Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Unconventional Materials: the mismatch between electronic charge centers andatomic positions

51   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Jiacheng Gao
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

The complete band representations (BRs) have been constructed in the work of topological quantum chemistry. Each BR is expressed by either a certain orbital at a set of Wyckoff sites in realspace, or by a set of irreducible representations in momentum space. In this work, we define unconventional materials as the topologically trivial compounds whose occupied bands can be expressedas a sum of elementary BRs, but not a sum of atomic-orbital-induced BRs (aBRs). Namely, these materials possess the unconventional feature of the mismatch between average electronic centers and atomic positions. The existence of an essential BR at an empty site is described by nonzero real-space invariants. The valence states can be derived by the aBR decomposition, and unconventional materials are supposed to have an uncompensatedtotal valence state. The high-throughput screening for unconventional materials has been performed through the first-principles calculations. We have discovered 392 unconventional compounds with detailed information in the table of the results, including thermoelectronic materials, higher-order topological insulators, electrides, hydrogenstorage materials, hydrogen evolution reaction electrocatalysts, electrodes, and superconductors. The diversity of their interesting properties and applications would be widely studied in the future.



rate research

Read More

In addition to being the core quantity in density functional theory, the charge density can be used in many tertiary analyses in materials sciences from bonding to assigning charge to specific atoms. The charge density is data-rich since it contains information about all the electrons in the system. With increasing utilization of machine-learning tools in materials sciences, a data-rich object like the charge density can be utilized in a wide range of applications. The database presented here provides a modern and user-friendly interface for a large and continuously updated collection of charge densities as part of the Materials Project. In addition to the charge density data, we provide the theory and code for changing the representation of the charge density which should enable more advanced machine-learning studies for the broader community.
97 - B. Q. Lv , Alfred Zong , D. Wu 2021
Hysteresis underlies a large number of phase transitions in solids, giving rise to exotic metastable states that are otherwise inaccessible. Here, we report an unconventional hysteretic transition in a quasi-2D material, EuTe4. By combining transport, photoemission, diffraction, and x-ray absorption measurements, we observed that the hysteresis loop has a temperature width of more than 400 K, setting a record among crystalline solids. The transition has an origin distinct from known mechanisms, lying entirely within the incommensurate charge-density-wave (CDW) phase of EuTe4 with no change in the CDW modulation periodicity. We interpret the hysteresis as an unusual switching of the relative CDW phases in different layers, a phenomenon unique to quasi-2D compounds that is not present in either purely 2D or strongly-coupled 3D systems. Our findings challenge the established theories on metastable states in density wave systems, pushing the boundary of understanding hysteretic transitions in a broken-symmetry state.
We review existing manifestations and prospects for ferroelectricity in electronically and optically active carbon-based materials. The focus point is the proposal for the electronic ferroelectricity in conjugated polymers from the family of substituted polyacetylenes. The attractive feature of synthetic organic ferroelectrics is a very high polarizability coming from redistribution of the electronic density, rather than from conventional displacements of ions. Next fortunate peculiarity is the symmetry determined predictable design of perspective materials. The macroscopic electric polarization follows ultimately from combination of two types of a microscopic symmetry breaking which are ubiquitous to qusi-1D electronic systems. The state supports anomalous quasi-particles - microscopic solitons, carrying non-integer electric charges, which here play the role of nano-scale nucleus of ferroelectric domain walls. Their spectroscopic features in optics can interfere with low-frequency ferroelectric repolarization providing new accesses and applications. In addition to already existing electronic ferroelectricity in organic crystals and donor-acceptor chains, we point to a class of conducting polymers and may be also to nano-ribbons of the graphene where such a state can be found. These proposals may lead to potential applications in modern intensive searches of carbon ferroelectrics.
The intense theoretical and experimental interest in topological insulators and semimetals has established band structure topology as a fundamental material property. Consequently, identifying band topologies has become an important, but often challenging problem, with no exhaustive solution at the present time. In this work we compile a series of techniques, some previously known, that allow for a solution to this problem for a large set of the possible band topologies. The method is based on tracking hybrid Wannier charge centers computed for relevant Bloch states, and it works at all levels of materials modeling: continuous k.p models, tight-binding models and ab initio calculations. We apply the method to compute and identify Chern, Z2 and crystalline topological insulators, as well as topological semimetal phases, using real material examples. Moreover, we provide a numerical implementation of this technique (the Z2Pack software package) that is ideally suited for high-throughput screening of materials databases for compounds with non-trivial topologies. We expect that our work will allow researchers to: (a) identify topological materials optimal for experimental probes, (b) classify existing compounds and (c) reveal materials that host novel, not yet described, topological states.
The issue of the net charge at insulating oxide interfaces is shortly reviewed with the ambition of dispelling myths of such charges being affected by covalency and related charge density effects. For electrostatic analysis purposes, the net charge at such interfaces is defined by the counting of discrete electrons and core ion charges, and by the definition of the reference polarisation of the separate, unperturbed bulk materials. The arguments are illustrated for the case of a thin film of LaAlO$_3$ over SrTiO$_3$ in the absence of free carriers, for which the net charge is exactly 0.5$e$ per interface formula unit, if the polarisation response in both materials is referred to zero bulk values. Further consequences of the argument are extracted for structural and chemical alterations of such interfaces, in which internal rearrangements are distinguished from extrinsic alterations (changes of stoichiometry, redox processes), only the latter affecting the interfacial net charge. The arguments are reviewed alongside the proposal of Stengel and Vanderbilt [Phys. Rev. B {bf 80}, 241103 (2009)] of using formal polarisation values instead of net interfacial charges, based on the interface theorem of Vanderbilt and King-Smith [Phys. Rev. B {bf 48}, 4442 (1993)]. Implications for non-centrosymmetric materials are discussed, as well as for interfaces for which the charge mismatch is an integer number of polarisation quanta.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا