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A method is presented for calculating electron-hole pair excitation due to an incident atom or molecule interacting with a metal surface. Energy loss is described using an textit{ab initio} approach that obtains a position-dependent friction coefficient for an adsorbate moving near a metal surface from a total energy pseudopotential calculation. A semi-classical forced oscillator model is constructed, using the same friction coefficient description of the energy loss, to describe excitation of the electron gas due to the incident molecule. This approach is applied to H and D atoms incident on a Cu(111) surface, and we obtain theoretical estimates of the `chemicurrents measured by Nienhaus et al [Phys. Rev. Lett. textbf{82}, 446 (1999)] for these atoms incident on the surface of a Schottky diode.
The time-dependent, mean-field Newns-Anderson model for a spin-polarised adsorbate approaching a metallic surface is solved in the wide-band limit. Equations for the time-evolution of the electronic structure of the adsorbate-metal system are derived
Electron-hole pair creation by an adsorbate incident on a metal surface is described using textit{ab initio} methods. The approach starts with standard first principles electronic structure theory, and proceeds to combine classical, quantum oscillato
We investigate some surfaces of a paradigmatic sp bonded metal--namely, Al(110), Al(100), and Al(111)--by means of the electron localization function (ELF), implemented in a first-principle pseudopotential framework. ELF is a ground-state property wh
The bulk photovoltaic effect (BPVE) has attracted an increasing interest due to its potential to overcome the efficiency limit of traditional photovoltaics, and much effort has been devoted to understanding its underlying physics. However, previous w
We present results for the optical absorption spectra of small-diameter single-wall carbon and boron nitride nanotubes obtained by {it ab initio} calculations in the framework of time-dependent density functional theory. We compare the results with t