ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Pressure induced electronic transitions in Samarium monochalcogenides

289   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Debalina Banerjee
 تاريخ النشر 2021
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف Debalina Banerjee




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Pressure induced isostructural insulator to metal transition for SmS is characterised by the presence of an intermediate valence state at higher pressure which cannot be captured by the density functional theory. As a direct outcome of including the charge and spin fluctuations incorporated in dynamical mean field theory, we see the emergence of insulating and metallic phases with increasing pressure as a function of changing valence. This is accompanied by significantly improved predictions of the equilibrium lattice constants and bulk moduli for all Sm-monochalcogenides verifying experiments. Nudged Elastic Band analysis reveals the insulating states to have a finite quasiparticle weight, decreasing as the gap closes rendering the transition to be not Mott-like, and classifies these materials as correlated band insulators. The difference between the discontinuous and continuous natures of these transitions can be attributed to the closeness of the sharply resonant Sm-4f peaks to the fermi level in the predicted metallic states in SmS as compared to SmSe and SmTe.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

The electronic structures of SmX (X=N, P, As, Sb, Bi, O, S, Se, Te, Po)compounds are calculated using the self-interaction corrected local-spin density approximation. The Sm ion is described with either five or six localized $f$-electrons while the r emaining electrons form bands, and the total energies of these scenarios are compared. With five localized $f$-electrons a narrow $f$-band is formed in the vicinity of the Fermi level leading to an effective intermediate valence. This scenario is the ground state of all the pnictides as well as SmO. With six localized $f$-electrons, the chalcogenides are semiconductors, which is the ground state of SmS, SmSe and SmTe. Under compression the Sm chalcogenides undergo first order transitions with destabilization of the $f$ states into the intermediate valence state, the bonding properties of which are well reproduced by the present theory.
177 - G. Fabbris , T. Matsuoka , J. Lim 2013
The sudden decrease in molar volume exhibited by most lanthanides under high pressure is often attributed to changes in the degree of localization of their 4f-electrons. We give evidence, based on electrical resistivity measurements of dilute Y(Gd) a nd Y(Tb) alloys to 120 GPa, that the volume collapse transitions in Gd and Tb metals have different origins, despite their being neighbors in the periodic table. Remarkably, the change under pressure in the magnetic state of isolated Pr or Tb impurity ions in the nonmagnetic Y host appears to closely mirror corresponding changes in pure Pr or Tb metals. The collapse in Tb appears to be driven by an enhanced negative exchange interaction between 4f and conduction electrons under pressure (Kondo resonance) which, in the case of Y(Tb), dramatically alters the superconducting properties of the Y host, much like previously found for Y(Pr). In Gd our resistivity measurements suggest that a Kondo resonance is not the main driver for its volume collapse. X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopies clearly show that 4f local moments remain largely intact across both volume collapse transitions ruling out 4f band formation (delocalization) and valence transition models as possible drivers. The results highlight the richness of behavior behind the volume collapse transition in lanthanides and demonstrate the stability of the 4f level against band formation to extreme pressure.
180 - G. A. Gehring 2008
A quantum critical point is approached by applying pressure in a number of magnetic metals. The observed dependence of Tc on pressure necessarily means that the magnetic energy is coupled to the lattice. A first order phase transition occurs if this coupling exceeds a critical value: this is inevitable if diverges as Tc approaches zero. It is argued that this is the cause of the first order transition that is observed in many systems. Using Landau theory we obtain expressions for the boundaries of the region where phase separation occurs that agree well with experiments done on MnSi and other materials. The theory can be used to obtain very approximate values for the temperature and pressure at the tricritical point in terms of quantities measured at ambient pressure and the measured values of along the second order line. The values of the tricritical temperature for various materials obtained from Landau theory are too low but it is shown that the predicted values will rise if the effects of fluctuations are included.
The crystal lattice of Sr$_2$IrO$_4$ is investigated with synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction under hydrostatic pressures up to $P=43$ GPa and temperatures down to $20$ K. The tetragonal unit cell is maintained over the whole investigated pressure r ange, within our resolution and sensitivity. The $c$-axis compressibility $kappa_c(P,T) equiv -({1} / {c}) ({d c} / {d P})$ presents an anomaly with pressure at $P_1=17$ GPa at fixed $T=20$ K that is not observed at $T=300$ K, whereas $kappa_a(P,T)$ is nearly temperature-independent and shows a linear behavior with $P$. The anomaly in $kappa_c(P,T)$ is associated with the onset of long-range magnetic order, as evidenced by an analysis of the temperature-dependence of the lattice parameters at fixed $P=13.7 pm 0.5$ GPa. At fixed $T=20$ K, the tetragonal elongation $c/a(P,T)$ shows a gradual increment with pressure and a depletion above $P_2=30$ GPa that indicates an orbital transition and possibly marks the collapse of the $J_{eff}=1/2$ spin-orbit-entangled state. Our results support pressure-induced phase transitions or crossovers between electronic ground states that are sensed, and therefore can be probed, by the crystal lattice at low temperatures in this prototype spin-orbit Mott insulator.
242 - L. Petit , R. Tyer , Z. Szotek 2010
We present results of an ab-initio study of the electronic structure of 140 rare earth compounds. Specifically we predict an electronic phase diagram of the entire range of rare earth monopnictides and monochalcogenides, composed of metallic, semicon ducting and heavy fermion-like regions, and exhibiting valency transitions brought about by a complex interplay between ligand chemistry and lanthanide contraction. The calculations exploit the combined effect of a first-principles methodology, which can adequately describe the dual character of electrons, itinerant vs. localized, and high throughput computing made possible by the increasing available computational power. Our findings, including the predicted intermediate valent compounds SmO and TmSe, are in overall excellent agreement with the available experimental data. The accuracy of the approach, proven e.g. through the lattice parameters calculated to within 1.5% of the experimental values, and its ability to describe localization phenomena in solids, makes it a competitive atomistic simulation approach in the search for and design of new materials with specific physical properties and possible technological applications.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا