.; Hanks, T. C.; Herrmann, R. B.
2015-12-01
Induced earthquakes in the central United States pose a risk to local populations, but there is not yet agreement on how to portray their hazard. A large source of uncertainty in the hazard arises from ground motion prediction, which depends on the magnitude and distance of the causative earthquake. However, ground motion models for induced earthquakes may be very different than models previously developed for either the eastern or western United States. A key question is whether ground motions from induced earthquakes are similar to those from natural earthquakes, yet there is little history of natural events in the same region with which to compare the induced ground motions. To address these problems, we explore how earthquake source properties, such as stress drop or depth, affect the recorded ground motion of induced earthquakes. Typically, due to stress drop increasing with depth, ground motion prediction equations model shallower events to have smaller ground motions, when considering the same absolute hypocentral distance to the station. Induced earthquakes tend to occur at shallower depths, with respect to natural eastern US earthquakes, and may also exhibit lower stress drops, which begs the question of how these two parameters interact to control ground motion. Can the ground motions of induced earthquakes simply be understood by scaling our known source-ground motion relations to account for the shallow depth or potentially smaller stress drops of these induced earthquakes, or is there an inherently different mechanism in play for these induced earthquakes? We study peak ground-motion velocity (PGV) and acceleration (PGA) from induced earthquakes in Oklahoma and Kansas, recorded by USGS networks at source-station distances of less than 20 km, in order to model the source effects. We compare these records to those in both the NGA-West2 database (primarily from California) as well as NGA-East, which covers the central and eastern United States and Canada. Preliminary analysis indicates that the induced ground motions appear similar to those from the NGA-West2 database. However, upon consideration of their shallower depths, ground motion behavior from induced events seems to fall in between the West data and that of NGA-East, so we explore the control of stress drop and depth on ground motion in more detail.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mandra, Salvatore
2017-01-01
We study the performance of the D-Wave 2X quantum annealing machine on systems with well-controlled ground-state degeneracy. While obtaining the ground state of a spin-glass benchmark instance represents a difficult task, the gold standard for any optimization algorithm or machine is to sample all solutions that minimize the Hamiltonian with more or less equal probability. Our results show that while naive transverse-field quantum annealing on the D-Wave 2X device can find the ground-state energy of the problems, it is not well suited in identifying all degenerate ground-state configurations associated to a particular instance. Even worse, some states are exponentially suppressed, in agreement with previous studies on toy model problems [New J. Phys. 11, 073021 (2009)]. These results suggest that more complex driving Hamiltonians are needed in future quantum annealing machines to ensure a fair sampling of the ground-state manifold.
Ellis, J Michael; Altman, Michael D; Cash, Brandon; Haidle, Andrew M; Kubiak, Rachel L; Maddess, Matthew L; Yan, Youwei; Northrup, Alan B
2016-12-08
Optimization of a series of highly potent and kinome selective carbon-linked carboxamide spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) inhibitors with favorable drug-like properties is described. A pervasive Ames liability in an analogous nitrogen-linked carboxamide series was obviated by replacement with a carbon-linked moiety. Initial efforts lacked on-target potency, likely due to strain induced between the hinge binding amide and solvent front heterocycle. Consideration of ground state and bound state energetics allowed rapid realization of improved solvent front substituents affording subnanomolar Syk potency and high kinome selectivity. These molecules were also devoid of mutagenicity risk as assessed via the Ames test using the TA97a Salmonella strain.
2016-01-01
Optimization of a series of highly potent and kinome selective carbon-linked carboxamide spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) inhibitors with favorable drug-like properties is described. A pervasive Ames liability in an analogous nitrogen-linked carboxamide series was obviated by replacement with a carbon-linked moiety. Initial efforts lacked on-target potency, likely due to strain induced between the hinge binding amide and solvent front heterocycle. Consideration of ground state and bound state energetics allowed rapid realization of improved solvent front substituents affording subnanomolar Syk potency and high kinome selectivity. These molecules were also devoid of mutagenicity risk as assessed via the Ames test using the TA97a Salmonella strain. PMID:27994755
Ground-state properties of trapped Bose-Fermi mixtures: Role of exchange correlation
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Albus, Alexander P.; Wilkens, Martin; Illuminati, Fabrizio
2003-06-01
We introduce density-functional theory for inhomogeneous Bose-Fermi mixtures, derive the associated Kohn-Sham equations, and determine the exchange-correlation energy in local-density approximation. We solve numerically the Kohn-Sham system, and determine the boson and fermion density distributions and the ground-state energy of a trapped, dilute mixture beyond mean-field approximation. The importance of the corrections due to exchange correlation is discussed by a comparison with current experiments; in particular, we investigate the effect of the repulsive potential-energy contribution due to exchange correlation on the stability of the mixture against collapse.
Disaster warning satellite study
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1971-01-01
The Disaster Warning Satellite System is described. It will provide NOAA with an independent, mass communication system for the purpose of warning the public of impending disaster and issuing bulletins for corrective action to protect lives and property. The system consists of three major segments. The first segment is the network of state or regional offices that communicate with the central ground station; the second segment is the satellite that relays information from ground stations to home receivers; the third segment is composed of the home receivers that receive information from the satellite and provide an audio output to the public. The ground stations required in this system are linked together by two, separate, voice bandwidth communication channels on the Disaster Warning Satellites so that a communications link would be available in the event of disruption of land line service.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Errico, Leonardo A.; Rentería, Mario; Petrilli, Helena M.
2007-04-01
We perform an ab initio study of the electric field gradient (EFG) at the nucleus of Cd impurities at substitutional Sn sites in crystalline SnO. The full-potential linearized-augmented plane wave and the projector augmented wave methods used here allow us to treat the electronic structure of the doped system and the atomic relaxations introduced by the impurities in the host in a fully self-consistent way using a supercell approach in a state-of-the-art way. Effects of the impurity charge state on the electronic and structural properties are also discussed. Since the EFG is a very subtle quantity, its determination is very useful to probe ground-state properties such as the charge density. We show that the EFG is very sensitive to structural relaxations induced by the impurity. Our theoretical predictions are compared with available experimental results.
Ushakou, Dzmitryi V; Tomin, Vladimir I
2018-06-07
We report spectroscopic properties of 3-hydroxyflavone (3-HF) and 4'-N,N-dimethylamino-3-hydroxyflavone (DMA3HF) in acetonitrile and ethyl acetate at different temperatures in the range from 10 °C to about 67 °C. These compounds are characterized by excited-state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) which leads to occurrence of two forms of these molecules. For this reason their fluorescence spectra have two bands which correspond to emission of normal and photoproduct (tautomer) forms. The correlation between ratio of integrated intensity of these two bands and inverse absolute temperature (the Arrhenius plot) have been applied to estimate energetic properties, such as difference between energy levels of excited states as well ground states for normal and tautomer forms for each molecule. Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Laser Spectroscopy and Density Functional Study on Niobium Dimer Cation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aydin, Metin; Lombardi, John R.
2009-06-01
Resonant multiphoton fragmentation spectra of niobium dimer cation (Nb2+) have been obtained by utilizing laser vaporization of a Nb metal target. Ions are mass-selected with a time-of-flight mass spectrometer followed by a mass gate, then fragmented with a pulsed dye laser, and the resulting fragment ions are detected with a second time-of-flight reflectron mass spectrometer and multichannel plate. Photon resonances are detected by monitoring ion current as a function of fragmentation laser wavelength. A rich, but complex spectrum of the cation is obtained. The bands display a characteristic multiplet structure that may be interpreted as due to transitions from the ground state X^{4}{Σ}^{-}({Ω}g) to several excited states, X^{4}{Π}({Ω}u) and X^{4}{Σ}(^{-}{Ω}u). The ground state X^{4}{Σ}^{-}({Ω}g) is derived from the electron configuration ({π}{_u})^{4} (1{σ}{_g})^{2}(2{σ}{_g})^{1} ({δ}{_g})^{2}. The two spin-orbit components are split by 145 cm^{-1} due to a strong second-order isoconfigurational spin-orbit interaction with the low-lying ^{2}{Σ}^{+}({Ω}g) state. The vibrational frequencies of the ground sate and the excited state of Nb2+ are identified as well as molecular spin-orbit constants (A{_S}{_O}) in the excited state. The electronic structure of niobium dimer cation was investigated using density functional theory. For the electronic ground state, the predicted spectroscopic properties were in good agreement with experiment. Calculations on excited states reveal congested manifolds of quartet and doublet electronic states in the range 0-30,000 cm^{-1}, reflecting the multitude of possible electronic promotions among the 4d- and 5s-based molecular orbitals. Comparisons are drawn between Nb^{+}{_2} and the prevalent isoelectronic molecules V^{+}{_2}/NbV^{+}/Nb{_2}/V{_2}/NbV. M. Aydin and John R. Lombardi J. Phys. Chem. A. xx XXXX 2009.
Large quantum rings in the ν > 1 quantum Hall regime.
Räsänen, E; Aichinger, M
2009-01-14
We study computationally the ground-state properties of large quantum rings in the filling-factor ν>1 quantum Hall regime. We show that the arrangement of electrons into different Landau levels leads to clear signatures in the total energies as a function of the magnetic field. In this context, we discuss possible approximations for the filling factor ν in the system. We are able to characterize integer-ν states in quantum rings in an analogy with conventional quantum Hall droplets. We also find a partially spin-polarized state between ν = 2 and 3. Despite the specific topology of a quantum ring, this state is strikingly reminiscent of the recently found ν = 5/2 state in a quantum dot.
Frozen into stripes: fate of the critical Ising model after a quench.
Blanchard, T; Picco, M
2013-09-01
In this article we study numerically the final state of the two-dimensional ferromagnetic critical Ising model after a quench to zero temperature. Beginning from equilibrium at T_{c}, the system can be blocked in a variety of infinitely long lived stripe states in addition to the ground state. Similar results have already been obtained for an infinite temperature initial condition and an interesting connection to exact percolation crossing probabilities has emerged. Here we complete this picture by providing an example of stripe states precisely related to initial crossing probabilities for various boundary conditions. We thus show that this is not specific to percolation but rather that it depends on the properties of spanning clusters in the initial state.
A scheme for two-photon lasing with two coupled flux qubits in circuit quantum electrodynamics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Huang, Wen; Zou, Xu-Bo; Guo, Guang-Can
2015-06-01
We theoretically study the system of a superconducting transmission line resonator coupled to two interacting superconducting flux qubits. It is shown that under certain conditions the resonator mode can be tuned to two-photon resonance between the ground state and the highest excited state while the middle excited states are far-off resonance. Furthermore, we study the steady-state properties of the flux qubits and resonator, such as the photon statistics, the spectrum and squeezing of the resonator, and demonstrate that two-photon laser can be implemented with current experimental technology. Project supported by the National Fundamental Research Program of China (Grant No. 2011cba00200), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 11274295), and the Doctor Foundation of Education Ministry of China (Grant No. 20113402110059).
Synthesis, Photophysical and Computational Study of Novel Coumarin-based Organic Dyes.
Kumbar, Mahadev N; Sannaikar, Madivalagouda S; Shaikh, Saba Kauser J; Kamble, Atulkumar A; Wari, Manjunath N; Inamdar, Sanjeev R; Qiao, Qiquan; Revanna, Bhavya N; Madegowda, Mahendra; Dasappa, Jagadeesh P; Kamble, Ravindra R
2018-03-01
A series of novel coumarin pyrazoline moieties combined with tetrazoles, 3-(1-phenyl-4-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)-1H-pyrazol-3-yl)-2H-chromen-2-one, 6-chloro-3-(1-phenyl-4-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)-1H-pyrazol-3-yl)-2H-chromen-2-one, 6-bromo-3-(1-phenyl-4-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)-1H-pyrazol-3-yl)-2H-chromen-2-one and 6-bromo-3-(1-(4-bromophenyl)-4-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)-1H pyrazol-3-yl)-2H-chromen-2-one7(a-d), were designed and synthesized. Single crystal X-ray diffraction and their interactions were studied by Hirshfeld surface analysis. Thermal stabilities and electrochemical properties of these compounds were examined from differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), thermogravimetric (TGA) and cyclic voltammetric (CV) studies. Their spectroscopic properties were analyzed in various alcohols and general solvents by UV-Vis absorption, fluorescence and time-resolved spectroscopy. In addition, the ground and excited state electronic properties were investigated using density functional theory (DFT). The calculated highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) and energy band gap (E g ) values have revealed the effect of substitution of halogens. The substitution has equally affected the ground and excited states of 7(a-d) compounds. The solvatochromism on absorption, fluorescence spectra and fluorescence lifetimes of these compounds was investigated. All these results showed the chromen-2-one of pyrazoline tetrazole derivatives could play an important role in photonic and electronic devices. © 2017 The American Society of Photobiology.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pawar, H.; Shugani, M.; Aynyas, M.; Sanyal, S. P.
2018-02-01
The structural, electronic and elastic properties of YbTM2 (TM = Ir and Pt) Laves phase intermetallic compounds which crystallize in cubic (MgCu2-type) structure, have been investigated using ab-initio full potential linearized augmented plane wave (FP-LAPW) method with LDA and LDA+U approximation. The calculated ground state properties such as lattice parameter (a0), bulk modulus (B) and its pressure derivative (B‧) are in good agreement with available experimental and theoretical data. The electronic properties are analyzed from band structures and density of states. Elastic constants are predicted first time for these compounds which obey the stability criteria for cubic system.
Primary photophysical properties of moxifloxacin--a fluoroquinolone antibiotic.
Lorenzo, Fernando; Navaratnam, Suppiah; Edge, Ruth; Allen, Norman S
2008-01-01
The photophysical properties of the fluoroquinolone antibiotic moxifloxacin (MOX) were investigated in aqueous media. MOX in water, at pH 7.4, shows two intense absorption bands at 287 and 338 nm (epsilon = 44,000 and 17,000 dm(3) mol(-1) cm(-1), respectively). The absorption and emission properties of MOX are pH-dependent, pK(a) values for the protonation equilibria of both the ground (6.1 and 9.6) and excited singlet states (6.8 and 9.1) of MOX were determined spectroscopically. MOX fluoresces weakly, the quantum yield for fluorescence emission being maximum (0.07) at pH 8. Phosphorescence from the excited triplet state in frozen ethanol solution has a quantum yield of 0.046. Laser flash photolysis and pulse radiolysis studies have been carried out to characterize the transient species of MOX in aqueous solution. On laser excitation, MOX undergoes monophotonic photoionization with a quantum yield of 0.14. This leads to the formation of a long-lived cation radical whose absorption is maximum at 470 nm (epsilon(470) = 3400 dm(3) mol(-1) cm(-1)). The photoionization process releases hydrated electron which rapidly reacts (k = 2.8 x 10(10) dm(3) mol(-1) s(-1)) with ground state MOX, yielding a long-lived anion radical with maximum absorption at 390 nm (epsilon(390) = 2400 dm(3) mol(-1) cm(-1)). The cation radical of MOX is able to oxidize protein components tryptophan and tyrosine. The bimolecular rate constants for these reactions are 2.3 x 10(8) dm(3) mol(-1) s(-1) and 1.3 x 10(8) dm(3) mol(-1) s(-1), respectively. Singlet oxygen sensitized by the MOX triplet state was also detected only in oxygen-saturated D(2)O solutions, with a quantum yield of 0.075.
Prediction of new ground-state crystal structure of T a2O5
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Yong; Kawazoe, Yoshiyuki
2018-03-01
Tantalum pentoxide (T a2O5 ) is a wide-gap semiconductor which has important technological applications. Despite the enormous efforts from both experimental and theoretical studies, the ground-state crystal structure of T a2O5 is not yet uniquely determined. Based on first-principles calculations in combination with evolutionary algorithm, we identify a triclinic phase of T a2O5 , which is energetically much more stable than any phases or structural models reported previously. Characterization of the static and dynamical properties of the phase reveals the common features shared with previous metastable phases of T a2O5 . In particular, we show that the d spacing of ˜3.8 Å found in the x-ray diffraction patterns of many previous experimental works is actually the radius of the second Ta-Ta coordination shell as defined by radial distribution functions.
Liu, Jin; Adamska, Lyudmyla; Doorn, Stephen K.; ...
2015-05-14
Conformational structure and the electronic properties of various electronic excitations in cycloparaphenylenes (CPPs) are calculated using hybrid Density Functional Theory (DFT). The results demonstrate that wavefunctions of singlet and triplet excitons as well as the positive and negative polarons remain fully delocalized in CPPs. In contrast, these excitations in larger CPP molecules become localized on several phenyl rings, which are locally planarized, while the undeformed ground state geometry is preserved on the rest of the hoop. As evidenced by the measurements of bond-length alternation and dihedral angles, localized regions show stronger hybridization between neighboring bonds and thus enhanced electronic communication.more » This effect is even more significant in the smaller hoops, where phenyl rings have strong quinoid character in the ground state. Thus, upon excitation, electron–phonon coupling leads to the self-trapping of the electronic wavefunction and release of energy from fractions of an eV up to two eVs, depending on the type of excitation and the size of the hoop. The impact of such localization on electronic and optical properties of CPPs is systematically investigated and compared with the available experimental measurements.« less
The emission function of ground-based light sources: State of the art and research challenges
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Solano Lamphar, Héctor Antonio
2018-05-01
To understand the night sky radiance generated by the light emissions of urbanised areas, different researchers are currently proposing various theoretical approaches. The distribution of the radiant intensity as a function of the zenith angle is one of the most unknown properties on modelling skyglow. This is due to the collective effects of the artificial radiation emitted from the ground-based light sources. The emission function is a key property in characterising the sky brightness under arbitrary conditions, therefore it is required by modellers, environmental engineers, urban planners, light pollution researchers, and experimentalists who study the diffuse light of the night sky. As a matter of course, the emission function considers the public lighting system, which is in fact the main generator of the skyglow. Still, another class of light-emitting devices are gaining importance since their overuse and the urban sprawl of recent years. This paper will address the importance of the emission function in modelling skyglow and the factors involved in its characterization. On this subject, the author's intention is to organise, integrate, and evaluate previously published research in order to state the progress of current research toward clarifying this topic.
Systematic approaches to layered materials with strong electron correlations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chung, Chung-Hou
I present systematic large-N approaches to study the ground state magnetic orderings and charge transport of layered materials with strong electron correlations, including the organic material kappa-(BEDT-TTF)2X, and the antiferromagnetic insulators Cs2CuCl4 and SrCu2(BO3) 2. I model the electronic properties of the organic materials kappa-(BEDT-TTF) 2X with a fermionic SU(N) Hubbard-Heisenberg model on an anisotropic triangular lattice. The ground state phase diagram shows a metal-insulator transition and a depression of the density of states in the metallic phase which are consistent with the experiments. The magnetic properties of kappa-(BEDT-TTF) 2X are modeled by a bosonic Sp(N) quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the same lattice. The phase diagram consists of five different phases as a function of the size of the spin and the degree of frustration: the Neel ordered phase, a (pi, pi) short-range-order (SRO) phase, an incommensurate (q, q) long-range-order (LRO) phase, a (q, q) SRO phase, and a decoupled chain phase. I apply the same Sp(N) approach on the same triangular lattice to model the magnetic properties of Cs2CuCl 4 both with and without a magnetic field. At zero field, I find the ground state either exhibits incommensurate spin order, or is in a quantum disordered phase with deconfined spin-1/2 excitations and topological order. The Sp(N) calculation of spin excitation spectrum shows a large upward quantum renormalization consistent with that seen in experiments. For fields perpendicular to the plane of spin rotation, I find that the spins form an incommensurate "cone" of polarization up to a saturation field where all spins are fully polarized. There is a large quantum renormalization of the zero-field incommensuration. The results are in apparent agreement with neutron scattering experiments. Finally, the magnetic properties of the insulator SrCu2(BO 3)2 is modeled by the Sp(N) quantum antiferromagnet on the Shastry-Sutherland lattice. In addition to the familiar Neel and dimer phases, I find a confining phase with plaquette order, and a topologically ordered phase with deconfined S = 1/2 spinons and helical spin correlations. The deconfined phase is contiguous to the dimer phase, and in a regime of couplings close to those appropriate for the material.
Black carbon's contribution to aerosol absorption optical depth over S. Korea
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lamb, K.; Perring, A. E.; Beyersdorf, A. J.; Anderson, B. E.; Segal-Rosenhaimer, M.; Redemann, J.; Holben, B. N.; Schwarz, J. P.
2017-12-01
Aerosol absorption optical depth (AAOD) monitored by ground-based sites (AERONET, SKYNET, etc.) is used to constrain climate radiative forcing from black carbon (BC) and other absorbing aerosols in global models, but few validation studies between in situ aerosol measurements and ground-based AAOD exist. AAOD is affected by aerosol size distributions, composition, mixing state, and morphology. Megacities provide appealing test cases for this type of study due to their association with very high concentrations of anthropogenic aerosols. During the KORUS-AQ campaign in S. Korea, which took place in late spring and early summer of 2016, in situ aircraft measurements over the Seoul Metropolitan Area and Taehwa Research Forest (downwind of Seoul) were repeated three times per flight over a 6 week period, providing significant temporal coverage of vertically resolved aerosol properties influenced by different meteorological conditions and sources. Measurements aboard the NASA DC-8 by the NOAA Humidified Dual Single Particle Soot Photometers (HD-SP2) quantified BC mass, size distributions, mixing state, and the hygroscopicity of BC containing aerosols. The in situ BC mass vertical profiles are combined with estimated absorption enhancement calculated from observed optical size and hygroscopicity using Mie theory, and then integrated over the depth of the profile to calculate BC's contribution to AAOD. Along with bulk aerosol size distributions and hygroscopicity, bulk absorbing aerosol optical properties, and on-board sky radiance measurements, these measurements are compared with ground-based AERONET site measurements of AAOD to evaluate closure between in situ vertical profiles of BC and AAOD measurements. This study will provide constraints on the relative importance of BC (including lensing and hygroscopicity effects) and non-BC components to AAOD over S. Korea.
Bi-layer graphene structure with non-equivalent planes: Magnetic properties study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mhirech, A.; Aouini, S.; Alaoui-Ismaili, A.; Bahmad, L.
2018-05-01
In this paper, we study the magnetic properties of a ferromagnetic bi-layer graphene structure with non-equivalent planes. The geometry of the studied system is formed by two layers (A) and (B) consisting of the spins σ = 1 / 2 and S = 1 . For this purpose, the influence of the coupling exchange interactions, the external magnetic and the crystal fields are investigated and presented as well as the ground state phase diagrams. The Monte Carlo simulations have been used to examine the behavior of the partial and the total magnetizations as a function of the system parameters. These effects on the compensation and critical temperatures behavior are also presented in different phase diagrams, for the studied system.
Final Technical Report for DE-SC0001878 [Theory and Simulation of Defects in Oxide Materials
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Chelikowsky, James R.
2014-04-14
We explored a wide variety of oxide materials and related problems, including materials at the nanoscale and generic problems associated with oxide materials such as the development of more efficient computational tools to examine these materials. We developed and implemented methods to understand the optical and structural properties of oxides. For ground state properties, our work is predominantly based on pseudopotentials and density functional theory (DFT), including new functionals and going beyond the local density approximation (LDA): LDA+U. To study excited state properties (quasiparticle and optical excitations), we use time dependent density functional theory, the GW approach, and GW plusmore » Bethe-Salpeter equation (GW-BSE) methods based on a many-body Green function approaches. Our work focused on the structural, electronic, optical and magnetic properties of defects (such as oxygen vacancies) in hafnium oxide, titanium oxide (both bulk and clusters) and related materials. We calculated the quasiparticle defect states and charge transition levels of oxygen vacancies in monoclinic hafnia. we presented a milestone G0W0 study of two of the crystalline phases of dye-sensitized TiO{sub 2} clusters. We employed hybrid density functional theory to examine the electronic structure of sexithiophene/ZnO interfaces. To identify the possible effect of epitaxial strain on stabilization of the ferromagnetic state of LaCoO{sub 3} (LCO), we compare the total energy of the magnetic and nonmagnetic states of the strained theoretical bulk structure.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hutchings, L J; Foxall, W; Rambo, J
2005-02-14
Yucca Mountain licensing will require estimation of ground motions from probabilistic seismic hazard analyses (PSHA) with annual probabilities of exceedance on the order of 10{sup -6} to 10{sup -7} per year or smaller, which correspond to much longer earthquake return periods than most previous PSHA studies. These long return periods for the Yucca Mountain PSHA result in estimates of ground motion that are extremely high ({approx} 10 g) and that are believed to be physically unrealizable. However, there is at present no generally accepted method to bound ground motions either by showing that the physical properties of materials cannot maintainmore » such extreme motions, or the energy release by the source for such large motions is physically impossible. The purpose of this feasibility study is to examine recorded ground motion and rock property data from nuclear explosions to determine its usefulness for studying the ground motion from extreme earthquakes. The premise is that nuclear explosions are an extreme energy density source, and that the recorded ground motion will provide useful information about the limits of ground motion from extreme earthquakes. The data were categorized by the source and rock properties, and evaluated as to what extent non-linearity in the material has affected the recordings. They also compiled existing results of non-linear dynamic modeling of the explosions carried out by LLNL and other institutions. They conducted an extensive literature review to outline current understanding of extreme ground motion. They also analyzed the data in terms of estimating maximum ground motions at Yucca Mountain.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hutchings, L H; Foxall, W; Rambo, J
2005-03-09
Yucca Mountain licensing will require estimation of ground motions from probabilistic seismic hazard analyses (PSHA) with annual probabilities of exceedance on the order of 10{sup -6} to 10{sup -7} per year or smaller, which correspond to much longer earthquake return periods than most previous PSHA studies. These long return periods for the Yucca Mountain PSHA result in estimates of ground motion that are extremely high ({approx} 10 g) and that are believed to be physically unrealizable. However, there is at present no generally accepted method to bound ground motions either by showing that the physical properties of materials cannot maintainmore » such extreme motions, or the energy release by the source for such large motions is physically impossible. The purpose of this feasibility study is to examine recorded ground motion and rock property data from nuclear explosions to determine its usefulness for studying the ground motion from extreme earthquakes. The premise is that nuclear explosions are an extreme energy density source, and that the recorded ground motion will provide useful information about the limits of ground motion from extreme earthquakes. The data were categorized by the source and rock properties, and evaluated as to what extent non-linearity in the material has affected the recordings. They also compiled existing results of non-linear dynamic modeling of the explosions carried out by LLNL and other institutions. They conducted an extensive literature review to outline current understanding of extreme ground motion. They also analyzed the data in terms of estimating maximum ground motions at Yucca Mountain.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Pagare, G., E-mail: gita-pagare@yahoo.co.in; Abraham, Jisha A.; Department of Physics, National Defence Academy, Pune-411023
2015-06-24
A theoretical study of structural, electronic and optical properties of RESn{sub 3} (RE = Pr & Nd) intermetallics have been investigated systematically using first principles density functional theory. The calculations are carried out within the PBE-GGA and LSDA for the exchange correlation potential. The ground state properties such as lattice parameter (a{sub 0}), bulk modulus (B) and its pressure derivative (B′) are calculated and the calculated lattice parameters show well agreement with the experimental results. We first time predict elastic constants for these compounds. From energy dispersion curves, it is found that these compounds are metallic in nature. The linearmore » optical response of these compounds are also studied and the higher value of static dielectric constant shows the possibility to use them as good dielectric materials.« less
Quantifying confidence in density functional theory predictions of magnetic ground states
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Houchins, Gregory; Viswanathan, Venkatasubramanian
2017-10-01
Density functional theory (DFT) simulations, at the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) level, are being routinely used for material discovery based on high-throughput descriptor-based searches. The success of descriptor-based material design relies on eliminating bad candidates and keeping good candidates for further investigation. While DFT has been widely successfully for the former, oftentimes good candidates are lost due to the uncertainty associated with the DFT-predicted material properties. Uncertainty associated with DFT predictions has gained prominence and has led to the development of exchange correlation functionals that have built-in error estimation capability. In this work, we demonstrate the use of built-in error estimation capabilities within the BEEF-vdW exchange correlation functional for quantifying the uncertainty associated with the magnetic ground state of solids. We demonstrate this approach by calculating the uncertainty estimate for the energy difference between the different magnetic states of solids and compare them against a range of GGA exchange correlation functionals as is done in many first-principles calculations of materials. We show that this estimate reasonably bounds the range of values obtained with the different GGA functionals. The estimate is determined as a postprocessing step and thus provides a computationally robust and systematic approach to estimating uncertainty associated with predictions of magnetic ground states. We define a confidence value (c-value) that incorporates all calculated magnetic states in order to quantify the concurrence of the prediction at the GGA level and argue that predictions of magnetic ground states from GGA level DFT is incomplete without an accompanying c-value. We demonstrate the utility of this method using a case study of Li-ion and Na-ion cathode materials and the c-value metric correctly identifies that GGA-level DFT will have low predictability for NaFePO4F . Further, there needs to be a systematic test of a collection of plausible magnetic states, especially in identifying antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground states. We believe that our approach of estimating uncertainty can be readily incorporated into all high-throughput computational material discovery efforts and this will lead to a dramatic increase in the likelihood of finding good candidate materials.
Quantum simulation of interacting spin models with trapped ions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Islam, Kazi Rajibul
The quantum simulation of complex many body systems holds promise for understanding the origin of emergent properties of strongly correlated systems, such as high-Tc superconductors and spin liquids. Cold atomic systems provide an almost ideal platform for quantum simulation due to their excellent quantum coherence, initialization and readout properties, and their ability to support several forms of interactions. In this thesis, I present experiments on the quantum simulation of long range Ising models in the presence of transverse magnetic fields with a chain of up to sixteen ultracold 171Yb+ ions trapped in a linear radio frequency Paul trap. Two hyperfine levels in each of the 171Yb+ ions serve as the spin-1/2 systems. We detect the spin states of the individual ions by observing state-dependent fluorescence with single site resolution, and can directly measure any possible spin correlation function. The spin-spin interactions are engineered by applying dipole forces from precisely tuned lasers whose beatnotes induce stimulated Raman transitions that couple virtually to collective phonon modes of the ion motion. The Ising couplings are controlled, both in sign and strength with respect to the effective transverse field, and adiabatically manipulated to study various aspects of this spin model, such as the emergence of a quantum phase transition in the ground state and spin frustration due to competing antiferromagnetic interactions. Spin frustration often gives rise to a massive degeneracy in the ground state, which can lead to entanglement in the spin system. We detect and characterize this frustration induced entanglement in a system of three spins, demonstrating the first direct experimental connection between frustration and entanglement. With larger numbers of spins we also vary the range of the antiferromagnetic couplings through appropriate laser tunings and observe that longer range interactions reduce the excitation energy and thereby frustrate the ground state order. This system can potentially be scaled up to study a wide range of fully connected spin networks with a few dozens of spins, where the underlying theory becomes intractable on a classical computer.
Excited-State Deactivation of Branched Phthalocyanine Compounds.
Zhu, Huaning; Li, Yang; Chen, Jun; Zhou, Meng; Niu, Yingli; Zhang, Xinxing; Guo, Qianjin; Wang, Shuangqing; Yang, Guoqiang; Xia, Andong
2015-12-21
The excited-state relaxation dynamics and chromophore interactions in two phthalocyanine compounds (bis- and trisphthalocyanines) are studied by using steady-state and femtosecond transient absorption spectral measurements, where the excited-state energy-transfer mechanism is explored. By exciting phthalocyanine compounds to their second electronically excited states and probing the subsequent relaxation dynamics, a multitude of deactivation pathways are identified. The transient absorption spectra show the relaxation pathway from the exciton state to excimer state and then back to the ground state in bisphthalocyanine (bis-Pc). In trisphthalocyanine (tris-Pc), the monomeric and dimeric subunits are excited and the excitation energy transfers from the monomeric vibrationally hot S1 state to the exciton state of a pre-associated dimer, with subsequent relaxation to the ground state through the excimer state. The theoretical calculations and steady-state spectra also show a face-to-face conformation in bis-Pc, whereas in tris-Pc, two of the three phthalocyanine branches form a pre-associated face-to-face dimeric conformation with the third one acting as a monomeric unit; this is consistent with the results of the transient absorption experiments from the perspective of molecular structure. The detailed structure-property relationships in phthalocyanine compounds is useful for exploring the function of molecular aggregates in energy migration of natural photosynthesis systems. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Electronic and thermodynamic properties of α-Pu2O3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lu, Yong; Yang, Yu; Zheng, Fawei; Zhang, Ping
2014-08-01
Based on density functional theory+U calculations and the quasi-annealing simulation method, we obtain the ground electronic state for α-Pu2O3 and present its phonon dispersion curves as well as various thermodynamic properties, which have seldom been theoretically studied because of the huge unit cell. We find that the Pu-O chemical bonding is weaker in α-Pu2O3 than in fluorite PuO2, and subsequently a frequency gap appears between oxygen and plutonium vibration density of states. Based on the calculated Helmholtz free energies at different temperatures, we further study the reaction energies for Pu oxidation, PuO2 reduction, and transformation between PuO2 and α-Pu2O3. Our reaction energy results are in agreements with available experiment. And it is revealed that high temperature and insufficient oxygen environment are in favor of the formation of α-Pu2O3.
Characteristics of ultraviolet light and radicals formed by pulsed discharge in water
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sun, Bing; Kunitomo, Shinta; Igarashi, Chiaki
2006-09-01
In this investigation, the ultraviolet light characteristics and OH radical properties produced by a pulsed discharge in water were studied. For the plate-rod reactor, it was found that the ultraviolet light energy has a 3.2% total energy injected into the reactor. The ultraviolet light changed with the peak voltage and electrode distance. UV characteristics in tap water and the distilled water are given. The intensity of the OH radicals was the highest for the 40 mm electrode distance reactor. In addition, the properties of hydrogen peroxide and ozone were also studied under arc discharge conditions. It was found that the OH radicals were in the ground state and the excited state when a pulsed arc discharge was used. The ozone was produced by the arc discharge even if the oxygen gas is not bubbled into the reactor. The ozone concentration produces a maximum value with treatment time.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Biczysko, Malgorzata; Piani, Giovanni; Pasquini, Massimiliano; Schiccheri, Nicola; Pietraperzia, Giangaetano; Becucci, Maurizio; Pavone, Michele; Barone, Vincenzo
2007-10-01
State-of-the-art spectroscopic and theoretical methods have been exploited in a joint effort to elucidate the subtle features of the structure and the energetics of the anisole-ammonia 1:1 complex, a prototype of microsolvation processes. Resonance enhanced multiphoton ionization and laser-induced fluorescence spectra are discussed and compared to high-level first-principles theoretical models, based on density functional, many body second order perturbation, and coupled cluster theories. In the most stable nonplanar structure of the complex, the ammonia interacts with the delocalized π electron density of the anisole ring: hydrogen bonding and dispersive forces provide a comparable stabilization energy in the ground state, whereas in the excited state the dispersion term is negligible because of electron density transfer from the oxygen to the aromatic ring. Ground and excited state geometrical parameters deduced from experimental data and computed by quantum mechanical methods are in very good agreement and allow us to unambiguously determine the molecular structure of the anisole-ammonia complex.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Saadatmand, S. N.; Bartlett, S. D.; McCulloch, I. P.
2018-04-01
Obtaining quantitative ground-state behavior for geometrically-frustrated quantum magnets with long-range interactions is challenging for numerical methods. Here, we demonstrate that the ground states of these systems on two-dimensional lattices can be efficiently obtained using state-of-the-art translation-invariant variants of matrix product states and density-matrix renormalization-group algorithms. We use these methods to calculate the fully-quantitative ground-state phase diagram of the long-range interacting triangular Ising model with a transverse field on six-leg infinite-length cylinders and scrutinize the properties of the detected phases. We compare these results with those of the corresponding nearest neighbor model. Our results suggest that, for such long-range Hamiltonians, the long-range quantum fluctuations always lead to long-range correlations, where correlators exhibit power-law decays instead of the conventional exponential drops observed for short-range correlated gapped phases. Our results are relevant for comparisons with recent ion-trap quantum simulator experiments that demonstrate highly-controllable long-range spin couplings for several hundred ions.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Akin, Muge K.
2016-04-01
The term of ground improvement states to the modification of the engineering properties of soils. Jet-grouting is one of the grouting methods among various ground improvement techniques. During jet-grouting, different textures of columns can be obtained depending on the characteristics of surrounding subsoil as well as the adopted jet-grouting system for each site is variable. In addition to textural properties, strength and index parameters of jet-grout columns are highly affected by the adjacent soil. In this study, the physical and mechanical properties of jet-grout columns constructed at two different sites in silty and sandy soil conditions were determined by laboratory tests. A number of statistical relationships between physical and mechanical properties of soilcrete were established in this study in order to investigate the dependency of numerous variables. The relationship between qu and γd is more reliable for sandy soilcrete than that of silty columns considering the determination coefficients. Positive linear relationships between Vp and γd with significantly high determination coefficients were obtained for the jet-grout columns in silt and sand. The regression analyses indicate that the P-wave velocity is a very dominant parameter for the estimation of physical and mechanical properties of jet-grout columns and should be involved during the quality control of soilcrete material despite the intensive use of uniaxial compressive strength test. Besides, it is concluded that the dry unit weight of jet-grout column is a good indicator of the efficiency of employed operational parameters during jet-grouting.
Unexpected Ground-State Structure and Mechanical Properties of Ir₂Zr Intermetallic Compound.
Zhang, Meiguang; Cao, Rui; Zhao, Meijie; Du, Juan; Cheng, Ke
2018-01-10
Using an unbiased structure searching method, a new orthorhombic Cmmm structure consisting of ZrIr 12 polyhedron building blocks is predicted to be the thermodynamic ground-state of stoichiometric intermetallic Ir₂Zr in Ir-Zr systems. The formation enthalpy of the Cmmm structure is considerably lower than that of the previously synthesized Cu₂Mg-type phase, by ~107 meV/atom, as demonstrated by the calculation of formation enthalpy. Meanwhile, the phonon dispersion calculations further confirmed the dynamical stability of Cmmm phase under ambient conditions. The mechanical properties, including elastic stability, rigidity, and incompressibility, as well as the elastic anisotropy of Cmmm -Ir₂Zr intermetallic, have thus been fully determined. It is found that the predicted Cmmm phase exhibits nearly elastic isotropic and great resistance to shear deformations within the (100) crystal plane. Evidence of atomic bonding related to the structural stability for Ir₂Zr were manifested by calculations of the electronic structures.
Theoretical study of some experimentally relevant states of dysprosium
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Dzuba, V. A.; Flambaum, V. V.
2010-05-15
Configuration interaction method is used to calculate transition amplitudes and other properties of the low states of dysprosium which are used in cooling and in the study of the time variation of the fine structure constant and violation of fundamental symmetries. The branching ratio for the cooling state to decay to states other than ground states is found to be smaller than 10{sup -4}. The matrix element of the weak interaction between degenerate states at E=19797.96 cm{sup -1} is about 4 Hz which is consistent with the experimental limit |H{sub W}|=|2.3{+-}2.9(stat.){+-}0.7(syst.)| Hz [A. T. Nguyen, D. Budker, D. DeMille, andmore » M. Zolotorev, Phys. Rev. A 56, 3453 (1997)] and points to feasibility of its experimental measurement. Applications include the search for physics beyond the standard model using the parity nonconservation (PNC) isotopic chain approach.« less
First-principles study of structural and electronic properties of Be0.25Zn0.75S mixed compound
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Paliwal, U.; Joshi, K. B.
2018-05-01
In this work the first-principles study of structural and electronic properties of Be0.25Zn0.75S mixed compound is presented. The calculations are performed applying the QUANTUM ESPRESSO code utilizing the Perdew, Becke, Ernzerhof generalized gradient approximation in the framework of density functional theory. Adopting standard optimization strategy, the ground state equilibrium lattice constant and bulk modulus are calculated. After settling the structure the electronic band structure, bandgap and static dielectric constant are evaluated. In absence of any experimental work on this system our findings are compared with the available theoretical calculations which are found to follow well anticipated general trends.
Decay properties and reaction dynamics of zirconium isotopes in the relativistic mean-field model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Panigrahi, M.; Panda, R. N.; Kumar, Bharat; Patra, S. K.
In the framework of relativistic mean-field theory, the ground state properties like binding energy, charge radius and quadrupole deformation parameter for various isotopes of zirconium from the valley of stability to drip-line region have been studied. The results are compared with the experimental data and we found reasonable agreement. The calculations are carried out for β-decay energy and β-decay half-life up to the drip-line. Total reaction and elastic differential cross-sections are also studied for few zirconium isotopes as projectiles with 12C as target, using different parameter sets namely NL3*, DD-ME2 and DD-PC1 in conjunction with Glauber model.
Even, J; Pedesseau, L; Katan, C
2014-05-14
Yun Wang et al. used density functional theory (DFT) to investigate the orthorhombic phase of CH3NH3PbI3, which has recently shown outstanding properties for photovoltaic applications. Whereas their analysis of ground state properties may represent a valuable contribution to understanding this class of materials, effects of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) cannot be overlooked as was shown in earlier studies. Moreover, their discussion on optical properties may be misleading for non-DFT-experts, and the nice agreement between experimental and calculated band gap is fortuitous, stemming from error cancellations between SOC and many-body effects. Lastly, Bader charges suggest potential problems during crystal structure optimization.
Ground-water data collected in the Missouri River basin units in Kansas during 1950
Berry, Delmar W.
1951-01-01
Ground-water studies in the Missouri River basin were begun by the United States Geological Survey during the fall of 1945 as a part of a program for the development of the resources of the basin by the United States Bureau of Reclamation and other Federal Agencies. The studies of the ground-water resources in the part of Kansas that lies within the basin have been coordinated with the cooperative program of ground-water studies already being carried on in Kansas by the United States Geological Survey, the State Geological Survey of Kansas,the Division of Sanitation of the Kansas State Board of Health, and the Division of Water Resources of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture.
Juckem, Paul F.
2007-01-01
Population growth in the St. Croix River Basin in Minnesota and Wisconsin has intensified concerns of county resource managers and the National Park Service, which is charged with protecting the St. Croix National Scenic Riverway, about the potential for ground-water contamination in the basin. This report describes a previously developed method that was adapted to illustrate potential ground-water-contamination susceptibility in the St. Croix River Basin. The report also gives an estimate of ground-water-residence time and surface-water/ground-water interaction as related to natural attenuation and movement of contaminants in five tributary basins. A ground-water-contamination-susceptibility map was adapted from a state-wide map of Wisconsin to the St. Croix River Basin by use of well-driller construction records and regional maps of aquifer properties in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Measures of various subsurface properties were combined to generate a spatial index of susceptibility. The subjective index method developed for the State of Wisconsin by Schmidt (1987) was not derived from analyses of water-quality data or physical processes. Nonetheless, it was adapted for this report to furnish a seamless map across state boundaries that would be familiar to many resource managers. Following this method, areas most susceptible to contamination appear to have coarse-grained sediments (sands or gravels) and shallow water tables or are underlain by carbonate-bedrock aquifers. The least susceptible areas appear to have fine-grained sediments and deep water tables. If an aquifer becomes contaminated, the ground-water-residence time can affect potential natural attenuation along the ground-water-flow path. Mean basin ground-water-residence times were computed for the Apple, Kettle, Kinnickinnic, Snake and Sunrise River Basins, which are tributary basins to the St. Croix Basin, by use of average aquifer properties of saturated thickness, porosity, and recharge rates. The Apple River Basin had the shortest mean ground-water-residence times (20-120 years), owing largely to the moderate saturated thickness and high recharge rate in the basin. The Kinnickinnic and Sunrise River Basins had the longest mean residence times (60-350 and 70-390 years, respectively) chiefly because of the relatively large saturated thickness of the basins. Owing to limitations of the residence-time calculations, actual ground-water-residence times will vary around the mean values within each basin and may range from days or weeks in karst carbonate aquifers to millennia in deep confined sandstone aquifers. Areas of relatively short residence time (less than the median residence time in each basin) were identified by use of ground-water-flow models for each of the five tributary basins. Results of simulations show that these areas, in which contaminants may have relatively less time for natural attenuation along the short flow paths, generally occur near streams and rivers where ground water discharges to the surface. Finally, the ground-water-flow models were used to simulate ground-water/surface-water interaction in the five tributary basins. Results of simulations show that some lakes and reservoirs leak surface water into the ground-water-flow system on their downgradient side, where the surface-water outflow has been restricted by a dam or a naturally constricted outlet. These locations are noteworthy because contaminated surface waters could potentially enter the ground-water-flow system at these locations.
NUBASE2012 Evaluation of Nuclear Properties
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wang, M., E-mail: wangm@impcas.ac.cn; CSNSM-Orsay, MPI-K, D-69117 Heidelberg; Audi, G.
NUBASE is a database containing the recommended values for the main properties of all known nuclides in their ground and excited isomeric states. Since the publication of the first version in 1997, NUBASE has been widely used in the nuclear science community. The latest version (NUBASE2012) was published in December 2012. Two specific examples are given to illustrate the evaluation policy of NUBASE2012.
Advances in QCD sum-rule calculations
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Melikhov, Dmitri
2016-01-22
We review the recent progress in the applications of QCD sum rules to hadron properties with the emphasis on the following selected problems: (i) development of new algorithms for the extraction of ground-state parameters from two-point correlators; (ii) form factors at large momentum transfers from three-point vacuum correlation functions: (iii) properties of exotic tetraquark hadrons from correlation functions of four-quark currents.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Blair, Shamus A.; Thakkar, Ajit J., E-mail: ajit@unb.ca
2014-08-21
Semiquantitative relationships between the mean static dipole polarizability and other molecular properties such as the volume, ionization energy, electronegativity, hardness, and moments of momentum are explored. The relationships are tested using density functional theory computations on the 1641 neutral, ground-state, organic molecules in the TABS database. The best polarizability approximations have median errors under 5%.
Blair, Shamus A; Thakkar, Ajit J
2014-08-21
Semiquantitative relationships between the mean static dipole polarizability and other molecular properties such as the volume, ionization energy, electronegativity, hardness, and moments of momentum are explored. The relationships are tested using density functional theory computations on the 1641 neutral, ground-state, organic molecules in the TABS database. The best polarizability approximations have median errors under 5%.
Time- and Space-Resolved Spectroscopic Investigation on Pi-Conjugated Nanostructures - 2
2016-01-12
15. SUBJECT TERMS Materials Characterization, Materials Chemistry, Nonlinear Optical Materials, Spectroscopy 16. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION...nanostructures will translate into new ground-breaking developments that not only allow the structure-property relationships to be probed in greater detail... spectroscopy . I. Experimental method 1. Steady-state Spectroscopy - UV-Vis-NIR Absorption & Emission Steady-state Spectroscopy - NIR
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Evleth, E. M.
1972-01-01
Stabilities of nitrogen containing heterocyclic radicals were studied to detect radicals of the type R-N-R, and to theoretically rationalize their electronic structure. The computation of simple potential energy surfaces for ground and excited states is discussed along with the photophysical properties of indolizine. Methods of calculation and problems associated with the calculations are presented. Results, tables, diagrams, discussions, and references are included.
Shape coexistence and shape transition in light nuclei
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Saxena, G.; Kumawat, M.; Singh, U. K.; Kaushik, M.; Jain, S. K.
2018-05-01
A systematic study has been performed to investigate the shape coexistence and shape transition for even-even nuclei between Z = 10-20 by employing Relativistic Mean-Filed plus BCS (RMF+BCS) approach. We calculate ground state properties viz. binding energy, deformation etc. for even-even nuclei to find the shape coexistence and shape transition. These results are found in agreement of recent experiments and consistent with other parameters of RMF and other theories.
Nastasi, Francesco; Puntoriero, Fausto; Natali, Mirco; Mba, Miriam; Maggini, Michele; Mussini, Patrizia; Panigati, Monica; Campagna, Sebastiano
2015-05-01
A novel molecular dyad, 1, made of a dinuclear {[Re2(μ-X)2(CO)6(μ-pyridazine)]} component covalently-linked to a fullerene unit by a carbocyclic molecular bridge has been prepared and its redox, spectroscopic, and photophysical properties - including pump-probe transient absorption spectroscopy in the visible and near-infrared region - have been investigated, along with those of its model species. Photoinduced, intercomponent electron transfer occurs in 1 from the thermally-equilibrated, triplet metal/ligand-to-ligand charge-transfer ((3)MLLCT) state of the dinuclear rhenium(I) subunit to the fullerene acceptor, with a time constant of about 100 ps. The so-formed triplet charge-separated state recombines in a few nanoseconds by a spin-selective process yielding, rather than the ground state, the locally-excited, triplet fullerene state, which finally decays to the ground state by intersystem crossing in about 290 ns.
The Dielectric Permittivity of Crystals in the Reduced Hartree-Fock Approximation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cancès, Éric; Lewin, Mathieu
2010-07-01
In a recent article (Cancès et al. in Commun Math Phys 281:129-177, 2008), we have rigorously derived, by means of bulk limit arguments, a new variational model to describe the electronic ground state of insulating or semiconducting crystals in the presence of local defects. In this so-called reduced Hartree-Fock model, the ground state electronic density matrix is decomposed as {γ = γ^0_per + Q_{ν,\\varepsilon_F}}, where {γ^0_per} is the ground state density matrix of the host crystal and {Q_{ν,\\varepsilon_F}} the modification of the electronic density matrix generated by a modification ν of the nuclear charge of the host crystal, the Fermi level ɛ F being kept fixed. The purpose of the present article is twofold. First, we study in more detail the mathematical properties of the density matrix {Q_{ν,\\varepsilon_F}} (which is known to be a self-adjoint Hilbert-Schmidt operator on {L^2(mathbb{R}^3)}). We show in particular that if {int_{mathbb{R}^3} ν neq 0, Q_{ν,\\varepsilon_F}} is not trace-class. Moreover, the associated density of charge is not in {L^1(mathbb{R}^3)} if the crystal exhibits anisotropic dielectric properties. These results are obtained by analyzing, for a small defect ν, the linear and nonlinear terms of the resolvent expansion of {Q_{ν,\\varepsilon_F}}. Second, we show that, after an appropriate rescaling, the potential generated by the microscopic total charge (nuclear plus electronic contributions) of the crystal in the presence of the defect converges to a homogenized electrostatic potential solution to a Poisson equation involving the macroscopic dielectric permittivity of the crystal. This provides an alternative (and rigorous) derivation of the Adler-Wiser formula.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Not Available
This report develops and applies a methodology for estimating strong earthquake ground motion. The motivation was to develop a much needed tool for use in developing the seismic requirements for structural designs. An earthquake`s ground motion is a function of the earthquake`s magnitude, and the physical properties of the earth through which the seismic waves travel from the earthquake fault to the site of interest. The emphasis of this study is on ground motion estimation in Eastern North America (east of the Rocky Mountains), with particular emphasis on the Eastern United States and southeastern Canada. Eastern North America is amore » stable continental region, having sparse earthquake activity with rare occurrences of large earthquakes. While large earthquakes are of interest for assessing seismic hazard, little data exists from the region to empirically quantify their effects. The focus of the report is on the attributes of ground motion in Eastern North America that are of interest for the design of facilities such as nuclear power plants. This document, Volume II, contains Appendices 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7 covering the following topics: Eastern North American Empirical Ground Motion Data; Examination of Variance of Seismographic Network Data; Soil Amplification and Vertical-to-Horizontal Ratios from Analysis of Strong Motion Data From Active Tectonic Regions; Revision and Calibration of Ou and Herrmann Method; Generalized Ray Procedure for Modeling Ground Motion Attenuation; Crustal Models for Velocity Regionalization; Depth Distribution Models; Development of Generic Site Effects Model; Validation and Comparison of One-Dimensional Site Response Methodologies; Plots of Amplification Factors; Assessment of Coupling Between Vertical & Horizontal Motions in Nonlinear Site Response Analysis; and Modeling of Dynamic Soil Properties.« less
Rotational fluxons of Bose-Einstein condensates in coplanar double-ring traps
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Brand, J.; Institute of Natural Sciences, Massey University; Haigh, T. J.
Rotational analogs to magnetic fluxons in conventional Josephson junctions are predicted to emerge in the ground state of rotating tunnel-coupled annular Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs). Such topological condensate-phase structures can be manipulated by external potentials. We determine conditions for observing macroscopic quantum tunneling of a fluxon. Rotational fluxons in double-ring BECs can be created, manipulated, and controlled by external potentials in different ways than is possible in the solid-state system, thus rendering them a promising candidate system for studying and utilizing quantum properties of collective many-particle degrees of freedom.
Solvatochromic studies on 4-Bromomethyl-7-methyl coumarins
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khanapurmath, Netravati; Kulkarni, Manohar V.; Pallavi, L.; Yenagi, Jayashree; Tonannavar, Jagdish
2018-05-01
Non- and dinitro 4-bromomethyl-7-methyl coumarins and new mono- and trinitro 4-bromomethyl-7-methyl coumarins have been synthesized. Effect of nitro groups on the photophysical properties of the parent 4-bromomethyl-7-methyl coumarin has been reported. Their ground and excited state dipole moments have been estimated by solvatochromic method using nine solvents. A reasonable agreement has been observed between calculated and observed dipole moments. Reduction in dipole moment has been observed for mono- and dinitro compounds where as the trinitro compound was found to have higher dipole moment in the excited state.
Open quantum random walk in terms of quantum Bernoulli noise
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Caishi; Wang, Ce; Ren, Suling; Tang, Yuling
2018-03-01
In this paper, we introduce an open quantum random walk, which we call the QBN-based open walk, by means of quantum Bernoulli noise, and study its properties from a random walk point of view. We prove that, with the localized ground state as its initial state, the QBN-based open walk has the same limit probability distribution as the classical random walk. We also show that the probability distributions of the QBN-based open walk include those of the unitary quantum walk recently introduced by Wang and Ye (Quantum Inf Process 15:1897-1908, 2016) as a special case.
Emerging single-phase state in small manganite nanodisks
Shao, Jian; Liu, Hao; Zhang, Kai; ...
2016-08-01
In complex oxides systems such as manganites, electronic phase separation (EPS), a consequence of strong electronic correlations, dictates the exotic electrical and magnetic properties of these materials. A fundamental yet unresolved issue is how EPS responds to spatial confinement; will EPS just scale with size of an object, or will the one of the phases be pinned? Understanding this behavior is critical for future oxides electronics and spintronics because scaling down of the system is unavoidable for these applications. In this work, we use La 0.325Pr 0.3Ca 0.375MnO 3 (LPCMO) single crystalline disks to study the effect of spatial confinementmore » on EPS. The EPS state featuring coexistence of ferromagnetic metallic and charge order insulating phases appears to be the low-temperature ground state in bulk, thin films, and large disks, a previously unidentified ground state (i.e., a single ferromagnetic phase state emerges in smaller disks). The critical size is between 500 nm and 800 nm, which is similar to the characteristic length scale of EPS in the LPCMO system. The ability to create a pure ferromagnetic phase in manganite nanodisks is highly desirable for spintronic applications.« less
Interplay between spin frustration and magnetism in the exactly solved two-leg mixed spin ladder
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Qi, Yan; Lv, Song-Wei; Du, An; Yu, Nai-sen
2016-11-01
We study a mixed spin-(3/2, 1) ladder system with antiferromagnetic rung coupling and next-nearest-neighbor interaction. The exactly solved Ising-chain model is employed to investigate the ground-state properties and thermodynamics of the low-dimensional ladder system. Our results show that the competition between different exchange couplings brings in a large variety of ground states characterized by various values of normalized magnetization equal to 0, 1/5, 2/5, 3/5, 1. Moreover, an interesting double-peak structure is also detected in the thermal dependence of magnetic susceptibility and specific heat when the frustration comes into play. It is shown that the double-peak phenomenon at zero-field for the case of AF2 ground-state arises from the very strong antiferromagnetic rung coupling, while other cases are attributed to the excitations induced by temperature and external field around the phase boundary. Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 11547236), the General Project of the Education Department of Liaoning Province, China (Grant No. L2015130), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, China (Grant Nos. DC201501065 and DCPY2016014), and the Doctoral Starting-up Foundation of Dalian Nationalities University, China.
Identical spin rotation effect and electron spin waves in quantum gas of atomic hydrogen
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lehtonen, L.; Vainio, O.; Ahokas, J.; Järvinen, J.; Novotny, S.; Sheludyakov, S.; Suominen, K.-A.; Vasiliev, S.; Khmelenko, V. V.; Lee, D. M.
2018-05-01
We present an experimental study of electron spin waves in atomic hydrogen gas compressed to high densities of ∼5 × 1018 cm‑3 at temperatures ranging from 0.26 to 0.6 K in the strong magnetic field of 4.6 T. Hydrogen gas is in a quantum regime when the thermal de-Broglie wavelength is much larger than the s-wave scattering length. In this regime the identical particle effects play a major role in atomic collisions and lead to the identical spin rotation effect (ISR). We observed a variety of spin wave modes caused by this effect with strong dependence on the magnetic potential caused by variations of the polarizing magnetic field. We demonstrate confinement of the ISR modes in the magnetic potential and manipulate their properties by changing the spatial profile of the magnetic field. We have found that at a high enough density of H gas the magnons accumulate in their ground state in the magnetic trap and exhibit long coherence, which has a profound effect on the electron spin resonance spectra. Such macroscopic accumulation of the ground state occurs at a certain critical density of hydrogen gas, where the chemical potential of the magnons becomes equal to the energy of their ground state in the trapping potential.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ross, Kate
In the search for novel quantum states of matter, such as highly entangled Quantum Spin Liquids, ``geometrically frustrated'' magnetic lattices are essential for suppressing conventional magnetic order. In three dimensions, the pyrochlore lattice is the canonical frustrated geometry. Magnetic materials with pyrochlore structures have the potential to realize unusual phases such as ``quantum spin ice'', which is predicted to host emergent magnetic monopoles, electrons, and photons as its fundamental excitations. Even in pyrochlores that form long range ordered phases, this often occurs through unusual routes such as ``order by disorder'', in which the fluctuation spectrum dictates the preferred ordered state. The rare earth-based pyrochlore series R2Ti2O7 provides a fascinating variety of magnetic ground states. I will introduce the general anisotropic interaction Hamiltonian that has been successfully used to describe several materials in this series. Using inelastic neutron scattering, the relevant anisotropic interaction strengths can be extracted quantitatively. I will discuss this approach, and its application to two rare earth pyrochlore materials, Er2Ti2O7 and Yb2Ti<2O7, whose ground state properties have long been enigmatic. From these studies, ErTi2O7 and Yb2Ti2O7 have been suggested to be realizations of "quantum order by disorder" and "quantum spin ice", respectively. This research was supported by NSERC of Canada and the National Science Foundation.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kim, Jeongnim; Reboredo, Fernando A.
The self-healing diffusion Monte Carlo method for complex functions [F. A. Reboredo J. Chem. Phys. {\\bf 136}, 204101 (2012)] and some ideas of the correlation function Monte Carlo approach [D. M. Ceperley and B. Bernu, J. Chem. Phys. {\\bf 89}, 6316 (1988)] are blended to obtain a method for the calculation of thermodynamic properties of many-body systems at low temperatures. In order to allow the evolution in imaginary time to describe the density matrix, we remove the fixed-node restriction using complex antisymmetric trial wave functions. A statistical method is derived for the calculation of finite temperature properties of many-body systemsmore » near the ground state. In the process we also obtain a parallel algorithm that optimizes the many-body basis of a small subspace of the many-body Hilbert space. This small subspace is optimized to have maximum overlap with the one expanded by the lower energy eigenstates of a many-body Hamiltonian. We show in a model system that the Helmholtz free energy is minimized within this subspace as the iteration number increases. We show that the subspace expanded by the small basis systematically converges towards the subspace expanded by the lowest energy eigenstates. Possible applications of this method to calculate the thermodynamic properties of many-body systems near the ground state are discussed. The resulting basis can be also used to accelerate the calculation of the ground or excited states with Quantum Monte Carlo.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Juan; Li, An Yong
2018-06-01
To study the hydrogen bonds upon photoexcited, the time dependent density function method (TD DFT) was performed to investigate the excited state hydrogen bond properties of between o-nitroaniline (ONA) and formaldehyde (CH2O). The optimized structures of the complex and the monomers both in the ground state and the electronically excited states are calculated using DFT and TD DFT method respectively. Quantum chemical calculations of the electronic and vibrational absorption spectra are also carried out by TD DFT method at the different level. The complex ONA⋯CH2O forms the intramolecular hydrogen bond and intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Since the strength of hydrogen bonds can be measured by studying the vibrational absorption spectra of the characteristic groups on the hydrogen bonding acceptor and donor, it evidently confirms that the hydrogen bonds is strengthened in the S1/S2/T1 excited states upon photoexcitation. As a result, the hydrogen bonds cause that the CH stretch frequency of the proton donor CH2O has a blue shift, and the electron excitations leads to a frequency red shift of Ndbnd O and Nsbnd H stretch modes in the o-nitroaniline(ONA) and a small frequency blue shift of CH stretch mode in the formaldehyde(CH2O) in the S1 and S2 excited states. The excited states S1, S2 and T1 are locally excited states where only the ONA moiety is excited, but the CH2O moiety remains in its ground state.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Yi-Xian; Hu, Cui-E.; Chen, Yang-Mei; Cheng, Yan; Ji, Guang-Fu
2016-11-01
The structural, optical, dynamical, and thermodynamic properties of BaZnO2 under pressure are studied based on the density functional theory. The calculated structural parameters are consistent with the available experimental data. In the ground state, the electronic band structure and density of states indicate that BaZnO2 is an insulator with a direct gap of 2.2 eV. The Mulliken charges are also analyzed to characterize the bonding property. After the structural relaxation, the optical properties are studied. It is found that the dielectric function of E Vert x and EVert y are isotropic, whereas the EVert x and EVert z are anisotropic. The effect of pressure on the energy-loss function in the ultraviolet region becomes more obvious as the pressure increases. Furthermore, the dynamical properties under different pressures are investigated using the finite displacement method. We find that the P3121 phase of BaZnO2 is dynamically stable under the pressure ranging from 0 GPa to 30 GPa. The phonon dispersion curves, phonon density of states, vibrational modes and atoms that contribute to these vibrations at {{\\varvec{Γ }}} point under different pressures are also reported in this work. Finally, by employing the quasi-harmonic approximation, the thermodynamic properties such as the temperature dependence of the thermal expansion coefficient, specific heat, entropy and Gibbs free energy under different pressures are investigated. It is found that the influences of the temperature on the heat capacity are much more significant than that of the pressure on it.
Climate Responses to Changes in Land-surface Properties due to Wildfires
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Liu, Y.; Hao, X.; Qu, J. J.
2015-12-01
Wildfires can feedback the atmosphere by impacting atmospheric radiation transfer and cloud microphysics through emitting smoke particles and the land-air heat and water fluxes through modifying land-surface properties. While the impacts through smoke particles have been extensively investigated recently, very few studies have been conducted to examine the impacts through land-surface property change. This study is to fill this gap by examining the climate responses to the changes in land-surface properties induced by several large wildfires in the United States. Satellite remote sensing tools including MODIS and Landsat are used to quantitatively evaluate the land-surface changes characterized by reduced vegetation coverage and increased albedo over long post-fire periods. Variations in air and soil temperature and moisture of the burned areas are also monitored. Climate modeling is conducted to simulate climate responses and understand the related physical processes and interactions. The preliminary results indicate noticeable changes in water and heat transfers from the ground to the atmosphere through several mechanisms. Larger albedo reduces solar radiation absorbed on the ground, leading to less energy for latent and sensible heat fluxes. With smaller vegetation coverage, water transfer from the soil to the atmosphere through transpiration is reduced. Meanwhile, the Bowen ratio becomes larger after burning and therefore more solar energy absorbed on the ground is converted into sensible heat instead of being used as latent energy for water phase change. In addition, reduced vegetation coverage reduces roughness and increases wind speed, which modify dynamic resistances to water and heat movements. As a result of the changes in the land-air heat and water fluxes, clouds and precipitation as well as other atmospheric processes are affected by wildfires.
Gieseking, Rebecca L.; Ratner, Mark A.; Schatz, George C.
2016-06-03
Quantum mechanical studies of Ag nanoclusters have shown that plasmonic behavior can be modeled in terms of excited states where collectivity among single excitations leads to strong absorption. However, new computational approaches are needed to provide understanding of plasmonic excitations beyond the single-excitation level. We show that semiempirical INDO/CI approaches with appropriately selected parameters reproduce the TD-DFT optical spectra of various closed-shell Ag clusters. The plasmon-like states with strong optical absorption comprise linear combinations of many singly excited configurations that contribute additively to the transition dipole moment, whereas all other excited states show significant cancellation among the contributions to themore » transition dipole moment. The computational efficiency of this approach allows us to investigate the role of double excitations at the INDO/SDCI level. The Ag cluster ground states are stabilized by slight mixing with doubly excited configurations, but the plasmonic states generally retain largely singly excited character. The consideration of double excitations in all cases improves the agreement of the INDO/CI absorption spectra with TD-DFT, suggesting that the SDCI calculation effectively captures some of the ground-state correlation implicit in DFT. Furthermore, these results provide the first evidence to support the commonly used assumption that single excitations are in many cases sufficient to describe the optical spectra of plasmonic excitations quantum mechanically.« less
Symmetry-Breaking Bifurcation in the Nonlinear Schrödinger Equation with Symmetric Potentials
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kirr, E.; Kevrekidis, P. G.; Pelinovsky, D. E.
2011-12-01
We consider the focusing (attractive) nonlinear Schrödinger (NLS) equation with an external, symmetric potential which vanishes at infinity and supports a linear bound state. We prove that the symmetric, nonlinear ground states must undergo a symmetry breaking bifurcation if the potential has a non-degenerate local maxima at zero. Under a generic assumption we show that the bifurcation is either a subcritical or supercritical pitchfork. In the particular case of double-well potentials with large separation, the power of nonlinearity determines the subcritical or supercritical character of the bifurcation. The results are obtained from a careful analysis of the spectral properties of the ground states at both small and large values for the corresponding eigenvalue parameter.
Localization of soft modes at the depinning transition
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cao, Xiangyu; Bouzat, Sebastian; Kolton, Alejandro B.; Rosso, Alberto
2018-02-01
We characterize the soft modes of the dynamical matrix at the depinning transition, and compare the matrix with the properties of the Anderson model (and long-range generalizations). The density of states at the edge of the spectrum displays a universal linear tail, different from the Lifshitz tails. The eigenvectors are instead very similar in the two matrix ensembles. We focus on the ground state (soft mode), which represents the epicenter of avalanche instabilities. We expect it to be localized in all finite dimensions, and make a clear connection between its localization length and the Larkin length of the depinning model. In the fully connected model, we show that the weak-strong pinning transition coincides with a peculiar localization transition of the ground state.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Monthus, Cécile
2018-03-01
For the line of critical antiferromagnetic XXZ chains with coupling J > 0 and anisotropy 0<Δ ≤slant 1 , we describe how the block-spin renormalization procedure preserving the SU q (2) symmetry introduced by Martin-Delgado and Sierra (1996 Phys. Rev. Lett. 76 1146) can be reformulated as the translation-invariant scale-invariant tree-tensor-state of the smallest dimension that is compatible with the quantum symmetries of the model. The properties of this tree-tensor-state are studied in detail via the ground-state energy, the magnetizations and the staggered magnetizations, as well as the Shannon-Renyi entropies characterizing the multifractality of the components of the wave function.
Appalakondaiah, S; Vaitheeswaran, G; Lebègue, S
2015-06-18
We have performed ab initio calculations for a series of energetic solids to explore their structural and electronic properties. To evaluate the ground state volume of these molecular solids, different dispersion correction methods were accounted in DFT, namely the Tkatchenko-Scheffler method (with and without self-consistent screening), Grimme's methods (D2, D3(BJ)), and the vdW-DF method. Our results reveal that dispersion correction methods are essential in understanding these complex structures with van der Waals interactions and hydrogen bonding. The calculated ground state volumes and bulk moduli show that the performance of each method is not unique, and therefore a careful examination is mandatory for interpreting theoretical predictions. This work also emphasizes the importance of quasiparticle calculations in predicting the band gap, which is obtained here with the GW approximation. We find that the obtained band gaps are ranging from 4 to 7 eV for the different compounds, indicating their insulating nature. In addition, we show the essential role of quasiparticle band structure calculations to correlate the gap with the energetic properties.
Gapless Spin-Liquid Ground State in the S =1 /2 Kagome Antiferromagnet
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Liao, H. J.; Xie, Z. Y.; Chen, J.; Liu, Z. Y.; Xie, H. D.; Huang, R. Z.; Normand, B.; Xiang, T.
2017-03-01
The defining problem in frustrated quantum magnetism, the ground state of the nearest-neighbor S =1 /2 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the kagome lattice, has defied all theoretical and numerical methods employed to date. We apply the formalism of tensor-network states, specifically the method of projected entangled simplex states, which combines infinite system size with a correct accounting for multipartite entanglement. By studying the ground-state energy, the finite magnetic order appearing at finite tensor bond dimensions, and the effects of a next-nearest-neighbor coupling, we demonstrate that the ground state is a gapless spin liquid. We discuss the comparison with other numerical studies and the physical interpretation of this result.
Photoisomerization and photoionization of the photoactive yellow protein chromophore in solution.
Larsen, Delmar S; Vengris, Mikas; van Stokkum, Ivo H M; van der Horst, Michael A; de Weerd, Frank L; Hellingwerf, Klaas J; van Grondelle, Rienk
2004-04-01
Dispersed pump-dump-probe spectroscopy has the ability to characterize and identify the underlying ultrafast dynamical processes in complicated chemical and biological systems. This technique builds on traditional pump-probe techniques by exploring both ground- and excited-state dynamics and characterizing the connectivity between constituent transient states. We have used the dispersed pump-dump-probe technique to investigate the ground-state dynamics and competing excited-state processes in the excitation-induced ultrafast dynamics of thiomethyl p-coumaric acid, a model chromophore for the photoreceptor photoactive yellow protein. Our results demonstrate the parallel formation of two relaxation pathways (with multiple transient states) that jointly lead to two different types of photochemistry: cis-trans isomerization and detachment of a hydrated electron. The relative transition rates and quantum yields of both pathways have been determined. We find that the relaxation of the photoexcited chromophores involves multiple, transient ground-state intermediates and the chromophore in solution does not generate persistent photoisomerized products, but instead undergoes photoionization resulting in the generation of detached electrons and radicals. These results are of great value in interpreting the more complex dynamical changes in the optical properties of the photoactive yellow protein.
Photoisomerization and Photoionization of the Photoactive Yellow Protein Chromophore in Solution
Larsen, Delmar S.; Vengris, Mikas; van Stokkum, Ivo H. M.; van der Horst, Michael A.; de Weerd, Frank L.; Hellingwerf, Klaas J.; van Grondelle, Rienk
2004-01-01
Dispersed pump-dump-probe spectroscopy has the ability to characterize and identify the underlying ultrafast dynamical processes in complicated chemical and biological systems. This technique builds on traditional pump-probe techniques by exploring both ground- and excited-state dynamics and characterizing the connectivity between constituent transient states. We have used the dispersed pump-dump-probe technique to investigate the ground-state dynamics and competing excited-state processes in the excitation-induced ultrafast dynamics of thiomethyl p-coumaric acid, a model chromophore for the photoreceptor photoactive yellow protein. Our results demonstrate the parallel formation of two relaxation pathways (with multiple transient states) that jointly lead to two different types of photochemistry: cis-trans isomerization and detachment of a hydrated electron. The relative transition rates and quantum yields of both pathways have been determined. We find that the relaxation of the photoexcited chromophores involves multiple, transient ground-state intermediates and the chromophore in solution does not generate persistent photoisomerized products, but instead undergoes photoionization resulting in the generation of detached electrons and radicals. These results are of great value in interpreting the more complex dynamical changes in the optical properties of the photoactive yellow protein. PMID:15041690
Spin symmetry in the Dirac sea derived from the bare nucleon-nucleon interaction
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shen, Shihang; Liang, Haozhao; Meng, Jie; Ring, Peter; Zhang, Shuangquan
2018-06-01
The spin symmetry in the Dirac sea has been investigated with relativistic Brueckner-Hartree-Fock theory using the bare nucleon-nucleon interaction. Taking the nucleus 16O as an example and comparing the theoretical results with the data, the definition of the single-particle potential in the Dirac sea is studied in detail. It is found that if the single-particle states in the Dirac sea are treated as occupied states, the ground state properties are in better agreement with experimental data. Moreover, in this case, the spin symmetry in the Dirac sea is better conserved and it is more consistent with the findings using phenomenological relativistic density functionals.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Obukhov, A. E.
2017-01-01
In this work we demonstrate the physical foundations of the spectroscopy of the grounds states: E- and X-ray, (RR) Raman scattering the NMR 1H and 13C and IR-, EPR- absorption and the singlets and triplets electronic excited states in the multinuclear hydrocarbons in chemmotology. The parameters of UV-absorption, RR-Raman scattering of light, the fluorescence and the phosphorescence and day-lasers at the pumping laser and lamp, OLEDs and OTETs- are measurements. The spectral-energy properties are briefly studied. The quantum-chemical LCAO-MO SCF expanded-CI PPP/S and INDO/S methods in the electronic and spatial structure hidrocarbons are considered.
Efficient cooling of quantized vibrations using a four-level configuration
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yan, Lei-Lei; Zhang, Jian-Qi; Zhang, Shuo; Feng, Mang
2016-12-01
Cooling vibrational degrees of freedom down to ground states is essential to observation of quantum properties of systems with mechanical vibration. We propose two cooling schemes employing four internal levels of the systems, which achieve the ground-state cooling in an efficient fashion by completely deleting the carrier and first-order blue-sideband transitions. The schemes, based on quantum interference and Stark-shift gates, are robust to fluctuations of laser intensity and frequency. The feasibility of the schemes is justified using current laboratory technology. In practice, our proposal readily applies to a nanodiamond nitrogen-vacancy center levitated in an optical trap or attached to a cantilever.
Calzolari, Arrigo; Nardelli, Marco Buongiorno
2013-01-01
Using first principles calculations based on density functional theory and a coupled finite-fields/finite-differences approach, we study the dielectric properties, phonon dispersions and Raman spectra of ZnO, a material whose internal polarization fields require special treatment to correctly reproduce the ground state electronic structure and the coupling with external fields. Our results are in excellent agreement with existing experimental measurements and provide an essential reference for the characterization of crystallinity, composition, piezo- and thermo-electricity of the plethora of ZnO-derived nanostructured materials used in optoelectronics and sensor devices. PMID:24141391
An approach to adjustment of relativistic mean field model parameters
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bayram, Tuncay; Akkoyun, Serkan
2017-09-01
The Relativistic Mean Field (RMF) model with a small number of adjusted parameters is powerful tool for correct predictions of various ground-state nuclear properties of nuclei. Its success for describing nuclear properties of nuclei is directly related with adjustment of its parameters by using experimental data. In the present study, the Artificial Neural Network (ANN) method which mimics brain functionality has been employed for improvement of the RMF model parameters. In particular, the understanding capability of the ANN method for relations between the RMF model parameters and their predictions for binding energies (BEs) of 58Ni and 208Pb have been found in agreement with the literature values.
Cobalt-doped ZnO nanocrystals: quantum confinement and surface effects from ab initio methods.
Schoenhalz, Aline L; Dalpian, Gustavo M
2013-10-14
Cobalt-doped ZnO nanocrystals were studied through ab initio methods based on the Density Functional Theory. Both quantum confinement and surface effects were explicitly taken into account. When only quantum confinement effects are considered, Co atoms interact through a superexchange mechanism, stabilizing an antiferromagnetic ground state. Usually, this is the case for high quality nanoparticles with perfect surface saturation. When the surfaces were considered, a strong hybridization between the Co atoms and surfaces was observed, strongly changing their electronic and magnetic properties. Our results indicated that the surfaces might qualitatively change the properties of impurities in semiconductor nanocrystals.
Electronic and Piezoelectric properties of half-Heusler compounds: A first principles study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rai, D. P.; Sandeep; Shankar, A.; Aly, Abeer E.; Patra, P. K.; Thapa, R. K.
2016-10-01
We have investigated the semiconducting and piezoelectric properties of bulk MNiSn (M=Ti, Zr, Hf) type a half-Heusler compound with cubic F-43m symmetry by means of density functional theory (DFT). For electron exchange correlation a generalized gradient approximation (GGA) was used. Special attention was paid to establish a most favourble ground state configuration on magnetic as well as non-magnetic ordering. With fully optimized structure the electronic and ferroelectric calculation was performed. The formation of band gap was discussed on the basis of d-d orbital hybridization. Further we have calculated the spontaneous polarization by means of structural deformation.
Electronic structure properties of UO2 as a Mott insulator
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sheykhi, Samira; Payami, Mahmoud
2018-06-01
In this work using the density functional theory (DFT), we have studied the structural, electronic and magnetic properties of uranium dioxide with antiferromagnetic 1k-, 2k-, and 3k-order structures. Ordinary approximations in DFT, such as the local density approximation (LDA) or generalized gradient approximation (GGA), usually predict incorrect metallic behaviors for this strongly correlated electron system. Using Hubbard term correction for f-electrons, LDA+U method, as well as using the screened Heyd-Scuseria-Ernzerhof (HSE) hybrid functional for the exchange-correlation (XC), we have obtained the correct ground-state behavior as an insulator, with band gaps in good agreement with experiment.
Pool, D.R.; Dickinson, Jesse
2007-01-01
A numerical ground-water model was developed to simulate seasonal and long-term variations in ground-water flow in the Sierra Vista subwatershed, Arizona, United States, and Sonora, Mexico, portions of the Upper San Pedro Basin. This model includes the simulation of details of the groundwater flow system that were not simulated by previous models, such as ground-water flow in the sedimentary rocks that surround and underlie the alluvial basin deposits, withdrawals for dewatering purposes at the Tombstone mine, discharge to springs in the Huachuca Mountains, thick low-permeability intervals of silt and clay that separate the ground-water flow system into deep-confined and shallow-unconfined systems, ephemeral-channel recharge, and seasonal variations in ground-water discharge by wells and evapotranspiration. Steady-state and transient conditions during 1902-2003 were simulated by using a five-layer numerical ground- water flow model representing multiple hydrogeologic units. Hydraulic properties of model layers, streamflow, and evapotranspiration rates were estimated as part of the calibration process by using observed water levels, vertical hydraulic gradients, streamflow, and estimated evapotranspiration rates as constraints. Simulations approximate observed water-level trends throughout most of the model area and streamflow trends at the Charleston streamflow-gaging station on the San Pedro River. Differences in observed and simulated water levels, streamflow, and evapotranspiration could be reduced through simulation of climate-related variations in recharge rates and recharge from flood-flow infiltration.
Analysis of ground state in random bipartite matching
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shi, Gui-Yuan; Kong, Yi-Xiu; Liao, Hao; Zhang, Yi-Cheng
2016-02-01
Bipartite matching problems emerge in many human social phenomena. In this paper, we study the ground state of the Gale-Shapley model, which is the most popular bipartite matching model. We apply the Kuhn-Munkres algorithm to compute the numerical ground state of the model. For the first time, we obtain the number of blocking pairs which is a measure of the system instability. We also show that the number of blocking pairs formed by each person follows a geometric distribution. Furthermore, we study how the connectivity in the bipartite matching problems influences the instability of the ground state.
The electronic structures of AlN and InN wurtzite nanowires
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xiong, Wen; Li, Dong-Xiao
2017-07-01
We derive the relations between the analogous seven Luttinger-Kohn parameters and six Rashba-Sheka-Pikus parameters for wurtzite semiconductors, which can be used to investigate the electronic structures of some wurtzite semiconductors such as AlN and InN materials, including their low-dimensional structures. As an example, the electronic structures of AlN and InN nanowires are calculated by using the derived relations and six-band effective-mass k · p theory. Interestingly, it is found that the ground hole state of AlN nanowires is always a pure S state whether the radius R is small (1 nm) or large (6 nm), and the ground hole state only contains | Z 〉 Bloch orbital component. Therefore, AlN nanowires is the ideal low-dimensional material for the production of purely linearly polarized π light, unlike ZnO nanowires, which emits plane-polarized σ light. However, the ground hole state of InN nanowires can be tuned from a pure S state to a mixed P state when the radius R is larger than 2.6 nm, which will make the polarized properties of the lowest optical transition changes from linearly polarized π light to plane-polarized σ light. Meanwhile, the valence band structures of InN nanowires will present strong band-crossings when the radius R increases to 6 nm, and through the detail analysis of possible transitions of InN nanowires at the Γ point, we find some of the neighbor optical transitions are almost degenerate, because the spin-orbit splitting energy of InN material is only 0.001 eV. Therefore, it is concluded that the electronic structures and optical properties of InN nanowires present great differences with that of AlN nanowires.
Satam, Manjaree A; Telore, Rahul D; Sekar, Nagaiyan
2014-11-11
A series of novel Schiff's bases have been synthesized from 3-(1,3-benzothiazol-2-yl)-2-hydroxynaphthalene-1-carbaldehyde. The presence of hydroxyl group ortho to the benzothiazolyl group as well as the imine linkage lead to the occurrence of excited state intramolecular proton transfer process. The computational strategy was used to study the ESIPT process of the synthesized Schiff's bases, which revealed surprisingly that the keto form predominantly exists in the ground state contradicting the ESIPT process. Density functional theory and time dependent density functional theory have been used to investigate the structural parameters and photophysical properties in different solvents of one of the Schiff's bases. The experimental results correlate well with the computed results. All Schiff's bases show good thermal stability. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Electronic and magnetic properties of SnS2 monolayer doped with non-magnetic elements
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xiao, Wen-Zhi; Xiao, Gang; Rong, Qing-Yan; Wang, Ling-Ling
2018-05-01
We performed a systematic study of the electronic structures and magnetic properties of SnS2 monolayer doped with non-magnetic elements in groups IA, IIA and IIIA based on the first-principles methods. The doped systems exhibit half-metallic and metallic natures depending on the doping elements. The formation of magnetic moment is attributable to the cooperative effect of the Hund's rule coupling and hole concentration. The spin polarization can be stabilized and enhanced through confining the delocalized impurity states by biaxial tensile strain in hole-doped SnS2 monolayer. Both the double-exchange and p-p exchange mechanisms are simultaneously responsible for the ferromagnetic ground state in those hole-doped materials. Our results demonstrate that spin polarization can be induced and controlled in SnS2 monolayers by non-magnetic doping and tensile strain.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Masrour, R.; Jabar, A.; Hlil, E. K.
2018-05-01
Self-consistent ab initio calculations, based on Density Functional Theory (DFT) approach and using Full potential Linear Augmented Plane Wave (FLAPW) method, are performed to investigate the electronic and magnetic properties of the Fe4N compound. Polarized spin and spin-orbit coupling are included in calculations within the framework of the ferromagnetic state between Fe(I) and Fe(II) in Fe4N compound. We have used the obtained data from abinitio calculations as an input in Monte Carlo simulation to calculate the magnetic properties of this compounds such as the ground state phase diagrams, total and partial magnetization of Fe(I) and Fe(II) as well as the transition temperatures are computed. The variation of magnetization with the crystal field are also studied. The magnetic hysteresis cycle of the same Fe4N compound are determined for different values of temperatures and crystal field values. The two-step hysteresis loop are evidenced, which is typical for Fe4N structure. The ferromagnetic and superparamagnetic phase is observed as well.
cgDNAweb: a web interface to the cgDNA sequence-dependent coarse-grain model of double-stranded DNA.
De Bruin, Lennart; Maddocks, John H
2018-06-14
The sequence-dependent statistical mechanical properties of fragments of double-stranded DNA is believed to be pertinent to its biological function at length scales from a few base pairs (or bp) to a few hundreds of bp, e.g. indirect read-out protein binding sites, nucleosome positioning sequences, phased A-tracts, etc. In turn, the equilibrium statistical mechanics behaviour of DNA depends upon its ground state configuration, or minimum free energy shape, as well as on its fluctuations as governed by its stiffness (in an appropriate sense). We here present cgDNAweb, which provides browser-based interactive visualization of the sequence-dependent ground states of double-stranded DNA molecules, as predicted by the underlying cgDNA coarse-grain rigid-base model of fragments with arbitrary sequence. The cgDNAweb interface is specifically designed to facilitate comparison between ground state shapes of different sequences. The server is freely available at cgDNAweb.epfl.ch with no login requirement.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Marvilliers, Arnaud; Hortholary, Cédric; Rogez, Guillaume; Audière, Jean-Paul; Rivière, Eric; Cano Boquera, Joan; Paulsen, Carley; Villar, Vincent; Mallah, Talal
2001-07-01
Two pentanuclear complexes are obtained from the reaction of hexacyanochromate(III) with one to two molar equivalents of [Ni(H2O)6]2+ and bidentate organic ligands that chelate the metal ion, leaving two coordination sites in cis positions. Even though the crystal structure was not solved, the full characterization supports the formation of pentanuclear discrete species. [Cr(CN)6]2[Ni(HIM2-py)2]3·7H2O, 1, has a ground spin state S=6 owing to the ferromagnetic interaction between CrIII (S=3/2) and NII (S=1). The presence of six organic radicals that couple ferromagnetically with NiII in [Cr(CN)6]2[Ni(IM2-py)2]3·7H2O, 2, leads to an S=9 ground state. A.c. susceptibility measurements below 2K indicate the occurrence of an antiferromagnetic order at 1.5 K in 2.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Albagami, Abdullah Mohamed
In this Thesis project, an experimental study on the magnetic and exchange bias properties of a series of polycrystalline Ni1.7-xMn1.7+x Ga0.6 alloys have been investigated by x-ray diffraction, dc magnetization, and ac susceptibility measurements. X-ray diffraction measurement showed that all prepared samples have a tetragonal L10 martensitic structure at room temperature. Scanning electron microscopy measurements show that the compounds are single phase. With increasing Mn concentration x, the lattice parameters marginally increases. The temperature dependence of magnetization data show two distinct transitions in the alloys. At lower temperatures, a peak in the data is observed while the ferromagnetic to paramagnetic transition occurs at higher temperatures. With increasing Mn concentration, the temperature of both transitions increases. Thermomagnetic irreversibility is observed in the magnetization data of all alloys. The ac susceptibility measurements on the materials show the existence of frequency dependence, which suggest that the thermomagnetic irreversibility in the magnetization data is due to the spin glass like ground state in the alloys. The spin glass like ground state with competing magnetic interactions result in the observation of double-shifted hysteresis loop and exchange bias effects in the alloys. The magnitude of the exchange bias field is strongly dependent on the cooling field.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Patra, S. K.; Wu, Cheng-Li; Praharaj, C. R.; Gupta, Raj K.
1999-05-01
We have studied the structural properties of even-even, neutron deficient, Z = 114-126, superheavy nuclei in the mass region A ˜ 270-320, using an axially deformed relativistic mean field model. The calculations are performed with three parameter sets (NL1, TM1 and NL-SH), in order to see the dependence of the structural properties on the force used. The calculated ground state shapes are found to be parameter dependent. For some parameter sets, many of the nuclei are degenerate in their ground state configuration. Special attention is given to the investigation of the magic structures (spherical shell closures) in the superheavy region. We find that some known magic numbers are absent and new closed shells are predicted. Large shell gaps appear at Z = 80, 92, (114), 120 and 138, N = 138, (164), (172), 184, (198), (228) and 258, irrespective of the parameter sets used. The numbers in parenthesis are those which correspond to relatively smaller gaps. The existence of new magic numbers in the valley of superheavy elements is discussed. It is suggested that nuclei around Z = 114 and N = 164 ˜ 172 could be considered as candidates for the next search of superheavy nuclei. The existence of superheavy islands around Z = 120 and N = 172 or N = 184 double shell closure is also discussed.
Algorithms and semantic infrastructure for mutation impact extraction and grounding.
Laurila, Jonas B; Naderi, Nona; Witte, René; Riazanov, Alexandre; Kouznetsov, Alexandre; Baker, Christopher J O
2010-12-02
Mutation impact extraction is a hitherto unaccomplished task in state of the art mutation extraction systems. Protein mutations and their impacts on protein properties are hidden in scientific literature, making them poorly accessible for protein engineers and inaccessible for phenotype-prediction systems that currently depend on manually curated genomic variation databases. We present the first rule-based approach for the extraction of mutation impacts on protein properties, categorizing their directionality as positive, negative or neutral. Furthermore protein and mutation mentions are grounded to their respective UniProtKB IDs and selected protein properties, namely protein functions to concepts found in the Gene Ontology. The extracted entities are populated to an OWL-DL Mutation Impact ontology facilitating complex querying for mutation impacts using SPARQL. We illustrate retrieval of proteins and mutant sequences for a given direction of impact on specific protein properties. Moreover we provide programmatic access to the data through semantic web services using the SADI (Semantic Automated Discovery and Integration) framework. We address the problem of access to legacy mutation data in unstructured form through the creation of novel mutation impact extraction methods which are evaluated on a corpus of full-text articles on haloalkane dehalogenases, tagged by domain experts. Our approaches show state of the art levels of precision and recall for Mutation Grounding and respectable level of precision but lower recall for the task of Mutant-Impact relation extraction. The system is deployed using text mining and semantic web technologies with the goal of publishing to a broad spectrum of consumers.
Subsidence from underground mining; environmental analysis and planning considerations
Lee, Fitzhugh T.; Abel, John F.
1983-01-01
Subsidence, a universal process that occurs in response to the voids created by extracting solids or liquids from beneath the Earth's surface, is controlled by many factors including mining methods, depth of extraction, thickness of deposit, and topography, as well as the in situ properties of the rock mass above the deposit. The impacts of subsidence are potentially severe in terms of damage to surface utility lines and structures, changes in surface-water and ground-water conditions, and effects on vegetation and animals. Although subsidence cannot be eliminated, it can be reduced or controlled in areas where deformation of the ground surface would produce dangerous or costly effects. Subsidence prediction is highly developed in Europe where there are comparatively uniform mining conditions and a long history of field measurements. Much of this mining has been carried out beneath crowded urban and industrial areas where accurate predictions have facilitated use of the surface and reduced undesirable impacts. Concerted efforts to understand subsidence processes in the United States are recent. Empirical methods of subsidence analysis and prediction based on local conditions seem better suited to the current state of knowledge of the varied geologic and topographic conditions in domestic coal mining regions than do theoretical/mathematical approaches. In order to develop broadly applicable subsidence prediction methods and models for the United States, more information is needed on magnitude and timing of ground movements and geologic properties.
Spin morphologies and heat dissipation in spherical assemblies of magnetic nanoparticles
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Anand, Manish; Carrey, Julian; Banerjee, Varsha
2016-09-01
Aggregates of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) exhibit unusual properties due to the interplay of small system size and long-range dipole-dipole interactions. Using the micromagnetic simulation software oommf, we study the spin morphologies and heat dissipation in micron-size spherical assemblies of MNPs. In particular, we examine the sensitivity of these properties to the dipolar strength, manipulated by the interparticle separation. As oommf is not designed for such a study, we have incorporated a novel scaling protocol for this purpose. We believe that it is essential for all studies where volume fractions are varied. Our main results are as follows: (i) Dense assemblies exhibit strong dipolar effects which yield local magnetic order in the core but not on the surface, where moments are randomly oriented. (ii) The probability distribution of ground-state energy exhibits a long high-energy tail for surface spins in contrast to small tails for the core spins. Consequently, there is a wide variation in the energy of surface spins but not the core spins. (iii) There is strong correlation between ground-state energy and heating properties on application of an oscillating magnetic field h (t ) =hocos2 π f t : the particles in the core heat uniformly, while those on the surface exhibit a wide range from cold to intensely hot. (iv) Specific choices of ho and f yield characteristic spatial heat distributions, e.g., hot surface and cold core, or vice versa. (iv) For all values of ho and f that we consider, heating was maximum at a specific volume fraction. These results are especially relevant in the context of contemporary applications such as hyperthermia and chemotherapy, and also for novel materials such as smart polymer beads and superspin glasses.
Arnold, Terri L.; Warner, Kelly L.; Groschen, George E.; Caldwell, James P.; Kalkhoff, Stephen J.
2008-01-01
The glacial aquifer system in the United States is a large (953,000 square miles) regional aquifer system of heterogeneous composition. As described in this report, the glacial aquifer system includes all unconsolidated geologic material above bedrock that lies on or north of the line of maximum glacial advance within the United States. Examining ground-water quality on a regional scale indicates that variations in the concentrations of major and minor ions and some trace elements most likely are the result of natural variations in the geologic and physical environment. Study of the glacial aquifer system was designed around a regional framework based on the assumption that two primary characteristics of the aquifer system can affect water quality: intrinsic susceptibility (hydraulic properties) and vulnerability (geochemical properties). The hydrochemical regions described in this report were developed to identify and explain regional spatial variations in ground-water quality in the glacial aquifer system within the hypothetical framework context. Data analyzed for this study were collected from 1991 to 2003 at 1,716 wells open to the glacial aquifer system. Cluster analysis was used to group wells with similar ground-water concentrations of calcium, chloride, fluoride, magnesium, potassium, sodium, sulfate, and bicarbonate into five unique groups. Maximum Likelihood Classification was used to make the extrapolation from clustered groups of wells, defined by points, to areas of similar water quality (hydrochemical regions) defined in a geospatial model. Spatial data that represented average annual precipitation, average annual temperature, land use, land-surface slope, vertical soil permeability, average soil clay content, texture of surficial deposits, type of surficial deposit, and potential for ground-water recharge were used in the Maximum Likelihood Classification to classify the areas so the characteristics of the hydrochemical regions would resemble the characteristics of the clusters. The result of the Maximum Likelihood Classification is a map showing five hydrochemical regions of the glacial aquifer system. Statistical analysis of ion concentrations (calcium, chloride, fluoride, magnesium, sodium, potassium, sulfate, and bicarbonate) in samples collected from wells completed in the glacial aquifer system illustrates that variations in water quality can be explained, in part, by related environmental characteristics that control the movement of ground water through the aquifer system. A comparison of median concentrations of chemical constituents in ground water among the five hydrochemical regions indicates that ground water in the Midwestern Agricultural Region, the Urban-Influenced Region, and the Western Agriculture and Grassland Region has the highest concentrations of major and minor ions, whereas ground water in the Northern and Great Lakes Forested Region and the Mountain and Coastal Forested Region has the lowest concentrations of these ions. Median concentrations of barium, arsenic, lithium, boron, strontium, and nitrite plus nitrate as nitrogen also are significantly different among the hydrochemical regions.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Thiel, Charles Warren
There are a vast number of applications for rare-earth-activated materials and much of today's cutting-edge optical technology and emerging innovations are enabled by their unique properties. In many of these applications, interactions between the rare-earth ion and the host material's electronic states can enhance or inhibit performance and provide mechanisms for manipulating the optical properties. Continued advances in these technologies require knowledge of the relative energies of rare-earth and crystal band states so that properties of available materials may be fully understood and new materials may be logically developed. Conventional and resonant electron photoemission techniques were used to measure 4f electron and valence band binding energies in important optical materials, including YAG, YAlO3, and LiYF4. The photoemission spectra were theoretically modeled and analyzed to accurately determine relative energies. By combining these energies with ultraviolet spectroscopy, binding energies of excited 4fN-15d and 4fN+1 states were determined. While the 4fN ground-state energies vary considerably between different trivalent ions and lie near or below the top of the valence band in optical materials, the lowest 4f N-15d states have similar energies and are near the bottom of the conduction band. As an example for YAG, the Tb3+ 4f N ground state is in the band gap at 0.7 eV above the valence band while the Lu3+ ground state is 4.7 eV below the valence band maximum; however, the lowest 4fN-15d states are 2.2 eV below the conduction band for both ions. We found that a simple model accurately describes the binding energies of the 4fN, 4fN-1 5d, and 4fN+1 states. The model's success across the entire rare-earth series indicates that measurements on two different ions in a host are sufficient to predict the energies of all rare-earth ions in that host. This information provides new insight into electron transfer transitions, luminescence quenching, and valence stability. All of these results lead to a clearer picture for the host's effect on the rare-earth ion's electron binding energies and will motivate fundamental theoretical analysis and accelerate the development of new optical materials.
Wierzbicki, Michał; Barnaś, Józef; Swirkowicz, Renata
2015-12-09
The effects of electron-electron and spin-orbit interactions on the ground-state magnetic configuration and on the corresponding thermoelectric and spin thermoelectric properties in zigzag nanoribbons of two-dimensional hexagonal crystals are analysed theoretically. The thermoelectric properties of quasi-stable magnetic states are also considered. Of particular interest is the influence of Coulomb and spin-orbit interactions on the topological edge states and on the transition between the topological insulator and conventional gap insulator states. It is shown that the interplay of both interactions also has a significant impact on the transport and thermoelectric characteristics of the nanoribbons. The spin-orbit interaction also determines the in-plane magnetic easy axis. The thermoelectric properties of nanoribbons with in-plane magnetic moments are compared to those of nanoribbons with edge magnetic moments oriented perpendicularly to their plane. Nanoribbons with ferromagnetic alignment of the edge moments are shown to reveal spin thermoelectricity in addition to the conventional one.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Roberts, Greg; Calmer, Radiance; Sanchez, Kevin; Cayez, Grégoire; Nicoll, Kerianne; Hashimshoni, Eyal; Rosenfeld, Daniel; Ansmann, Albert; Sciare, Jean; Ovadneite, Jurgita; Bronz, Murat; Hattenberger, Gautier; Preissler, Jana; Buehl, Johannes; Ceburnis, Darius; O'Dowd, Colin
2016-04-01
Clouds are omnipresent in earth's atmosphere and constitute an important role in regulating the radiative budget of the planet. However, the response of clouds to climate change remains uncertain, in particular, with respect to aerosol-cloud interactions and feedback mechanisms between the biosphere and atmosphere. Aerosol-cloud interactions and their feedbacks are the main themes of the European project FP7 BACCHUS (Impact of Biogenic versus Anthropogenic Emissions on Clouds and Climate: towards a Holistic Understanding). The National Center for Meteorological Research (CNRM-GAME, Toulouse, France) conducted airborne experiments in Cyprus and Ireland in March and August 2015 respectively to link ground-based and satellite observations. Multiple RPAS (remotely piloted aircraft systems) were instrumented for a specific scientific focus to characterize the vertical distribution of aerosol, cloud microphysical properties, radiative fluxes, 3D wind vectors and meteorological state parameters. Flights below and within clouds were coordinated with satellite overpasses to perform 'top-down' closure of cloud micro-physical properties. Measurements of cloud condensation nuclei spectra at the ground-based site have been used to determine cloud microphyical properties using wind vectors and meteorological parameters measured by the RPAS at cloud base. These derived cloud properties have been validated by in-situ RPAS measurements in the cloud and compared to those derived by the Suomi-NPP satellite. In addition, RPAS profiles in Cyprus observed the layers of dust originating from the Arabian Peninsula and the Sahara Desert. These profiles generally show a well-mixed boundary layer and compare well with ground-based LIDAR observations.
Huff, G.F.
2004-01-01
Increasing demand on the limited supplies of freshwater in the desert Southwest, as well as other parts of the United States, has increased the level of interest in saline-water resources. Saline ground water has long been recognized as a potentially important contributor to water supply in the Southwest, as demonstrated by the number of hydrologic, geologic, and engineering studies on the distribution of saline water and the feasibility of desalination. Potential future study needs include investigating and documenting the three-dimensional distribution of salinity and chemical composition of saline-water resources and the hydraulic properties of aquifers containing these saline-water resources, assessing the chemical suitability of saline water for use with existing and anticipated desalination technologies, simulating the effect of withdrawal of saline ground water on water levels and water composition in saline and adjoining or overlying freshwater aquifers, and determining the suitability of target geologic formations for injection of desalination-generated waste.
Dobaczewski, J.; Afanasjev, A. V.; Bender, M.; ...
2015-07-29
In this study, we calculate properties of the ground and excited states of nuclei in the nobelium region for proton and neutron numbers of 92 ≤ Z ≤ 104 and 144 ≤ N ≤ 156, respectively. We use three different energy-density-functional (EDF) approaches, based on covariant, Skyrme, and Gogny functionals, each with two different parameter sets. A comparative analysis of the results obtained for quasiparticle spectra, odd–even and two-particle mass staggering, and moments of inertia allows us to identify single-particle and shell effects that are characteristic to these different models and to illustrate possible systematic uncertainties related to using themore » EDF modelling.« less
The role of tachysterol in vitamin D photosynthesis - a non-adiabatic molecular dynamics study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cisneros, Cecilia; Thompson, Travis; Baluyot, Noel; Smith, Adam C.; Tapavicza, Enrico
To investigate the role of tachysterol in the photophysical/chemical regulation of vitamin D photosynthesis, we studied its electronic absorption properties and excited state dynamics using time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT), coupled cluster theory (CC2), and non-adiabatic molecular dynamics. In excellent agreement with experiments, the simulated electronic spectrum shows a broad absorption band covering the spectra of the other vitamin D photoisomers. The broad band stems from the spectral overlap of four different ground state rotamers. After photoexcitation, the first excited singlet state (S1) decays within 882 fs. The S1 dynamics is characterized by a strong twisting of the central double bond. 96% of all trajectories relax without chemical transformation to the ground state. In 2.3 % of the trajectories we observed [1,5]-sigmatropic hydrogen shift forming the partly deconjugated toxisterol D1. 1.4 % previtamin D formation is observed via hula-twist double bond isomerization. We find a strong dependence between photoreactivity and dihedral angle conformation: hydrogen shift only occurs in cEc and cEt rotamers and double bond isomerization occurs mainly in cEc rotamers. Our study confirms the hypothesis that cEc rotamers are more prone to previtamin D formation than other isomers. We also observe the formation of a cyclobutene-toxisterol in the hot ground state (0.7 %). Due to its strong absorption and unreactive behavior, tachysterol acts mainly as a sun shield suppressing previtamin D formation. Tachysterol shows stronger toxisterol formation than previtamin D. Absorption of low energy UV light by the cEc rotamer can lead to previtamin D formation. Our study reinforces a recent hypothesis that tachysterol can act as a previtamin D source when only low energy ultraviolet light is available, as it is the case in winter or in the morning and evening hours of the day.
Mesko, Thomas O.; Swain, Lindsay A.; Hollyday, E.F.
2000-01-01
Severe and prolonged droughts between 1961 and 1988, combined with increased demands for freshwater supplies in the United States, have resulted in a critical need to assess the potential for development of ground- and surface-water supplies. Rapid industrial growth and urban expansion have caused existing freshwater supplies to be used at or near maximum capacity. Begun in 1978, the Regional Aquifer-System Analysis (RASA) Program of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is a systematic effort to study a number of the Nation's most important aquifer systems, which, in aggregate, underlie much of the country and represent an important component of the Nation's total water supply. The broad objective for each of the 28 studies in the program is to assemble geologic, hydrologic, and geochemical information, to analyze and develop an understanding of the system, and to develop predictive capabilities that will contribute to the effective management of the system.In 1988, as part of the RASA Program, the USGS began a 6-year study of the ground-water resources of parts of 11 States in the Eastern United States (Swain and others, 1991). The study was designated the Appalachian Valley and Piedmont Regional Aquifer-System Analysis (APRASA). The APRASA team investigated ground-water resources primarily in the unglaciated part of the Valley and Ridge, the Blue Ridge, the New England, and the Piedmont Physiographic Provinces (fig. 1). For the purposes of this report, the small area in the New England Physiographic Province that is within the study area in New Jersey and Pennsylvania was considered part of the Piedmont Physiographic Province. The results of the APRASA are contained in about 50 reports and abstracts, including reports on simulation of ground-water flow in three type areas, this atlas, and chapters in Professional Paper 1422. These chapters include the summary (Chapter A), descriptions of recharge rates and surface- and ground-water relations (Chapter B), hydrogeologic terranes in the Valley and Ridge Physiographic Province (Chapter C), and ground-water geochemistry (Chapter D).The purposes of this atlas are to summarize the hydrogeology, to describe an analysis of maps and well records, and to present a classification and map of the hydrogeologic terranes of the Blue Ridge and Piedmont Physiographic Provinces within the APRASA study area. Hydrogeologic terranes are defined for this atlas as regionally mappable areas characterized by similar water-yielding properties of a grouping of selected rock types. The hydrogeologic terranes represent areas of distinct hydrologic character. The terranes are intended to help water users locate and develop adequate water supplies and to help hydrologists interpret the regional hydrogeology.Previous investigations provide maps and descriptions of the geologic units, describe the local quantity and quality of ground water within these units, and establish the statistical methods for comparing the water-yielding properties of these units. State geologic maps show the distribution of geologic units at a scale of 1:500,000 for Alabama (Osborne and others, 1989), Georgia (Lawton and others, 1976), North Carolina (Brown and Parker, 1985), and Virginia (Calver and Hobbs, 1963). State maps show geologic units at a scale of 1:250,000 for Maryland (Cleaves and others, 1968), New Jersey (Lewis and Kummel, 1912), Pennsylvania (Berg and others, 1980), South Carolina (Overstreet and Bell, 1965), Tennessee (Hardeman, 1966), and West Virginia (Cardwell and others, 1968). Quadrangle geologic maps show geologic units at a scale of 1:24,000 for parts of Delaware within the APRASA area (Woodruff and Thompson, 1972, 1975). Many reports have been published describing the groundwater resources of a county, parts of a county, multi-county areas, or river basins.The statistical methods used in this atlas are based largely on those used by Helsel and Hirsch (1992) and by Knopman (1990, p. 7-9). In her analysis of well records in the USGS Ground-Water Site Inventory (GWSI) data base, Knopman (1990) ranked factors that must be taken into account when assessing the water-yielding potential of the rocks in the Valley and Ridge, the Blue Ridge, and the Piedmont Physiographic Provinces in Pennsylvania. Readers are referred to Helsel and Hirsch (1992) and Knopman (1990) for details regarding statistical methods.
Spin-Orbit Coupling Controlled J = 3 / 2 Electronic Ground State in 5 d 3 Oxides
Taylor, A. E.; Calder, S.; Morrow, R.; ...
2017-05-16
Spin-orbit entanglement in 5d-based transition metal oxides (TMOs) has been identified as a route to a host of unconventional physical states including quantum spin liquids, Weyl semimetals, and axion insulators. Yet despite intense interest, no clear rules have emerged for the treatment of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) in 5d TMOs outside of idealised LS or jj coupling paradigms. This is exemplified in 5d 3 oxides in which an orbitally-quenched singlet ground state is anticipated, yet SOC is manifest in the observed magnetic properties. Here we solve this long-outstanding puzzle by revealing that the electronic ground state of Os5+ 5d 3 ionsmore » is an unquenched J = 3/2 state. Resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) in Ca3LiOsO6 and Ba 2YOsO 6 exposes a SOC-controlled splitting of the t 2g manifold. The results are successfully described using an intermediate-coupling framework in which oxygen hybridisation promotes the breakdown of the orbital singlet. This framework opens the door to realistic treatment of SOC across a range of 5d TMOs beyond the 5d 3 case.« less
Spin-Orbit Coupling Controlled J = 3 / 2 Electronic Ground State in 5 d 3 Oxides
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Taylor, A. E.; Calder, S.; Morrow, R.
Spin-orbit entanglement in 5d-based transition metal oxides (TMOs) has been identified as a route to a host of unconventional physical states including quantum spin liquids, Weyl semimetals, and axion insulators. Yet despite intense interest, no clear rules have emerged for the treatment of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) in 5d TMOs outside of idealised LS or jj coupling paradigms. This is exemplified in 5d 3 oxides in which an orbitally-quenched singlet ground state is anticipated, yet SOC is manifest in the observed magnetic properties. Here we solve this long-outstanding puzzle by revealing that the electronic ground state of Os5+ 5d 3 ionsmore » is an unquenched J = 3/2 state. Resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) in Ca3LiOsO6 and Ba 2YOsO 6 exposes a SOC-controlled splitting of the t 2g manifold. The results are successfully described using an intermediate-coupling framework in which oxygen hybridisation promotes the breakdown of the orbital singlet. This framework opens the door to realistic treatment of SOC across a range of 5d TMOs beyond the 5d 3 case.« less
Electronic structure properties of deep defects in hBN
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dev, Pratibha; Prdm Collaboration
In recent years, the search for room-temperature solid-state qubit (quantum bit) candidates has revived interest in the study of deep-defect centers in semiconductors. The charged NV-center in diamond is the best known amongst these defects. However, as a host material, diamond poses several challenges and so, increasingly, there is an interest in exploring deep defects in alternative semiconductors such as hBN. The layered structure of hBN makes it a scalable platform for quantum applications, as there is a greater potential for controlling the location of the deep defect in the 2D-matrix through careful experiments. Using density functional theory-based methods, we have studied the electronic and structural properties of several deep defects in hBN. Native defects within hBN layers are shown to have high spin ground states that should survive even at room temperature, making them interesting solid-state qubit candidates in a 2D matrix. Partnership for Reduced Dimensional Material (PRDM) is part of the NSF sponsored Partnerships for Research and Education in Materials (PREM).
reaction data Sigma Retrieval & Plotting Nuclear structure & decay Data Nuclear Science References Experimental Unevaluated Nuclear Data List Evaluated Nuclear Structure Data File NNDC databases Ground and isomeric states properties Nuclear structure & decay data journal Nuclear reaction model code Tools and
First-Order Quantum Phase Transition for Dicke Model Induced by Atom-Atom Interaction
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhao, Xiu-Qin; Liu, Ni; Liang, Jiu-Qing
2017-05-01
In this article, we use the spin coherent state transformation and the ground state variational method to theoretically calculate the ground function. In order to consider the influence of the atom-atom interaction on the extended Dicke model’s ground state properties, the mean photon number, the scaled atomic population and the average ground energy are displayed. Using the self-consistent field theory to solve the atom-atom interaction, we discover the system undergoes a first-order quantum phase transition from the normal phase to the superradiant phase, but a famous Dicke-type second-order quantum phase transition without the atom-atom interaction. Meanwhile, the atom-atom interaction makes the phase transition point shift to the lower atom-photon collective coupling strength. Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant Nos. 11275118, 11404198, 91430109, 61505100, 51502189, and the Scientific and Technological Innovation Programs of Higher Education Institutions in Shanxi Province (STIP) under Grant No. 2014102, and the Launch of the Scientific Research of Shanxi University under Grant No. 011151801004, and the National Fundamental Fund of Personnel Training under Grant No. J1103210. The Natural Science Foundation of Shanxi Province under Grant No. 2015011008
Two-neutron decay within RMF+BCS approach
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kumawat, M.; Singh, U. K.; Saxena, G.; Kaushik, M.; Jain, S. K.
2018-05-01
A theoretical global study has been done for identifying possible candidates of 2n-radioactivity for all even and odd nuclei under proton number Z ≤ 40 by employing Relativistic Mean-Filed plus BCS (RMF+BCS) approach. We investigate two-and one-neutron separation energy, deformation, pairing energy, wave-function, potential and other ground state properties for our study of even and odd Z nuclei to find candidates of 2n-decay within Z ≤ 40. These results are found in agreement of recent experiments and consistent with other parameters of RMF and other theories.
Study on the spin-states of cobalt-based double-layer perovskite Sr2Y0.5Ca0.5Co2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
He, H.; Zhang, W. Y.
2008-02-01
The spin-states of cobalt based perovskite compounds depend sensitively on the valence state and local crystal environment of Co ions and the rich physical properties arise from strong coupling among charge, spin, and orbital degrees of freedom. While extensive studies have been carried out in the past, most of them concentrated on the isotropic compound LaCoO3. In this paper, using the unrestricted Hartree-Fock approximation and the real-space recursion method, we have investigated the competition of various magnetically ordered spin-states of anisotropic double-layered perovskite Sr2Y0.5Ca0.5Co2O7. The energy comparison among these states shows that the nearest-neighbor high-spin-intermediate-spin ferromagnetically ordered state is the relevant magnetic ground state of the compound. The magnetic structure and sizes of magnetic moments are consistent with the recent experimental observation.
Rotational Spectroscopy of Methyl Vinyl Ketone
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zakharenko, Olena; Motiyenko, R. A.; Aviles Moreno, Juan-Ramon; Huet, T. R.
2015-06-01
Methyl vinyl ketone, MVK, along with previously studied by our team methacrolein, is a major oxidation product of isoprene, which is one of the primary contributors to annual global VOC emissions. In this talk we present the analysis of the rotational spectrum of MVK recorded at room temperature in the 50 -- 650 GHz region using the Lille spectrometer. The spectroscopic characterization of MVK ground state will be useful in the detailed analysis of high resolution infrared spectra. Our study is supported by high level quantum chemical calculations to model the structure of the two stable s-trans and s-cis conformers and to obtain the harmonic force field parameters, internal rotation barrier heights, and vibrational frequencies. In the Doppler-limited spectra the splittings due to the internal rotation of methyl group are resolved, therefore for analysis of this molecule we used the Rho-Axis-Method Hamiltonian and RAM36 code to fit the rotational transitions. At the present time the ground state of two conformers is analyzed. Also we intend to study some low lying excited states. The analysis is in progress and the latest results will be presented. Support from the French Laboratoire d'Excellence CaPPA (Chemical and Physical Properties of the Atmosphere) through contract ANR-10-LABX-0005 of the Programme d'Investissements d'Avenir is acknowledged.
Tensor Network Wavefunctions for Topological Phases
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ware, Brayden Alexander
The combination of quantum effects and interactions in quantum many-body systems can result in exotic phases with fundamentally entangled ground state wavefunctions--topological phases. Topological phases come in two types, both of which will be studied in this thesis. In topologically ordered phases, the pattern of entanglement in the ground state wavefunction encodes the statistics of exotic emergent excitations, a universal indicator of a phase that is robust to all types of perturbations. In symmetry protected topological phases, the entanglement instead encodes a universal response of the system to symmetry defects, an indicator that is robust only to perturbations respecting the protecting symmetry. Finding and creating these phases in physical systems is a motivating challenge that tests all aspects--analytical, numerical, and experimental--of our understanding of the quantum many-body problem. Nearly three decades ago, the creation of simple ansatz wavefunctions--such as the Laughlin fractional quantum hall state, the AKLT state, and the resonating valence bond state--spurred analytical understanding of both the role of entanglement in topological physics and physical mechanisms by which it can arise. However, quantitative understanding of the relevant phase diagrams is still challenging. For this purpose, tensor networks provide a toolbox for systematically improving wavefunction ansatz while still capturing the relevant entanglement properties. In this thesis, we use the tools of entanglement and tensor networks to analyze ansatz states for several proposed new phases. In the first part, we study a featureless phase of bosons on the honeycomb lattice and argue that this phase can be topologically protected under any one of several distinct subsets of the crystalline lattice symmetries. We discuss methods of detecting such phases with entanglement and without. In the second part, we consider the problem of constructing fixed-point wavefunctions for intrinsically fermionic topological phases, i.e. topological phases contructed out of fermions with a nontrivial response to fermion parity defects. A zero correlation length wavefunction and a commuting projector Hamiltonian that realizes this wavefunction as its ground state are constructed. Using an appropriate generalization of the minimally entangled states method for extraction of topological order from the ground states on a torus to the intrinsically fermionic case, we fully characterize the corresponding topological order as Ising x (px - ipy). We argue that this phase can be captured using fermionic tensor networks, expanding the applicability of tensor network methods.
Wu, M.; Xin, Houlin L.; Wang, J. O.; ...
2018-04-24
Synchrotron-based L 2,3-edge absorption spectra show strong sensitivities to the local electronic structure and chemical environment. However, detailed physical information cannot be extracted easily without computational aids. Here in this study using the experimental Ti L 2,3-edges absorption spectrum of SrTiO 3as a fingerprint and considering full multiplet effects, calculations yield different energy parameters characterizing local ground state properties. The peak splitting and intensity ratios of the L 3 and L 2 set of peaks are carefully analyzed quantitatively, giving rise to a small hybridization energy around 1.2 eV, and the different hybridization energy values reported in the literature aremore » further addressed. Finally, absorption spectra with different linearly polarized photons under various tetragonal crystal fields are investigated, revealing a non-linear orbital–lattice interaction, and a theoretical guidance for material engineering of SrTiO 3-based thin films and heterostructures is offered. Finally, detailed analysis of spectrum shifts with different tetragonal crystal fields suggests that the e g crystal field splitting is a necessary parameter for a thorough analysis of the spectra, even though it is not relevant for the ground state properties.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wu, M.; Xin, Houlin L.; Wang, J. O.
Synchrotron-based L 2,3-edge absorption spectra show strong sensitivities to the local electronic structure and chemical environment. However, detailed physical information cannot be extracted easily without computational aids. Here in this study using the experimental Ti L 2,3-edges absorption spectrum of SrTiO 3as a fingerprint and considering full multiplet effects, calculations yield different energy parameters characterizing local ground state properties. The peak splitting and intensity ratios of the L 3 and L 2 set of peaks are carefully analyzed quantitatively, giving rise to a small hybridization energy around 1.2 eV, and the different hybridization energy values reported in the literature aremore » further addressed. Finally, absorption spectra with different linearly polarized photons under various tetragonal crystal fields are investigated, revealing a non-linear orbital–lattice interaction, and a theoretical guidance for material engineering of SrTiO 3-based thin films and heterostructures is offered. Finally, detailed analysis of spectrum shifts with different tetragonal crystal fields suggests that the e g crystal field splitting is a necessary parameter for a thorough analysis of the spectra, even though it is not relevant for the ground state properties.« less
Mapping ecological states in a complex environment
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Steele, C. M.; Bestelmeyer, B.; Burkett, L. M.; Ayers, E.; Romig, K.; Slaughter, A.
2013-12-01
The vegetation of northern Chihuahuan Desert rangelands is sparse, heterogeneous and for most of the year, consists of a large proportion of non-photosynthetic material. The soils in this area are spectrally bright and variable in their reflectance properties. Both factors provide challenges to the application of remote sensing for estimating canopy variables (e.g., leaf area index, biomass, percentage canopy cover, primary production). Additionally, with reference to current paradigms of rangeland health assessment, remotely-sensed estimates of canopy variables have limited practical use to the rangeland manager if they are not placed in the context of ecological site and ecological state. To address these challenges, we created a multifactor classification system based on the USDA-NRCS ecological site schema and associated state-and-transition models to map ecological states on desert rangelands in southern New Mexico. Applying this system using per-pixel image processing techniques and multispectral, remotely sensed imagery raised other challenges. Per-pixel image classification relies upon the spectral information in each pixel alone, there is no reference to the spatial context of the pixel and its relationship with its neighbors. Ecological state classes may have direct relevance to managers but the non-unique spectral properties of different ecological state classes in our study area means that per-pixel classification of multispectral data performs poorly in discriminating between different ecological states. We found that image interpreters who are familiar with the landscape and its associated ecological site descriptions perform better than per-pixel classification techniques in assigning ecological states. However, two important issues affect manual classification methods: subjectivity of interpretation and reproducibility of results. An alternative to per-pixel classification and manual interpretation is object-based image analysis. Object-based image analysis provides a platform for classification that more closely resembles human recognition of objects within a remotely sensed image. The analysis presented here compares multiple thematic maps created for test locations on the USDA-ARS Jornada Experimental Range ranch. Three study sites in different pastures, each 300 ha in size, were selected for comparison on the basis of their ecological site type (';Clayey', ';Sandy' and a combination of both) and the degree of complexity of vegetation cover. Thematic maps were produced for each study site using (i) manual interpretation of digital aerial photography (by five independent interpreters); (ii) object-oriented, decision-tree classification of fine and moderate spatial resolution imagery (Quickbird; Landsat Thematic Mapper) and (iii) ground survey. To identify areas of uncertainty, we compared agreement in location, areal extent and class assignation between 5 independently produced, manually-digitized ecological state maps and with the map created from ground survey. Location, areal extent and class assignation of the map produced by object-oriented classification was also assessed with reference to the ground survey map.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hansda, Chaitali; Maiti, Pradip; Singha, Tanmoy; Pal, Manisha; Hussain, Syed Arshad; Paul, Sharmistha; Paul, Pabitra Kumar
2018-10-01
In this study, we investigated the spectroscopic properties of the water-soluble globular protein bovine serum albumin (BSA) while interacting with zinc oxide (ZnO) semiconductor nanoparticles (NPs) in aqueous medium and in a ZnO/BSA layer-by-layer (LbL) self-assembled film fabricated on poly (acrylic acid) (PAA)-coated quartz or a Si substrate via electrostatic interactions. BSA formed a ground state complex due to its interaction with ZnO NPs, which was confirmed by ultraviolet-visible absorption, and steady state and time-resolved fluorescence emission spectroscopic techniques. However, due to its interaction with ZnO, the photophysical properties of BSA depend significantly on the concentration of ZnO NPs in the mixed solution. The quenching of the fluorescence intensity of BSA in the presence of ZnO NPs was due to the interaction between ZnO and BSA, and the formation of their stable ground state complex, as well as energy transfer from the excited BSA to ZnO NPs in the complex nano-bioconjugated species. Multilayer growth of the ZnO/BSA LbL self-assembled film on the quartz substrate was confirmed by monitoring the characteristic absorption band of BSA (280 nm), where the nature of the film growth depends on the number of bilayers deposited on the quartz substrate. BSA formed a well-ordered molecular network-type morphology due to its adsorption onto the surface of the ZnO nanostructure in the backbone of the PAA-coated Si substrate in the LbL film according to atomic force microscopic study. The as-synthesized ZnO NPs were characterized by field emission scanning electron microscopy, X-ray powder diffraction, and dynamic light scattering techniques.
Kvaal, Simen; Helgaker, Trygve
2015-11-14
The relationship between the densities of ground-state wave functions (i.e., the minimizers of the Rayleigh-Ritz variation principle) and the ground-state densities in density-functional theory (i.e., the minimizers of the Hohenberg-Kohn variation principle) is studied within the framework of convex conjugation, in a generic setting covering molecular systems, solid-state systems, and more. Having introduced admissible density functionals as functionals that produce the exact ground-state energy for a given external potential by minimizing over densities in the Hohenberg-Kohn variation principle, necessary and sufficient conditions on such functionals are established to ensure that the Rayleigh-Ritz ground-state densities and the Hohenberg-Kohn ground-state densities are identical. We apply the results to molecular systems in the Born-Oppenheimer approximation. For any given potential v ∈ L(3/2)(ℝ(3)) + L(∞)(ℝ(3)), we establish a one-to-one correspondence between the mixed ground-state densities of the Rayleigh-Ritz variation principle and the mixed ground-state densities of the Hohenberg-Kohn variation principle when the Lieb density-matrix constrained-search universal density functional is taken as the admissible functional. A similar one-to-one correspondence is established between the pure ground-state densities of the Rayleigh-Ritz variation principle and the pure ground-state densities obtained using the Hohenberg-Kohn variation principle with the Levy-Lieb pure-state constrained-search functional. In other words, all physical ground-state densities (pure or mixed) are recovered with these functionals and no false densities (i.e., minimizing densities that are not physical) exist. The importance of topology (i.e., choice of Banach space of densities and potentials) is emphasized and illustrated. The relevance of these results for current-density-functional theory is examined.
Luo, Weidong; Franceschetti, Alberto; Varela, Maria; Tao, Jing; Pennycook, Stephen J; Pantelides, Sokrates T
2007-07-20
The structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of mixed-valence compounds are believed to be governed by strong electron correlations. Here we report benchmark density-functional calculations in the spin-polarized generalized-gradient approximation (GGA) for the ground-state properties of doped CaMnO(3). We find excellent agreement with all available data, while inclusion of strong correlations in the GGA+U scheme impairs this agreement. We demonstrate that formal oxidation states reflect only orbital occupancies, not charge transfer, and resolve outstanding controversies about charge ordering.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Luo, Weidong; Franceschetti, Alberto; Varela, Maria; Tao, Jing; Pennycook, Stephen J.; Pantelides, Sokrates T.
2007-07-01
The structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of mixed-valence compounds are believed to be governed by strong electron correlations. Here we report benchmark density-functional calculations in the spin-polarized generalized-gradient approximation (GGA) for the ground-state properties of doped CaMnO3. We find excellent agreement with all available data, while inclusion of strong correlations in the GGA+U scheme impairs this agreement. We demonstrate that formal oxidation states reflect only orbital occupancies, not charge transfer, and resolve outstanding controversies about charge ordering.
Ground-water data collected in the Missouri River Basin units in Kansas during 1954
Mason, B.J.; Loye, Linda
1955-01-01
Ground water studies in the Missouri River basin were begun by the United States Geological Survey during the fall of 1945 as a part of a program for the development of the resources of the basin by the United States Bureau of Reclamation and other federal agencies. The studies of ground-water resources in the part of Kansas that lies within the Missouri River basin have been coordinated with the cooperative program of ground-water studies which were already being made in Kansas by the U.S Geological Survey, the Kansas State Geological Survey, the Division of Sanitation of the Kansas Board of Health and the Division of Water Resources of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture.
Effect of edge modification on the zigzag BC2N nanoribbons
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xiao, Xiang; Li, Hong; Tie, Jun; Lu, Jing
2016-08-01
We use first principles calculations to investigate the effects of edge modification with nonmetal species on zigzag-edged BC2N nanoribbons (ZBC2NNRs). These ZBC2NNRs show either semiconducting or metallic behaviors depending on the edge modifications and ribbon widths. We find that the O-modification induces a ferromagnetic ground state with a metallic behavior for all the ribbon widths investigated. And when the ribbon width is more than 3.32 nm (NZ ⩾ 16), an antiferromagnetic ground state with a half-metallic behavior is realized in the H-passivated ZBC2NNRs. These versatile electronic properties render the ZBC2NNRs a promising candidate material in nanoelectronics and nanospintronics.
Electronic and optical properties of GaN/AlN quantum dots with adjacent threading dislocations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ye, Han; Lu, Peng-Fei; Yu, Zhong-Yuan; Yao, Wen-Jie; Chen, Zhi-Hui; Jia, Bo-Yong; Liu, Yu-Min
2010-04-01
We present a theory to simulate a coherent GaN QD with an adjacent pure edge threading dislocation by using a finite element method. The piezoelectric effects and the strain modified band edges are investigated in the framework of multi-band k · p theory to calculate the electron and the heavy hole energy levels. The linear optical absorption coefficients corresponding to the interband ground state transition are obtained via the density matrix approach and perturbation expansion method. The results indicate that the strain distribution of the threading dislocation affects the electronic structure. Moreover, the ground state transition behaviour is also influenced by the position of the adjacent threading dislocation.
Quantum Properties of Dichroic Silicon Vacancies in Silicon Carbide
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nagy, Roland; Widmann, Matthias; Niethammer, Matthias; Dasari, Durga B. R.; Gerhardt, Ilja; Soykal, Öney O.; Radulaski, Marina; Ohshima, Takeshi; Vučković, Jelena; Son, Nguyen Tien; Ivanov, Ivan G.; Economou, Sophia E.; Bonato, Cristian; Lee, Sang-Yun; Wrachtrup, Jörg
2018-03-01
Although various defect centers have displayed promise as either quantum sensors, single photon emitters, or light-matter interfaces, the search for an ideal defect with multifunctional ability remains open. In this spirit, we study the dichroic silicon vacancies in silicon carbide that feature two well-distinguishable zero-phonon lines and analyze the quantum properties in their optical emission and spin control. We demonstrate that this center combines 40% optical emission into the zero-phonon lines showing the contrasting difference in optical properties with varying temperature and polarization, and a 100% increase in the fluorescence intensity upon the spin resonance, and long spin coherence time of their spin-3 /2 ground states up to 0.6 ms. These results single out this defect center as a promising system for spin-based quantum technologies.
Chen, Jun; Zhang, Tao; Wang, Shuangqing; Hu, Rui; Li, Shayu; Ma, Jin Shi; Yang, Guoqiang
2015-10-05
A series of triazine-linked mono-, bis- and tris-phthalocyanines are synthesized, intramolecular aggregation is found in bis- and tris-phthalocyanines via π-π stacking interaction. Theoretical and experimental studies reveal the formation of the intramolecular aggregation. The spectrographic, photophysical and nonlinear optical properties of these compounds are adjusted for the formation of the intramolecular aggregation. The bis-phthalocyanine dimer presents smaller fluorescence quantum yield, lower triplet formation yield and the triplet-minus-ground state extinction coefficient, which causes poorer optical limiting performance. It is interesting that the tris-phthalocyanine is composed of a mono-phthalocyanine part and a bis-phthalocyanine part, the optical limiting property of the tris-phthalocyanine is similar to that of mono-phthalocyanine. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Carey, L. D.; Butts, D. A.
2006-12-01
Several past case and climatological studies have analyzed the relationship between tornadogenesis and cloud-to-ground (CG) lightning polarity. In particular, there has been an emphasis on investigating when and under what environmental and storm conditions tornadoes are associated with anomalous positive CG lightning in order to understand cloud electrification mechanisms and to explore tornado nowcasting opportunities using National Lightning Detection Network (NLDN) CG lightning data. Most of the case and all of the climatological studies have been conducted during the warm season (April to September). In the southeastern United States, a significant number of tornadoes occur in the cool season (October to March). To address this gap in our climatological knowledge, we extend past research by determining the NLDN ground flash properties, including polarity, flash density, peak current, and multiplicity, in the vicinity of tornado reports during the cool season from 1989 2002 in the southeastern United States (i.e., from 102 to 72 degrees west longitude and from 24 to 42 degrees north latitude). Following past studies, we examined NLDN CG lightning properties within 50 km and one hour prior to all tornado reports (i.e., F0 - F5 on the Fujita damage scale). Interestingly, no NLDN detected ground flash activity occurred in the vicinity of 967 (29 %) of the 3325 tornado reports in our sample. Only 10 % (236) of the remaining 2358 tornado reports were associated with predominately (> 50 %) positive CG (PPCG) lightning activity. About 25 % (598) of the tornado reports accompanied by ground flash activity were associated with > 25 % positive CG polarity. In our analysis domain, the geographic frequency maximum of tornadoes accompanied by PPCG lightning activity occurred in a north-south oriented region centered on central Kansas that extended northward into Nebraska and southward into Oklahoma. In this preferred region, 30 % to 60 % of all cool season tornado reports were associated with PPCG lightning activity. Secondary frequency maxima of tornadoes accompanied by PPCG lightning occurred from Louisiana to North Carolina in an arc that followed about 100 to 200 km inland from the coast. From North Carolina to Georgia, the secondary maxima were also downwind of the southern Appalachian Mountains. Another secondary frequency maximum in tornado PPCG activity was centered over northern Florida. However, the percentage of tornadoes associated with PPCG lightning activity over these secondary frequency maxima was typically less than 10 %. Interestingly, this percentage was slightly elevated (10 % to 20 %) over North Carolina on the lee side of the Appalachian Mountains. Additional results will be presented and implications of this study will be discussed.
Ground-state calculations of confined hydrogen molecule H2 using variational Monte Carlo method
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Doma, S. B.; El-Gammal, F. N.; Amer, A. A.
2018-07-01
The variational Monte Carlo method is used to evaluate the ground-state energy of a confined hydrogen molecule H2. Accordingly, we considered the.me case of hydrogen molecule confined by a hard prolate spheroidal cavity when the nuclear positions are clamped at the foci (on-focus case). Also, the case of off-focus nuclei in which the two nuclei are not clamped to the foci is studied. This case provides flexibility for the treatment of the molecular properties by selecting an arbitrary size and shape for the confining spheroidal box. A simple chemical analysis concerning the catalytic role of enzyme is investigated. An accurate trial wave function depending on many variational parameters is used for this purpose. The obtained results for the case of clamped foci exhibit good accuracy compared with the high precision variational data presented previously. In the case of off-focus nuclei, an improvement is obtained with respect to the most recent uncorrelated results existing in the literature.
Afanasjev, Anatoli V.; Agbemava, S. E.; Ray, D.; ...
2017-01-01
Here, the analysis of statistical and systematic uncertainties and their propagation to nuclear extremes has been performed. Two extremes of nuclear landscape (neutron-rich nuclei and superheavy nuclei) have been investigated. For the first extreme, we focus on the ground state properties. For the second extreme, we pay a particular attention to theoretical uncertainties in the description of fission barriers of superheavy nuclei and their evolution on going to neutron-rich nuclei.
Single magnetic adsorbates on s-wave superconductors
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Heinrich, Benjamin W.; Pascual, Jose I.; Franke, Katharina J.
2018-02-01
In superconductors, magnetic impurities induce a pair-breaking potential for Cooper pairs, which locally affects the Bogoliubov quasiparticles and gives rise to Yu-Shiba-Rusinov (YSR or Shiba, in short) bound states in the density of states (DoS). These states carry information on the magnetic coupling strength of the impurity with the superconductor, which determines the many-body ground state properties of the system. Recently, the interest in Shiba physics was boosted by the prediction of topological superconductivity and Majorana modes in magnetically coupled chains and arrays of Shiba impurities. Here, we review the physical insights obtained by scanning tunneling microscopy into single magnetic adsorbates on the s-wave superconductor lead (Pb). We explore the tunneling processes into Shiba states, show how magnetic anisotropy affects many-body excitations, and determine the crossing of the many-body ground state through a quantum phase transition. Finally, we discuss the coupling of impurities into dimers and chains and their relation to Majorana physics.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cha, Min-Chul; Chung, Myung-Hoon
2018-05-01
We study quantum phase transition of interacting fermions by measuring the local entanglement entropy in the one-dimensional Hubbard model. The reduced density matrices for blocks of a few sites are constructed from the ground state wave function in infinite systems by adopting the matrix product state representation where time-evolving block decimations are performed to obtain the lowest energy states. The local entanglement entropy, constructed from the reduced density matrices, as a function of the chemical potential shows clear signatures of the Mott transition. The value of the central charge, numerically determined from the universal properties of the local entanglement entropy, confirms that the transition is caused by the suppression of the charge degrees of freedom.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bañuls, Mari Carmen; Cichy, Krzysztof; Cirac, J. Ignacio; Jansen, Karl; Kühn, Stefan
2017-10-01
We propose an explicit formulation of the physical subspace for a (1 +1 )-dimensional SU(2) lattice gauge theory, where the gauge degrees of freedom are integrated out. Our formulation is completely general, and might be potentially suited for the design of future quantum simulators. Additionally, it allows for addressing the theory numerically with matrix product states. We apply this technique to explore the spectral properties of the model and the effect of truncating the gauge degrees of freedom to a small finite dimension. In particular, we determine the scaling exponents for the vector mass. Furthermore, we also compute the entanglement entropy in the ground state and study its scaling towards the continuum limit.
Mass measurements of neutron-rich indium isotopes toward the N =82 shell closure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Babcock, C.; Klawitter, R.; Leistenschneider, E.; Lascar, D.; Barquest, B. R.; Finlay, A.; Foster, M.; Gallant, A. T.; Hunt, P.; Kootte, B.; Lan, Y.; Paul, S. F.; Phan, M. L.; Reiter, M. P.; Schultz, B.; Short, D.; Andreoiu, C.; Brodeur, M.; Dillmann, I.; Gwinner, G.; Kwiatkowski, A. A.; Leach, K. G.; Dilling, J.
2018-02-01
Precise mass measurements of the neutron-rich In-130125 isotopes have been performed with the TITAN Penning trap mass spectrometer. TITAN's electron beam ion trap was used to charge breed the ions to charge state q =13 + thus providing the necessary resolving power to measure not only the ground states but also isomeric states at each mass number. In this paper, the properties of the ground states are investigated through a series of mass differentials, highlighting trends in the indium isotopic chain as compared to its proton-magic neighbor, tin (Z =50 ). In addition, the energies of the indium isomers are presented. The (8-) level in 128In is found to be 78 keV lower than previously thought and the (21 /2- ) isomer in 127In is shown to be lower than the literature value by more than 150 keV.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wdowik, U. D.; Piekarz, P.; Legut, D.; Jagło, G.
2016-08-01
Uranium monocarbide, a potential fuel material for the generation IV reactors, is investigated within density functional theory. Its electronic, magnetic, elastic, and phonon properties are analyzed and discussed in terms of spin-orbit interaction and localized versus itinerant behavior of the 5 f electrons. The localization of the 5 f states is tuned by varying the local Coulomb repulsion interaction parameter. We demonstrate that the theoretical electronic structure, elastic constants, phonon dispersions, and their densities of states can reproduce accurately the results of x-ray photoemission and bremsstrahlung isochromat measurements as well as inelastic neutron scattering experiments only when the 5 f states experience the spin-orbit interaction and simultaneously remain partially localized. The partial localization of the 5 f electrons could be represented by a moderate value of the on-site Coulomb interaction parameter of about 2 eV. The results of the present studies indicate that both strong electron correlations and spin-orbit effects are crucial for realistic theoretical description of the ground-state properties of uranium carbide.
Symmetry-breaking dynamics of the finite-size Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model near ground state
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Huang, Yi; Li, Tongcang; Yin, Zhang-qi
2018-01-01
We study the dynamics of the Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick (LMG) model with a finite number of spins. In the thermodynamic limit, the ground state of the LMG model with an isotropic Hamiltonian in the broken phase breaks to a mean-field ground state with a certain direction. However, when the spin number N is finite, the exact ground state is always unique and is not given by a classical mean-field ground state. Here, we prove that when N is large but finite, through a tiny external perturbation, a localized state which is close to a mean-field ground state can be prepared, which mimics spontaneous symmetry breaking. Also, we find the localized in-plane spin polarization oscillates with two different frequencies ˜O (1 /N ) , and the lifetime of the localized state is long enough to exhibit this oscillation. We numerically test the analytical results and find that they agree very well with each other. Finally, we link the phenomena to quantum time crystals and time quasicrystals.
do N Varella, Márcio T; Arasaki, Yasuki; Ushiyama, Hiroshi; Takatsuka, Kazuo; Wang, Kwanghsi; McKoy, Vincent
2007-02-07
The authors report on studies of time-resolved photoelectron spectra of intramolecular proton transfer in the ground state of chloromalonaldehyde, employing ab initio photoionization matrix elements and effective potential surfaces of reduced dimensionality, wherein the couplings of proton motion to the other molecular vibrational modes are embedded by averaging over classical trajectories. In the simulations, population is transferred from the vibrational ground state to vibrationally hot wave packets by pumping to an excited electronic state and dumping with a time-delayed pulse. These pump-dump-probe simulations demonstrate that the time-resolved photoelectron spectra track proton transfer in the electronic ground state well and, furthermore, that the geometry dependence of the matrix elements enhances the tracking compared with signals obtained with the Condon approximation. Photoelectron kinetic energy distributions arising from wave packets localized in different basins are also distinguishable and could be understood, as expected, on the basis of the strength of the optical couplings in different regions of the ground state potential surface and the Franck-Condon overlaps of the ground state wave packets with the vibrational eigenstates of the ion potential surface.
Schleicher, F; Halisdemir, U; Lacour, D; Gallart, M; Boukari, S; Schmerber, G; Davesne, V; Panissod, P; Halley, D; Majjad, H; Henry, Y; Leconte, B; Boulard, A; Spor, D; Beyer, N; Kieber, C; Sternitzky, E; Cregut, O; Ziegler, M; Montaigne, F; Beaurepaire, E; Gilliot, P; Hehn, M; Bowen, M
2014-08-04
Research on advanced materials such as multiferroic perovskites underscores promising applications, yet studies on these materials rarely address the impact of defects on the nominally expected materials property. Here, we revisit the comparatively simple oxide MgO as the model material system for spin-polarized solid-state tunnelling studies. We present a defect-mediated tunnelling potential landscape of localized states owing to explicitly identified defect species, against which we examine the bias and temperature dependence of magnetotransport. By mixing symmetry-resolved transport channels, a localized state may alter the effective barrier height for symmetry-resolved charge carriers, such that tunnelling magnetoresistance decreases most with increasing temperature when that state is addressed electrically. Thermal excitation promotes an occupancy switchover from the ground to the excited state of a defect, which impacts these magnetotransport characteristics. We thus resolve contradictions between experiment and theory in this otherwise canonical spintronics system, and propose a new perspective on defects in dielectrics.
Kobayashi, Makiko; Hattori, Yusuke; Sasaki, Tetsuo; Otsuka, Makoto
2017-01-01
The purposes of this study were to clarify the amorphization by ball milling of atorvastatin calcium sesquihydrate (AT) and to analyse the change in dissolution kinetics. The amorphous AT was prepared from crystal AT by ball milling and analysed in terms of the changes of its physicochemical properties by powder X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD), thermal analysis and infrared spectroscopy (IR). Moreover, to evaluate the usefulness of the amorphous form for pharmaceutical development, intrinsic solubility of the ground product was evaluated using a dissolution kinetic method. The XRD results indicated that crystalline AT was transformed into amorphous solids by more than 30-min milling. The thermal analysis result suggested that chemical potential of the ground AT are changed significantly by milling. The IR spectra of the AT showed the band shift from the amide group at 3406 cm -1 with an intermolecular hydrogen bond to a free amide group at 3365 cm -1 by milling. The dissolution of amorphous AT follows a dissolution kinetic model involving phase transformation. The initial dissolution rate of the ground product increased with the increase in milling time to reflect the increase in the intrinsic solubility based on the amorphous state. © 2016 Royal Pharmaceutical Society.
Law of corresponding states for open collaborations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gherardi, Marco; Bassetti, Federico; Cosentino Lagomarsino, Marco
2016-04-01
We study the relation between number of contributors and product size in Wikipedia and GitHub. In contrast to traditional production, this is strongly probabilistic, but is characterized by two quantitative nonlinear laws: a power-law bound to product size for increasing number of contributors, and the universal collapse of rescaled distributions. A variant of the random-energy model shows that both laws are due to the heterogeneity of contributors, and displays an intriguing finite-size scaling property with no equivalent in standard systems. The analysis uncovers the right intensive densities, enabling the comparison of projects with different numbers of contributors on equal grounds. We use this property to expose the detrimental effects of conflicting interactions in Wikipedia.
Effect of the depolarization field on coherent optical properties in semiconductor quantum dots
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mitsumori, Yasuyoshi; Watanabe, Shunta; Asakura, Kenta; Seki, Keisuke; Edamatsu, Keiichi; Akahane, Kouichi; Yamamoto, Naokatsu
2018-06-01
We study the photon echo spectrum of self-assembled semiconductor quantum dots using femtosecond light pulses. The spectrum shape changes from a single-peaked to a double-peaked structure as the time delay between the two excitation pulses is increased. The spectrum change is reproduced by numerical calculations, which include the depolarization field induced by the biexciton-exciton transition as well as the conventional local-field effect for the exciton-ground-state transition in a quantum dot. Our findings suggest that various optical transitions in tightly localized systems generate a depolarization field, which renormalizes the resonant frequency with a change in the polarization itself, leading to unique optical properties.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Elmacı, Gökhan; Duyar, Halil; Aydıner, Burcu; Seferoğlu, Nurgül; Naziri, Mir Abolfazl; Şahin, Ertan; Seferoğlu, Zeynel
2018-06-01
Benzil monohydrazone based Schiff bases were synthesized and characterized by 1H NMR, 13C NMR, HRMS as well as by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The geometries of the compounds was optimized by the DFT method and the results were compared with the X-ray diffraction data. The HOMO and LUMO energy gap and also related parameters (electronic chemical potential (μ) and global hardness (η), global electrophilicity index (ω) and softness (s)) were obtained from ground state calculations. In addition, the thermal properties of the compounds were investigated by DTA-TGA. The results showed that the compounds have good thermal properties for practical applications as optic dye.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Peng, Bo; Kowalski, Karol
In this paper we derive basic properties of the Green’s function matrix elements stemming from the exponential coupled cluster (CC) parametrization of the ground-state wave function. We demon- strate that all intermediates used to express retarded (or equivalently, ionized) part of the Green’s function in the ω-representation can be expressed through connected diagrams only. Similar proper- ties are also shared by the first order ω-derivatives of the retarded part of the CC Green’s function. This property can be extended to any order ω-derivatives of the Green’s function. Through the Dyson equation of CC Green’s function, the derivatives of corresponding CCmore » self-energy can be evaluated analytically. In analogy to the CC Green’s function, the corresponding CC self-energy is expressed in terms of connected diagrams only. Moreover, the ionized part of the CC Green’s func- tion satisfies the non-homogeneous linear system of ordinary differential equations, whose solution may be represented in the exponential form. Our analysis can be easily generalized to the advanced part of the CC Green’s function.« less
First-principles study of Ga-vacancy induced magnetism in β-Ga2O3.
Yang, Ya; Zhang, Jihua; Hu, Shunbo; Wu, Yabei; Zhang, Jincang; Ren, Wei; Cao, Shixun
2017-11-01
First principles calculations based on density functional theory were performed to study the electronic structure and magnetic properties of β-Ga 2 O 3 in the presence of cation vacancies. We investigated two kinds of Ga vacancies at different symmetry sites and the consequent structural distortion and defect states. We found that both the six-fold coordinated octahedral site and the four-fold coordinated tetrahedral site vacancies can lead to a spin polarized ground state. Furthermore, the calculation identified a relationship between the spin polarization and the charge states of the vacancies, which might be explained by a molecular orbital model consisting of uncompensated O 2- 2p dangling bonds. The calculations for the two vacancy systems also indicated a potential long-range ferromagnetic order which is beneficial for spintronics application.
Semistable extremal ground states for nonlinear evolution equations in unbounded domains
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rodríguez-Bernal, Aníbal; Vidal-López, Alejandro
2008-02-01
In this paper we show that dissipative reaction-diffusion equations in unbounded domains posses extremal semistable ground states equilibria, which bound asymptotically the global dynamics. Uniqueness of such positive ground state and their approximation by extremal equilibria in bounded domains is also studied. The results are then applied to the important case of logistic equations.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bakri, Badis; Driss, Zied; Berri, Saadi; Khenata, Rabah
2017-12-01
In this work, the structural, electronic and optical properties of fluoroperovskite ABF3 (A = K, Na; B = Mg, Zn) were studied using two different approaches: the full-potential linearized augmented plane wave method and the pseudo-potential plane wave scheme in the frame of generalized gradient approximation features such as the lattice constant, bulk modulus and its pressure derivative are reported. The ground state properties of these compounds such as the equilibrium lattice constant and the bulk modulus are in good agreement with the experimental results. The first principles calculations were performed to study the electronic structures of ABF3(A = K, Na; B = Mg, Zn) compounds and the results indicated that these four compounds are indirect band gap insulators. The optical properties are analysed and the source of some peaks in the spectra is discussed. Besides, the dielectric function, refractive index and extinction coefficient for radiation up to 25 eV have also been reported and discussed.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ma, Li; Ray, Asok K.
2010-03-01
As a continuation of our studies of pure actinide metals using hybrid density functional theory,footnotetextR. Atta-Fynn and A. K. Ray, Europhysics Letters, 85, 27008-p1- p6 (2009); Chemical Physics Letters, 482, 223-227 (2009). we present here a systematic study of the electronic and geometric structure properties of mixed actinide dioxides, U0.5Pu0.5O2, U0.5Am0.5O2, Pu0.5Am0.5 O2 and U0.8Pu0.2O2. The fraction of exact Hartree-Fock exchange used was 40%. To investigate the effect of spin-orbit coupling on the ground state electronic and geometric structure properties, computations have been carried out at two theoretical levels, one at the scalar-relativistic level with no spin-orbit coupling and one at the fully relativistic level with spin-orbit coupling. Thermodynamic properties have been calculated by a coupling of first-principles calculation and lattice dynamics.
Leighton, David A.; Phillips, Steven P.
2003-01-01
Antelope Valley, California, is a topographically closed basin in the western part of the Mojave Desert, about 50 miles northeast of Los Angeles. The Antelope Valley ground-water basin is about 940 square miles and is separated from the northern part of Antelope Valley by faults and low-lying hills. Prior to 1972, ground water provided more than 90 percent of the total water supply in the valley; since 1972, it has provided between 50 and 90 percent. Most ground-water pumping in the valley occurs in the Antelope Valley ground-water basin, which includes the rapidly growing cities of Lancaster and Palmdale. Ground-water-level declines of more than 200 feet in some parts of the ground-water basin have resulted in an increase in pumping lifts, reduced well efficiency, and land subsidence of more than 6 feet in some areas. Future urban growth and limits on the supply of imported water may continue to increase reliance on ground water. To better understand the ground-water flow system and to develop a tool to aid in effectively managing the water resources, a numerical model of ground-water flow and land subsidence in the Antelope Valley ground-water basin was developed using old and new geohydrologic information. The ground-water flow system consists of three aquifers: the upper, middle, and lower aquifers. The aquifers, which were identified on the basis of the hydrologic properties, age, and depth of the unconsolidated deposits, consist of gravel, sand, silt, and clay alluvial deposits and clay and silty clay lacustrine deposits. Prior to ground-water development in the valley, recharge was primarily the infiltration of runoff from the surrounding mountains. Ground water flowed from the recharge areas to discharge areas around the playas where it discharged either from the aquifer system as evapotranspiration or from springs. Partial barriers to horizontal ground-water flow, such as faults, have been identified in the ground-water basin. Water-level declines owing to ground-water development have eliminated the natural sources of discharge, and pumping for agricultural and urban uses have become the primary source of discharge from the ground-water system. Infiltration of return flows from agricultural irrigation has become an important source of recharge to the aquifer system. The ground-water flow model of the basin was discretized horizontally into a grid of 43 rows and 60 columns of square cells 1 mile on a side, and vertically into three layers representing the upper, middle, and lower aquifers. Faults that were thought to act as horizontal-flow barriers were simulated in the model. The model was calibrated to simulate steady-state conditions, represented by 1915 water levels and transient-state conditions during 1915-95 using water-level and subsidence data. Initial estimates of the aquifer-system properties and stresses were obtained from a previously published numerical model of the Antelope Valley ground-water basin; estimates also were obtained from recently collected hydrologic data and from results of simulations of ground-water flow and land subsidence models of the Edwards Air Force Base area. Some of these initial estimates were modified during model calibration. Ground-water pumpage for agriculture was estimated on the basis of irrigated crop acreage and crop consumptive-use data. Pumpage for public supply, which is metered, was compiled and entered into a database used for this study. Estimated annual pumpage peaked at 395,000 acre-feet (acre-ft) in 1952 and then declined because of declining agricultural production. Recharge from irrigation-return flows was estimated to be 30 percent of agricultural pumpage; the irrigation-return flows were simulated as recharge to the regional water table 10 years following application at land surface. The annual quantity of natural recharge initially was based on estimates from previous studies. During model calibration, natural recharge was reduced from the initial
First principles study on structural, lattice dynamical and thermal properties of BaCeO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhang, Qingping; Ding, Jinwen; He, Min
2017-09-01
BaCeO3 exhibits impressive application potentials on solid oxide fuel cell electrolyte, hydrogen separation membrane and photocatalyst, owing to its unique ionic and electronic properties. In this article, the electronic structures, phonon spectra and thermal properties of BaCeO3 in orthorhombic, rhombohedral and cubic phases are investigated based on density functional theory. Comparisons with reported experimental results are also presented. The calculation shows that orthorhombic structure is both energetically and dynamically stable under ground state, which is supported by the experiment. Moreover, charge transfer between cations and anions accompanied with phase transition is observed, which is responsible for the softened phonon modes in rhombohedral and cubic phases. Besides, thermal properties are discussed. Oxygen atoms contribute most to the specific heat. The calculated entropy and specific heat at constant pressure fit well with the experimental ones within the measured temperature range.
A study of remotely sensed aerosol properties from ground-based sun and sky scanning radiometers
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Giles, David M.
Aerosol particles impact human health by degrading air quality and affect climate by heating or cooling the atmosphere. The Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP) of Northern India, one of the most populous regions in the world, produces and is impacted by a variety of aerosols including pollution, smoke, dust, and mixtures of them. The NASA Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) mesoscale distribution of Sun and sky-pointing instruments in India was established to measure aerosol characteristics at sites across the IGP and around Kanpur, India, a large urban and industrial center in the IGP, during the 2008 pre-monsoon (April-June). This study focused on detecting spatial and temporal variability of aerosols, validating satellite retrievals, and classifying the dominant aerosol mixing states and origins. The Kanpur region typically experiences high aerosol loading due to pollution and smoke during the winter and high aerosol loading due to the addition of dust to the pollution and smoke mixture during the pre-monsoon. Aerosol emissions in Kanpur likely contribute up to 20% of the aerosol loading during the pre-monsoon over the IGP. Aerosol absorption also increases significantly downwind of Kanpur indicating the possibility of the black carbon emissions from aerosol sources such as coal-fired power plants and brick kilns. Aerosol retrievals from satellite show a high bias when compared to the mesoscale distributed instruments around Kanpur during the pre-monsoon with few high quality retrievals due to imperfect aerosol type and land surface characteristic assumptions. Aerosol type classification using the aerosol absorption, size, and shape properties can identify dominant aerosol mixing states of absorbing dust and black carbon particles. Using 19 long-term AERONET sites near various aerosol source regions (Dust, Mixed, Urban/Industrial, and Biomass Burning), aerosol absorption property statistics are expanded upon and show significant differences when compared to previous work. The sensitivity of absorption properties is evaluated and quantified with respect to aerosol retrieval uncertainty. Using clustering analysis, aerosol absorption and size relationships provide a simple method to classify aerosol mixing states and origins and potentially improve aerosol retrievals from ground-based and satellite-based instrumentation.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Frolov, Alexei M.
2015-10-01
Formulas and expectation values which are need to determine the lowest-order QED corrections (∼α3) and corresponding recoil (or finite mass) corrections in the two-electron helium-like ions are presented. Other important properties of the two-electron ions are also determined to high accuracy, including the expectation values of the quasi-singular Vinti operator and < reN-2> and < ree-2> expectation values. Elastic scattering of fast electrons by the two-electron ions in the Born approximation is considered. Interpolation formulas are derived for the bound state properties of the two-electron ions as the function of the nuclear electric charge Q.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Schwerdtfeger, P.; McFeaters, J.S.; Moore, J.J.
1991-01-01
Ab initio SCF studies have been performed to study the molecular properties of several single-bonded palladium compounds, PdH, PdC, PdO, PdF, Pd{sub 2}, and PdCO, which are important in surface and materials science. Electron correlation effects were evaluated by a second- and third-order Moller-Plesset (MP) perturbation theory and a size-consistency-corrected configuration interaction with single and double substitutions (CISC). Relativistic effects were investigated for PdH and PdF. The ground state of PdC has been calculated at the CISC level to be a {sup 3}{Pi} state which is only 0.26 eV below the {sup 3}{Sigma}{sup {minus}} state (previously assigned ground state) andmore » 0.51 eV below the {sup 1}{Sigma}{sup +} state. PdC is predicted to be stable in the gas phase, and the possibility of preparing this compound is investigated. The bonding in CO chemisorbed on palladium is studied by using the model Pd-CO system. The effect of d{sub {pi}}-{pi}{sup *} back-bonding, discussed at the Hartree-Fock and CI level, is compared with results from multiple-scattering {Chi}{alpha} calculations. The C-O stretching frequency shift for CO on palladium was analyzed at various levels of theory, and the results indicated that the decrease in the CO force constant associated with chemisorption is not solely the result of d{sub {pi}}-{pi}{sup *} back-bonding.« less
A hybrid modelling approach for predicting ground vibration from trains
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Triepaischajonsak, N.; Thompson, D. J.
2015-01-01
The prediction of ground vibration from trains presents a number of difficulties. The ground is effectively an infinite medium, often with a layered structure and with properties that may vary greatly from one location to another. The vibration from a passing train forms a transient event, which limits the usefulness of steady-state frequency domain models. Moreover, there is often a need to consider vehicle/track interaction in more detail than is commonly used in frequency domain models, such as the 2.5D approach, while maintaining the computational efficiency of the latter. However, full time-domain approaches involve large computation times, particularly where three-dimensional ground models are required. Here, a hybrid modelling approach is introduced. The vehicle/track interaction is calculated in the time domain in order to be able t account directly for effects such as the discrete sleeper spacing. Forces acting on the ground are extracted from this first model and used in a second model to predict the ground response at arbitrary locations. In the present case the second model is a layered ground model operating in the frequency domain. Validation of the approach is provided by comparison with an existing frequency domain model. The hybrid model is then used to study the sleeper-passing effect, which is shown to be less significant than excitation due to track unevenness in all the cases considered.
Mississippi Embayment Regional Ground Water Study
Increased water usage in the southeastern United States in the tri-state area of Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkansas poses a dilemma to ensuring long-term sustainability of the quantity and quality of ground-water resources that underlie the region. Demand for ground water by ag...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nag, Abhishek; Bhowal, Sayantika; Bert, F.; Hillier, A. D.; Itoh, M.; Carlomagno, Ilaria; Meneghini, C.; Sarkar, T.; Mathieu, R.; Dasgupta, I.; Ray, Sugata
2018-02-01
Spin-orbit coupling (SOC) is found to be crucial for understanding the magnetic and electronic properties of 5 d transition metal oxides. In 5 d systems, with Ir5 + ions, where ideally a nonmagnetic J =0 ground state is expected to be stabilized in the presence of strong SOC, often spontaneous moments are generated due to hopping induced superexchange. This effect is more pronounced when the Ir atoms are close by, as in systems with Ir2O9 dimers in 6 H Ba3M Ir2O9 compounds where magnetism is an outcome of complex Ir-O-Ir exchange paths, and is strongly influenced by the presence of local distortions. We find that subtle variations in the local structure of Ba3M Ir2O9 (M = Mg, Sr, and Ca) lead to markedly different magnetic properties. While SOC plays a pivotal role in explaining the insulating ground states of these systems, it is seen that Ba3MgIr2O9 , having a P 63 /m m c symmetry, does not order down to low temperature despite having antiferromagnetic exchange interactions, while Ba3CaIr2O9 shows weak dimer-like features and stabilizes in C 2 /c' magnetic configuration with no net moment, and Ba3SrIr2O9 possesses a ground state corresponding to the magnetic space group C 2'/c' and exhibits ferromagnet-like features.
Preliminary study of a gas burner-driven and ground-coupled heat pump system
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hsu, P.F.
1995-12-31
To address the concerns for higher energy efficiency and the immediate phase out of the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), a new gas burner-driven, ground-coupled heat pump (GBGCHP) system is proposed for study. The new system is energy efficient and pose no environmental problem. There are three unique features in the proposed system: (1) a patented gas burner-driven compressor with a floating diaphragm piston-cylinder for energy efficiency and accommodating variable load, (2) the ground coupled water-to-air heat exchangers for high coefficient of performance (COPs), and (3) the new refrigerants based on fluoroiodocarbons (FICS) with very little ozone depletion and global warming potential. Amore » preliminary analysis of a prototype heat pump with 3 ton (10.55 kW) heating capacity is presented. The thermodynamics analysis of the system shows that the steady state COP rating higher than 7 is possible with the system operating in heating mode. Additional research work for the GBGCHP system, especially the FICs` thermodynamic properties in the superheated region, is also described.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kurbah, Sunshine D.; Kumar, A.; Syiemlieh, I.; Dey, A. K.; Lal, R. A.
2018-02-01
Heterobimetallic complexes of the composition [CuNi(bpy)2 (μ-OAc) (μ-OH) (μ-OH2)](BF4)2 (1) and [CuNi(bz)3 (bpy)2]ClO4 (2) were synthesized in moderate yield through solid state reaction and have been characterized by elemental analyses, molar conductance, mass spectra, magnetic moment, EPR, UV-Vis, IR spectroscopies and cyclic voltammetry. The ground state in complex (1) is doublet while that in complex (2), the ground state is a mixture of doublet and quartet, respectively. The structure of the complexes has been established by X-ray crystallography. The electron transfer reactions of the complexes have been investigated by cyclic voltammetry.
Low-energy excitations of a Bose-Einstein condensate of rigid rotor molecules
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Smith, Joseph; Jones, Evan; Rittenhouse, Seth; Wilson, Ryan; Peden, Brandon
2017-04-01
We investigate the properties of the ground state and low-lying excitations of an oblate Bose-Einstein condensate composed of rigid rotor molecules in the presence of an external polarizing electric field. We build in a quantum model of molecular polarizability by including the full manifold of rotational states. The interplay between spatial and microscopic degrees of freedom via feedback between the molecular polarizability and inter-molecular dipole-dipole interactions leads to a rich quasi-particle spectrum. Under large applied fields, we reproduce the well-understood density-wave rotonization that appears in a fully polarized dipolar BEC, but under smaller applied fields, we predict the emergence of a spin wave instability and possible new stable ground state phases. We gratefully acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHYS-1516421.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zakerhamidi, M. S.; Zare Haghighi, L.; Seyed Ahmadian, S. M.
2017-09-01
In this paper, absorption and fluorescence spectra of vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) and vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) were recorded in solvents with different polarity, at room temperature. These vitamins' photo-physical behavior depends strongly on the solvent's nature along with different attached groups in their structures. In order to investigate the solvent-solute interactions and environmental effect on spectral variations, linear solvation energy relationships concept, suggested by Kamlet and Taft was used. Solvatochromic method was also used for measuring the ground and excited state dipole moments of these vitamins. According to our experimental results, dipole moment of these groups of vitamins in excited state is larger than ground state. Furthermore, obtained photo-physical and interactional properties of used vitamins can give important information on how this group of vitamins behaves in biological systems.
The first-principles investigations on magnetic ground-state in Sm-doped phenanthrene
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Han, Jia-Xing; Zhong, Guo-Hua; Wang, Xiao-Hui; Chen, Xiao-Jia; Lin, Hai-Qing
2017-05-01
Based on the density functional theory plus the effective Coulomb repulsion U, we have investigated the crystal structure, electronic properties and magnetic characteristics in Sm-doped phenanthrene, recently characterized as a superconductor with Tc˜5 -6 Kelvin. Calculated total energies of different magnetic states indicate that Sm-doped phenanthrene is stable at the ferromagnetic ground-state. Considered the strong electronic correlations effect due to the intercalation of Sm-4f electrons, we found that the Sm-4f contributes to the Fermi surface together with C-2p, which is different from K-doped phenanthrene. Compared with alkali-metal-doped phenanthrene, Sm atom has larger local magnetic moment, which suppresses the superconductivity in conventional superconductors. Our results indicate that the electron-electron correlations play an important role in superconductivity of Sm-doped phenanthrene.
Collier, Sonya; Zhou, Shan; Onasch, Timothy B; Jaffe, Daniel A; Kleinman, Lawrence; Sedlacek, Arthur J; Briggs, Nicole L; Hee, Jonathan; Fortner, Edward; Shilling, John E; Worsnop, Douglas; Yokelson, Robert J; Parworth, Caroline; Ge, Xinlei; Xu, Jianzhong; Butterfield, Zachary; Chand, Duli; Dubey, Manvendra K; Pekour, Mikhail S; Springston, Stephen; Zhang, Qi
2016-08-16
Wildfires are important contributors to atmospheric aerosols and a large source of emissions that impact regional air quality and global climate. In this study, the regional and nearfield influences of wildfire emissions on ambient aerosol concentration and chemical properties in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States were studied using real-time measurements from a fixed ground site located in Central Oregon at the Mt. Bachelor Observatory (∼2700 m a.s.l.) as well as near their sources using an aircraft. The regional characteristics of biomass burning aerosols were found to depend strongly on the modified combustion efficiency (MCE), an index of the combustion processes of a fire. Organic aerosol emissions had negative correlations with MCE, whereas the oxidation state of organic aerosol increased with MCE and plume aging. The relationships between the aerosol properties and MCE were consistent between fresh emissions (∼1 h old) and emissions sampled after atmospheric transport (6-45 h), suggesting that biomass burning organic aerosol concentration and chemical properties were strongly influenced by combustion processes at the source and conserved to a significant extent during regional transport. These results suggest that MCE can be a useful metric for describing aerosol properties of wildfire emissions and their impacts on regional air quality and global climate.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Monteseguro, V.; Rodríguez-Hernández, P.; Muñoz, A., E-mail: amunoz@ull.es
The structural, elastic, and vibrational properties of yttrium aluminum garnet Y{sub 3}Al{sub 5}O{sub 12} are studied under high pressure by ab initio calculations in the framework of the density functional theory. The calculated ground state properties are in good agreement with the available experimental data. Pressure dependences of bond length and bulk moduli of the constituent polyhedra are reported. The evolution of the elastic constants and the major elastic properties, Young and shear modulus, Poisson's ratios, and Zener anisotropy ratio, are described. The mechanical stability is analyzed, on the light of “Born generalized stability criteria,” showing that the garnet ismore » mechanically unstable above 116 GPa. Symmetries, frequencies, and pressure coefficients of the Raman-active modes are discussed on the basis of the calculated total and partial phonon density of states, which reflect the dynamical contribution of each atom. The relations between the phonon modes of Y{sub 3}Al{sub 5}O{sub 12} and the internal and external molecular modes of the different polyhedra are discussed. Infrared-active modes, as well as the silent modes, and their pressure dependence are also investigated. No dynamical instabilities were found below 116 GPa.« less
Structures and magnetic properties of Fe and Ni monoatomic chains encapsulated by an Au nanotube
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Han, Zhi-Dong; Li, Xiu-Yan; Yang, Zhi; Liu, Rui-Ping; Liu, Shao-Ding; Zhang, Ying
2012-11-01
Structures and magnetic properties of transition metal (TM) Fe or Ni monoatomic chains (MACs) encapsulated by a Au (5, 5) nanotube (Fe@Au and Ni@Au) are investigated using the density functional theory (DFT). The calculated results show that both Fe@Au and Ni@Au prefer to adopt ferromagnetic (FM) orders as ground states. In particular, the Fe@Au keeps the magnetic properties of free-standing Fe MAC, indicating that this system may be viewed as a new candidate in electromagnetic devices.
Structure and properties of CaMnO3/SrMnO3/BaMnO3 superlattices from first principles
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, Shen; Oh, Seongshik; Rabe, Karin
2008-03-01
Previous theoretical and experimental studies have shown that three-component, or ``tri-color'' superlattices can exhibit intrinsic electric polarization due to inversion-symmetry breaking in the layer sequence. In ferromagnetic inversion-symmetry-breaking superlattices, controlled symmetry lowering is similarly expected to lead to interesting new and tunable properties. Here, we present results of first-principles density-functional-theory calculations for short-period CaMnO3/SrMnO3/BaMnO3 superlattices, using VASP. The ground state structure, magnetic ordering, polarization and dielectric response will be presented. The role of epitaxial strain in the individual layers and the role of layer sequence will be explored. Connections to experimental studies and prospects for future work will be discussed.
Particle-hole symmetry, many-body localization, and topological edge modes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vasseur, Romain; Friedman, Aaron J.; Parameswaran, S. A.; Potter, Andrew C.
We study the excited states of interacting fermions in one dimension with particle-hole symmetric disorder (equivalently, random-bond XXZ chains) using a combination of renormalization group methods and exact diagonalization. Absent interactions, the entire many-body spectrum exhibits infinite-randomness quantum critical behavior with highly degenerate excited states. We show that though interactions are an irrelevant perturbation in the ground state, they drastically affect the structure of excited states: even arbitrarily weak interactions split the degeneracies in favor of thermalization (weak disorder) or spontaneously broken particle-hole symmetry, driving the system into a many-body localized spin glass phase (strong disorder). In both cases, the quantum critical properties of the non-interacting model are destroyed, either by thermal decoherence or spontaneous symmetry breaking. This system then has the interesting and counterintuitive property that edges of the many-body spectrum are less localized than the center of the spectrum. We argue that our results rule out the existence of certain excited state symmetry-protected topological orders. Supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation's EPiQS Initiative (Grant GBMF4307 (ACP), the Quantum Materials Program at LBNL (RV), NSF Grant DMR-1455366 and UCOP Research Catalyst Award No. CA-15-327861 (SAP).
Ghosh, Rajib; Kushwaha, Archana; Das, Dipanwita
2017-09-21
Fluorescent molecular rotors find widespread application in sensing and imaging of microscopic viscosity in complex chemical and biological media. Development of viscosity-sensitive ultrafast molecular rotor (UMR) relies upon the understanding of the excited-state dynamics and their implications for viscosity-dependent fluorescence signaling. Unraveling the structure-property relationship of UMR behavior is of significance toward development of an ultrasensitive fluorescence microviscosity sensor. Herein we show that the ground-state equilibrium conformation has an important role in the ultrafast twisting dynamics of UMRs and consequent viscosity sensing efficiency. Synthesis, photophysics, and ultrafast spectroscopic experiments in conjunction with quantum chemical calculation of a series of UMRs based on dimethylaniline donor and benzimidazolium acceptor with predefined ground-state torsion angle led us to unravel that the ultrafast torsional dynamics around the bond connecting donor and acceptor groups profoundly influences the molecular rotor efficiency. This is the first experimental demonstration of conformational control of small-molecule-based UMR efficiencies which can have wider implication toward development of fluorescence sensors based on the UMR principle. Conformation-controlled UMR efficiency has been shown to exhibit commensurate fluorescence enhancement upon DNA binding.
Barragán, Patricia; Pérez de Tudela, Ricardo; Qu, Chen; Prosmiti, Rita; Bowman, Joel M
2013-07-14
Diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) and path-integral Monte Carlo computations of the vibrational ground state and 10 K equilibrium state properties of the H7 (+)/D7 (+) cations are presented, using an ab initio full-dimensional potential energy surface. The DMC zero-point energies of dissociated fragments H5 (+)(D5 (+))+H2(D2) are also calculated and from these results and the electronic dissociation energy, dissociation energies, D0, of 752 ± 15 and 980 ± 14 cm(-1) are reported for H7 (+) and D7 (+), respectively. Due to the known error in the electronic dissociation energy of the potential surface, these quantities are underestimated by roughly 65 cm(-1). These values are rigorously determined for first time, and compared with previous theoretical estimates from electronic structure calculations using standard harmonic analysis, and available experimental measurements. Probability density distributions are also computed for the ground vibrational and 10 K state of H7 (+) and D7 (+). These are qualitatively described as a central H3 (+)/D3 (+) core surrounded by "solvent" H2/D2 molecules that nearly freely rotate.
Ground-state properties of light kaonic nuclei signaling symmetry energy at high densities
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Rongyao; Wei, Sina; Jiang, Weizhou
2018-01-01
A sensitive correlation between the ground-state properties of light kaonic nuclei and the symmetry energy at high densities is constructed under the framework of relativistic mean-field theory. Taking oxygen isotopes as an example, we see that a high-density core is produced in kaonic oxygen nuclei, due to the strongly attractive antikaon-nucleon interaction. It is found that the 1{S}1/2 state energy in the high-density core of kaonic nuclei can directly probe the variation of the symmetry energy at supranormal nuclear density, and a sensitive correlation between the neutron skin thickness and the symmetry energy at supranormal density is established directly. Meanwhile, the sensitivity of the neutron skin thickness to the low-density slope of the symmetry energy is greatly increased in the corresponding kaonic nuclei. These sensitive relationships are established upon the fact that the isovector potential in the central region of kaonic nuclei becomes very sensitive to the variation of the symmetry energy. These findings might provide another perspective to constrain high-density symmetry energy, and await experimental verification in the future. Supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (11775049, 11275048) and the China Jiangsu Provincial Natural Science Foundation (BK20131286)
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Robledo, L. M.; Baldo, M.; Schuck, P.
We discuss the octupole deformation properties of the recently proposed Barcelona-Catania-Paris (BCP) energy density functionals for two sets of isotopes, those of radium and barium, in which it is believed that octupole deformation plays a role in the description of the ground state. The analysis is carried out in the mean field framework (Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approximation) by using the axially symmetric octupole moment as a constraint. The main ingredients entering the octupole collective Hamiltonian are evaluated and the lowest-lying octupole eigenstates are obtained. In this way we restore, in an approximate way, the parity symmetry spontaneously broken by the mean fieldmore » and also incorporate octupole fluctuations around the ground-state solution. For each isotope the energy of the lowest lying 1{sup -} state and the B(E1) and B(E3) transition probabilities have been computed and compared to both the experimental data and the results obtained in the same framework with the Gogny D1S interaction, which are used here as a well-established benchmark. Finally, the octupolarity of the configurations involved in the way down to fission of {sup 240}Pu, which is strongly connected to the asymmetric fragment mass distribution, is studied. We confirm with this thorough study the suitability of the BCP functionals to describe octupole-related phenomena.« less
Cooperative bi-exponential decay of dye emission coupled via plasmons.
Lyvers, David P; Moazzezi, Mojtaba; de Silva, Vashista C; Brown, Dean P; Urbas, Augustine M; Rostovtsev, Yuri V; Drachev, Vladimir P
2018-06-22
Bi-exponential decay of dye fluorescence near the surface of plasmonic metamaterials and core-shell nanoparticles is shown to be an intrinsic property of the coupled system. Indeed, the Dicke, cooperative states involve two groups of transitions: super-radiant, from the most excited to the ground states and sub-radiant, which cannot reach the ground state. The relaxation in the sub-radiant system occurs mainly due to the interaction with the plasmon modes. Our theory shows that the relaxation leads to the population of the sub-radiant states by dephasing the super-radiant Dicke states giving rise to the bi-exponential decay in agreement with the experiments. We use a set of metamaterial samples consisting of gratings of paired silver nanostrips coated with Rh800 dye molecules, having resonances in the same spectral range. The bi-exponential decay is demonstrated for Au\\SiO 2 \\ATTO655 core-shell nanoparticles as well, which persists even when averaging over a broad range of the coupling parameter.
Ground-state magnetization of the Ising spin glass: A recursive numerical method and Chen-Ma scaling
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sepehrinia, Reza; Chalangari, Fartash
2018-03-01
The ground-state properties of quasi-one-dimensional (Q1D) Ising spin glass are investigated using an exact numerical approach and analytical arguments. A set of coupled recursive equations for the ground-state energy are introduced and solved numerically. For various types of coupling distribution, we obtain accurate results for magnetization, particularly in the presence of a weak external magnetic field. We show that in the weak magnetic field limit, similar to the 1D model, magnetization exhibits a singular power-law behavior with divergent susceptibility. Remarkably, the spectrum of magnetic exponents is markedly different from that of the 1D system even in the case of two coupled chains. The magnetic exponent makes a crossover from being dependent on a distribution function to a constant value independent of distribution. We provide an analytic theory for these observations by extending the Chen-Ma argument to the Q1D case. We derive an analytical formula for the exponent which is in perfect agreement with the numerical results.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Srivastava, Sangeeta; Gupta, Preeti; Amandeep; Singh, Ranvijay Pratap
2016-04-01
Curcumin (1), isolated as a major component from the chloroform extract of Curcuma longa was converted to its ester derivative 4-((1E, 6E)-7-(4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenyl)-3,5-dioxohepta-1,6-dienyl)-2-methoxyphenyl 4-fluorobenzoate (2). The compound has been characterized with the help of 1H, 13C NMR, UV, IR and mass spectrometry. The molecular geometry of synthesized compound was calculated in ground state by Density functional theory (DFT/B3LYP) using 6-31G (d,p) basis set. 1H and 13C NMR chemical shifts were calculated in ground state by using Gauge-Including Atomic Orbital (GIAO) approach and these values were correlated with experimental observations. The electronic properties such as HOMO and LUMO energies were calculated using time dependent Density Functional Theory (TD-DFT). Stability of the molecule as a result of hyper conjugative interactions and electron delocalization were analysed using Natural bond orbital (NBO) analysis. Intramolecular interactions were analysed by AIM (Atom in molecule) approach. Global reactivity descriptors were calculated to study the reactive site within molecule. The vibrational wavenumbers were calculated using DFT method and assigned with the help of potential energy distribution (PED). First hyperpolarizability values have been calculated to describe the nonlinear optical (NLO) property of the synthesized compounds. Molecular electrostatic potential (MEP) analysis has also been carried out.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Cook, Jasper D.; Carey, Thomas J.; Arias, Dylan H.
A detailed photophysical picture is elaborated for a structurally well-defined and symmetrical bis-tetracene dimer in solution. The molecule was designed for interrogation of the initial photophysical steps (S 1 → 1TT) in intramolecular singlet fission (SF). (Triisopropylsilyl)acetylene substituents on the dimer TIPS-BT1 as well as a monomer model TIPS-Tc enable a comparison of photophysical properties, including transient absorption dynamics, as solvent polarity is varied. In nonpolar toluene solutions, TIPS-BT1 decays via radiative and nonradiative pathways to the ground state with no evidence for dynamics related to the initial stages of SF. This contrasts with the behavior of the previously reportedmore » unsubstituted dimer BT1 and is likely a consequence of energetic perturbations to the singlet excited-state manifold of TIPS-BT1 by the (trialkylsilyl)acetylene substituents. In polar benzonitrile, two key findings emerge. First, photoexcited TIPS-BT1 shows a bifurcation into both arm-localized (S 1-loc) and dimer-delocalized (S 1-dim) singlet exciton states. The S 1-loc decays to the ground state, and weak temperature dependence of its emissive signatures suggests that once it is formed, it is isolated from S 1-dim. Emissive signatures of the S 1-dim state, on the other hand, are strongly temperature-dependent, and transient absorption dynamics show that S1-dim equilibrates with an intramolecular charge-transfer state in 50 ps at room temperature. This equilibrium decays to the ground state with little evidence for formation of long-lived triplets nor 1TT. These detailed studies spectrally characterize many of the key states in intramolecular SF in this class of dimers but highlight the need to tune electronic coupling and energetics for the S 1 → 1TT photoreaction.« less
Cook, Jasper D.; Carey, Thomas J.; Arias, Dylan H.; ...
2017-11-04
A detailed photophysical picture is elaborated for a structurally well-defined and symmetrical bis-tetracene dimer in solution. The molecule was designed for interrogation of the initial photophysical steps (S 1 → 1TT) in intramolecular singlet fission (SF). (Triisopropylsilyl)acetylene substituents on the dimer TIPS-BT1 as well as a monomer model TIPS-Tc enable a comparison of photophysical properties, including transient absorption dynamics, as solvent polarity is varied. In nonpolar toluene solutions, TIPS-BT1 decays via radiative and nonradiative pathways to the ground state with no evidence for dynamics related to the initial stages of SF. This contrasts with the behavior of the previously reportedmore » unsubstituted dimer BT1 and is likely a consequence of energetic perturbations to the singlet excited-state manifold of TIPS-BT1 by the (trialkylsilyl)acetylene substituents. In polar benzonitrile, two key findings emerge. First, photoexcited TIPS-BT1 shows a bifurcation into both arm-localized (S 1-loc) and dimer-delocalized (S 1-dim) singlet exciton states. The S 1-loc decays to the ground state, and weak temperature dependence of its emissive signatures suggests that once it is formed, it is isolated from S 1-dim. Emissive signatures of the S 1-dim state, on the other hand, are strongly temperature-dependent, and transient absorption dynamics show that S1-dim equilibrates with an intramolecular charge-transfer state in 50 ps at room temperature. This equilibrium decays to the ground state with little evidence for formation of long-lived triplets nor 1TT. These detailed studies spectrally characterize many of the key states in intramolecular SF in this class of dimers but highlight the need to tune electronic coupling and energetics for the S 1 → 1TT photoreaction.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Deluque Toro, C. E.; Mosquera Polo, A. S.; Gil Rebaza, A. V.; Landínez Téllez, D. A.; Roa-Rojas, J.
2018-04-01
We report first-principles calculations of the elastic properties, electronic structure and magnetic behavior performed over the Ba2NiMoO6 double perovskite. Calculations are carried out through the full-potential linear augmented plane-wave method within the framework of the Density Functional Theory (DFT) with exchange and correlation effects in the Generalized Gradient and Local Density Approximations, including spin polarization. The elastic properties calculated are bulk modulus (B), the elastic constants (C 11, C 12 and C 44), the Zener anisotropy factor (A), the isotropic shear modulus (G), the Young modulus (Y) and the Poisson ratio (υ). Structural parameters, total energies and cohesive properties of the perovskite are studied by means of minimization of internal parameters with the Murnaghan equation, where the structural parameters are in good agreement with experimental data. Furthermore, we have explored different antiferromagnetic configurations in order to describe the magnetic ground state of this compound. The pressure and temperature dependence of specific heat, thermal expansion coefficient, Debye temperature and Grüneisen parameter were calculated by DFT from the state equation using the quasi-harmonic model of Debye. A specific heat behavior C V ≈ C P was found at temperatures below T = 400 K, with Dulong-Petit limit values, which is higher than those, reported for simple perovskites.
Properties of the low-lying electronic states of phenanthrene: Exact PPP results
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Chakrabarti, A.; Ramasesha, S.
1996-10-05
The authors report properties of the exact low-lying states of phenanthrene, its anion and dianion within the Pariser-Parr-Pople (PPP) model. The experimentally known singlet states of the neutral molecule are well reproduced by the model. The intensities for one and two photon absorption to various single states are also in good agreement with experiment. From the bond orders of these states, the authors predict the equilibrium geometries. The relaxation energies of these states, computed from charge-charge correlations and bond orders, are presented. The authors also present results of ring current calculations in the singlet ground state of phenanthrene. The authorsmore » have also reported energies, spin densities, bond orders, and relaxation energies of several triplet states and compared then with experiments as well as with other calculations, where available. The fine structure constants D and E, computed in the lowest triplet state, compare well with those obtained from experiments. These properties are also presented for the anions and the dianions. The PPP model in these cases predicts a low-energy (< 1 eV) dipole excitation. 31 refs., 4 figs., 9 tabs.« less
Potential effects of the Hawaii Geothermal Project on ground-water resources on the island of Hawaii
Sorey, M.L.; Colvard, E.M.
1994-01-01
In 1990, the State of Hawaii proposed the Hawaii Geothermal Project for the development of as much as 500 MW of electric power from the geothermal system in the East Rift Zone of Kilauea Volcano. This report uses data from 31 wells and 8 springs to describe the properties of the ground-water system in and adjacent to the East Rift Zone. Potential effects of this project on ground-water resources are also discussed. Data show differences in ground-water chemistry and heads within the study area that appear to be related to mixing of waters of different origins and ground-water impoundment by volcanic dikes. East of Pahoa, the ground-water system within the rift is highly transmissive and receives abundant recharge from precipitation; therefore, the pumping of freshwater to support geothermal development in that part of the rift zone would have a minimal effect on ground-water levels. To the southwest of Pahoa, dike impoundment reduces the transmissivity of the ground-water system to such an extent that wells might not be capable of supplying sufficient fresh water to support geothermal operations. Contamination of ground-water resources by accidental release of geothermal fluids into shallow aquifers is possible because of corrosive conditions in the geothermal wells, potential well blowouts, and high ground-water velocities in parts of the region. Hydrologic monitoring of water level, temperature, and chemistry in observation wells should continue throughout development of geothermal resources for the Hawaii Geothermal Project for early detection of leakage and migration of geothermal fluids within the groundwater system.
Mesoscopic Rings with Spin-Orbit Interactions
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Berche, Bertrand; Chatelain, Christophe; Medina, Ernesto
2010-01-01
A didactic description of charge and spin equilibrium currents on mesoscopic rings in the presence of spin-orbit interaction is presented. Emphasis is made on the non-trivial construction of the correct Hamiltonian in polar coordinates, the calculation of eigenvalues and eigenfunctions and the symmetries of the ground-state properties. Spin…
Shape coexistence and β decay of 70Br within a beyond-mean-field approach
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Petrovici, A.
2018-02-01
β -decay properties of the odd-odd N =Z 70Br nucleus are self-consistently explored within the beyond-mean-field complex excited vampir variational model using an effective interaction obtained from a nuclear matter G -matrix based on the charge-dependent Bonn CD potential and an adequate model space. Results on superallowed Fermi β decay of the ground state and Gamow-Teller decay of the 9+ isomer in 70Br correlated with the shape coexistence and mixing effects on the structure and electromagnetic properties of the populated states in the daughter nucleus 70Se are presented and compared with available data.
X(1835), X(2120), and X(2370) in flux tube models
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Deng, Chengrong; Ping, Jialun; Yang, Youchang; Wang, Fan
2012-07-01
Nonstrange hexaquark state q3q¯3 spectrum is systematically studied by using the Gaussian expansion method in flux tube models with a six-body confinement potential. All the model parameters are fixed by baryon properties, so the calculation of hexaquark state q3q¯3 is parameter-free. It is found that some ground states of q3q¯3 are stable against disintegrating into a baryon and an anti-baryon. The main components of X(1835) and X(2370), which are observed in the radiative decay of J/ψ by BES collaboration, can be described as compact hexaquark states N8N¯8 and Δ8Δ¯8 with quantum numbers IGJPC=0+0-+, respectively. These bound states should be color confinement resonances with three-dimensional configurations similar to a rugby ball, however, X(2120) can not be accommodated in this model approach.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Partridge, Harry; Stallcop, James R.; Levin, Eugene; Arnold, Jim (Technical Monitor)
2001-01-01
The interactions of a He atom with a heavier atom are examined for 26 different elements, which are consecutive members selected from three rows (Li - Ne, Na - Ar, and K,Ca, Ga - Kr) and column 12 (Zn,Cd) of the periodic table. Interaction energies are determined wing high-quality ab initio calculations for the states of the molecule that would be formed from each pair of atoms in their ground states. Potential energies are tabulated for a broad range of Interatomic separation distances. The results show, for example, that the energy of an alkali interaction at small separations is nearly the same as that of a rare-gas interaction with the same electron configuration for the dosed shells. Furthermore, the repulsive-range parameter for this region is very short compared to its length for the repulsion dominated by the alkali-valence electron at large separations (beyond about 3-4 a(sub 0)). The potential energies in the region of the van der Waals minimum agree well with the most accurate results available. The ab initio energies are applied to calculate scattering cross sections and obtain the collision integrals that are needed to determine transport properties to second order. The theoretical values of Li-He total scattering cross sections and the rare-gas atom-He transport properties agree well (to within about 1%) with the corresponding measured data. Effective potential energies are constructed from the ab initio energies; the results have been shown to reproduce known transport data and can be readily applied to predict unknown transport properties for like-atom interactions.
Transport, Structural and Mechanical Properties of Quaternary FeVTiAl Alloy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bhat, Tahir Mohiuddin; Gupta, Dinesh C.
2016-11-01
The electronic, structural, magnetic and transport properties of FeVTiAl quaternary alloy have been investigated within the framework of density functional theory. The material is a completely spin-polarized half-metallic ferromagnet in its ground state with F-43m structure. The structural stability was further confirmed by elastic constants in the cubic phase with high Young's modulus and brittle nature. The present study predicts an energy band gap of 0.72 eV in a localized minority spin channel at equilibrium lattice parameter of 6.00 Å. The transport properties of the material are discussed based on the Seebeck coefficient, and electrical and thermal conductivity coefficients. The alloy presents large values of Seebeck coefficients, ~39 μV K-1 at room temperature (300 K), and has an excellent thermoelectric performance with ZT = ~0.8.
Monte Carlo Study of Magnetic Properties of Mixed Spins in a Fullerene X 30 Y 30-Like Structure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mhirech, A.; Aouini, S.; Alaoui-Ismaili, A.; Bahmad, L.
2018-03-01
In this work, inspiring form of the fullerene-C60 structures, we study the mixed X_{30} Y_{30} fullerene-like structure and investigate its magnetic properties. In a such a structure, the carbons are assumed to be replaced by magnetic atoms having spin moments σ = 1/2 and S = 1. Firstly, we elaborate the ground-state phase diagrams in different physical parameter planes. In a second stage, we investigate the exchange coupling interaction effects in the absence or presence of both external magnetic and crystal fields. Using the Monte Carlo method, we carried out a study of the system magnetic properties and the thermal behavior of such a system for the ferromagnetic case. It is found that the critical temperature increases when increasing the coupling exchange interactions. On the other hand, the coercive magnetic field increases also when increasing the coupling exchange interactions. However, this physical parameter decreases when increasing the reduced temperature.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dudnikov, V. A.; Orlov, Yu. S.; Kazak, N. V.; Platunov, M. S.; Ovchinnikov, S. G.
2016-10-01
The features of the characteristics of LnCoO3 cobaltites, where Ln is a rare-earth element, are discussed. Both experiment and theory demonstrate that their essentials are related to the low-spin ground state of cobalt ions. The thermally induced occupation of the excited high-spin state gives rise to peaks in the magnetic susceptibility, specific heat, and thermal expansion, as well as to a smooth insulator-metal transition. The analysis is based both on the data from the current literature concerning LaCoO3 and in many aspects on our own studies of GdCoO3 and La1- x Gd x CoO3 solid solutions.
Microwave spectroscopy of high-L Rydberg states of nickel
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lindsay, Mark D.; Keele, Julie A.; Woods, Shannon L.; Lundeen, Stephen R.
2010-03-01
High-L non-penetrating Rydberg levels of nickel display a fine structure pattern consisting of six levels for each value of L. This pattern was studied recently with the optical RESIS technique, determining initial values of the quadrupole moment and polarizabilities of the ^2D5/2 ground state of Ni^+ [1]. Measurements are now in progress using the microwave RESIS technique [2], which promises much more precise measurements of the fine structure and of the related core properties, including the permanent hexadecapole moment.[4pt] [1] Julie A. Keele, et. al., to be published, Phys. Rev. A[0pt] [2] M.E. Hanni, et. al., Phys. Rev. A 78, 062510 (2008)
Coherent population trapping with a controlled dissipation: applications in optical metrology
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nicolas, L.; Delord, T.; Jamonneau, P.; Coto, R.; Maze, J.; Jacques, V.; Hétet, G.
2018-03-01
We analyze the properties of a pulsed coherent population trapping protocol that uses a controlled decay from the excited state in a Λ-level scheme. We study this problem analytically and numerically and find regimes where narrow transmission, absorption, or fluorescence spectral lines occur. We then look for optimal frequency measurements using these spectral features by computing the Allan deviation in the presence of ground state decoherence and show that the protocol is on a par with Ramsey-CPT. We discuss possible implementations with ensembles of alkali atoms and single ions and demonstrate that typical pulsed-CPT experiments that are realized on femto-second timescales can be implemented on micro-seconds timescales using this scheme.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sun, Yong; Ding, Zhao-Hua; Xiao, Jing-Lin
2016-07-01
On the condition of strong electron-LO phonon coupling in a RbCl quantum pseudodot (QPD), the ground state energy and the mean number of phonons are calculated by using the Pekar variational method and quantum statistical theory. The variations of the ground state energy and the mean number with respect to the temperature and the cyclotron frequency of the magnetic field are studied in detail. We find that the absolute value of the ground state energy increases (decreases) with increasing temperature when the temperature is in the lower (higher) temperature region, and that the mean number increases with increasing temperature. The absolute value of the ground state energy is a decreasing function of the cyclotron frequency of the magnetic field whereas the mean number is an increasing function of it. We find two ways to tune the ground state energy and the mean number: controlling the temperature and controlling the cyclotron frequency of the magnetic field.
Electron-Driven Processes: From Single Collision Experiments to High-Pressure Discharge Plasmas
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Becker, Kurt
2001-10-01
Plasmas are complex systems which consist of various groups of interacting particles (neutral atoms and molecules in their ground states and in excite states, electrons, and positive and negative ions). In principle, one needs to understand and describe all interactions between these particles in order to model the properties of the plasma and to predict its behavior. However, two-body interactions are often the only processes of relevance and only a subset of all possible collisional interactions are important. The focus of this talk is on collisional and radiative processes in low-temperature plasmas, both at low and high pressures. We will limit the discussion (i) to ionization and dissociation processes in molecular low-pressure plasmas and (ii) to collisional and radiative processes in high-pressure plasmas in rare gases and mixtures of rare gases and N2, O2, and H2. Electron-impact dissociation processes can be divided into dissociative excitation and dissociation into neutral ground-state fragments. Neutral molecular dissociation has only recently received attention from experimentalists and theorists because of the serious difficulties associated with the investigation of these processes. Collisional and radiative processes in high-pressure plasmas provide a fertile environment to the study of interactions that go beyond binary collisions involving ground-state species. Step-wise processes and three-body collisions begin to dominate the behavior of such plasmas. We will discuss examples of such processes as they relate to high-pressure rare gas discharge plasmas. Work supported by NSF, DOE, DARPA, NASA, and ABA Inc.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Giraud, Olivier; Grabsch, Aurélien; Texier, Christophe
2018-05-01
We study statistical properties of N noninteracting identical bosons or fermions in the canonical ensemble. We derive several general representations for the p -point correlation function of occupation numbers n1⋯np ¯. We demonstrate that it can be expressed as a ratio of two p ×p determinants involving the (canonical) mean occupations n1¯, ..., np¯, which can themselves be conveniently expressed in terms of the k -body partition functions (with k ≤N ). We draw some connection with the theory of symmetric functions and obtain an expression of the correlation function in terms of Schur functions. Our findings are illustrated by revisiting the problem of Bose-Einstein condensation in a one-dimensional harmonic trap, for which we get analytical results. We get the moments of the occupation numbers and the correlation between ground-state and excited-state occupancies. In the temperature regime dominated by quantum correlations, the distribution of the ground-state occupancy is shown to be a truncated Gumbel law. The Gumbel law, describing extreme-value statistics, is obtained when the temperature is much smaller than the Bose-Einstein temperature.
Quantum phase transitions in effective spin-ladder models for graphene zigzag nanoribbons
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koop, Cornelie; Wessel, Stefan
2017-10-01
We examine the magnetic correlations in quantum spin models that were derived recently as effective low-energy theories for electronic correlation effects on the edge states of graphene nanoribbons. For this purpose, we employ quantum Monte Carlo simulations to access the large-distance properties, accounting for quantum fluctuations beyond mean-field-theory approaches to edge magnetism. For certain chiral nanoribbons, antiferromagnetic interedge couplings were previously found to induce a gapped quantum disordered ground state of the effective spin model. We find that the extended nature of the intraedge couplings in the effective spin model for zigzag nanoribbons leads to a quantum phase transition at a large, finite value of the interedge coupling. This quantum critical point separates the quantum disordered region from a gapless phase of stable edge magnetism at weak intraedge coupling, which includes the ground states of spin-ladder models for wide zigzag nanoribbons. To study the quantum critical behavior, the effective spin model can be related to a model of two antiferromagnetically coupled Haldane-Shastry spin-half chains with long-ranged ferromagnetic intrachain couplings. The results for the critical exponents are compared also to several recent renormalization-group calculations for related long-ranged interacting quantum systems.
Yao, Yin; Liu, Anping; Bai, Jianhui; Zhang, Xuanmei; Wang, Rui
2016-12-01
In this paper, we investigate the structural and electronic properties of zigzag silicene nanoribbons (ZSiNRs) with edge-chemistry modified by H, F, OH, and O, using the ab initio density functional theory method and local spin-density approximation. Three kinds of spin polarized configurations are considered: nonspin polarization (NM), ferromagnetic spin coupling for all electrons (FM), ferromagnetic ordering along each edge, and antiparallel spin orientation between the two edges (AFM). The H, F, and OH groups modified 8-ZSiNRs have the AFM ground state. The directly edge oxidized (O1) ZSiNRs yield the same energy and band structure for NM, FM, and AFM configurations, owning to the same s p (2) hybridization. And replacing the Si atoms on the two edges with O atoms (O2) yields FM ground state. The edge-chemistry-modified ZSiNRs all exhibit metallic band structures. And the modifications introduce special edge state strongly localized at the Si atoms in the edge, except for the O1 form. The modification of the zigzag edges of silicene nanoribbons is a key issue to apply the silicene into the field effect transistors (FETs) and gives more necessity to better understand the experimental findings.
Magnetic excitations in praseodymium
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Houmann, J.G.; Rainford, B.D.; Jensen, J.
1979-08-01
The magnetic excitations in a single crystal of dhcp Pr have been studied by inelastic neutron scattering. The excitations on the hexagonal sites, and their dependence on magnetic fields up to 43 kOe applied in the basal plane, have been analyzed in terms of a Hamiltonian in which exchange, crystal-field, and magnetoelastic interactions are included. The exchange is found to be strongly anisotropic, and this anisotropy is manifested directly in a splitting of most branches of the dispersion relations. By considering a variety of magnetic properties, we have been able to determine the crystal-field level scheme for the hexagonal sitesmore » fairly unambiguously. The first excited level is 3.5 meV above the ground state. The value of the magnetoelastic coupling deduced from the excitations is in good agreement with values obtained from other measurements. A field-dependent interaction with the phonons has been observed, and a pronounced broadening of the acoustic excitations of long wavelength is ascribed to the influence of the conduction electrons. The first excited state on the cubic ions is about 8.3 meV above the ground state. The corresponding excitations show a pronounced dispersion, but the exchange anisotropy is of less importance than for the hexagonal sites.« less
Controlling Emergent Ferromagnetism at Complex Oxide Interfaces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grutter, Alexander
The emergence of complex magnetic ground states at ABO3 perovskite heterostructure interfaces is among the most promising routes towards highly tunable nanoscale materials for spintronic device applications. Despite recent progress, isolating and controlling the underlying mechanisms behind these emergent properties remains a highly challenging materials physics problems. In particular, generating and tuning ferromagnetism localized at the interface of two non-ferromagnetic materials is of fundamental and technological interest. An ideal model system in which to study such effects is the CaRuO3/CaMnO3 interface, where the constituent materials are paramagnetic and antiferromagnetic in the bulk, respectively. Due to small fractional charge transfer to the CaMnO3 (0.07 e-/Mn) from the CaRuO3, the interfacial Mn ions are in a canted antiferromagnetic state. The delicate balance between antiferromagnetic superexchange and ferromagnetic double exchange results in a magnetic ground state which is extremely sensitive to perturbations. We exploit this sensitivity to achieve control of the magnetic interface, tipping the balance between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions through octahedral connectivity modification. Such connectivity effects are typically tightly confined to interfaces, but by targeting a purely interfacial emergent magnetic system, we achieve drastic alterations to the magnetic ground state. These results demonstrate the extreme sensitivity of the magnetic state to the magnitude of the charge transfer, suggesting the potential for direct electric field control. We achieve such electric field control through direct back gating of a CaRuO3/CaMnO3 bilayer. Thus, the CaRuO3/CaMnO3 system provides new insight into how charge transfer, interfacial symmetry, and electric fields may be used to control ferromagnetism at the atomic scale.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zhao, Li; University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049; Zhou, Pan-Wang, E-mail: pwzhou@dicp.ac.cn, E-mail: gjzhao@dicp.ac.cn
2016-07-28
The trans-urocanic acid, a UV chromophore in the epidermis of human skin, was found to exhibit a wavelength dependent isomerization property. The isomerization quantum yield to cis-urocanic is greatest when being excited to the S{sub 1} state, whereas exciting the molecule to the S{sub 2} state causes almost no isomerization. The comparative photochemical behavior of the trans-urocanic on the S{sub 1} and S{sub 2} states continues to be the subject of intense research effort. This study is concerned with the unique photo-behavior of this interesting molecule on the S{sub 2} state. Combining the on-the-fly surface hopping dynamics simulations and staticmore » electronic structure calculations, three decay channels were observed following excitation to the S{sub 2} state. An overwhelming majority of the molecules decay to the S{sub 1} state through a planar or pucker characterized minimum energy conical intersection (MECI), and then decay to the ground state along a relaxation coordinate driven by a pucker deformation of the ring. A very small fraction of molecules decay to the S{sub 1} state by a MECI characterized by a twisting motion around the CC double bond, which continues to drive the molecule to deactivate to the ground state. The latter channel is related with the photoisomerization process, whereas the former one will only generate the original trans-form products. The present work provides a novel S{sub 2} state decay mechanism of this molecule, which offers useful information to explain the wavelength dependent isomerization behavior.« less