ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Quantum simulation methods based on density-functional theory are currently deemed unfit to cope with atomic heat transport within the Green-Kubo formalism, because quantum-mechanical energy densities and currents are inherently ill-defined at the atomic scale. We show that, while this difficulty would also affect classical simulations, thermal conductivity is indeed insensitive to such ill-definedness by virtue of a sort of gauge invariance resulting from energy extensivity and conservation. Based on these findings, we derive an expression for the adiabatic energy flux from density-functional theory, which allows heat transport to be simulated using ab-initio equilibrium molecular dynamics. Our methodology is demonstrated by comparing its predictions with those of classical equilibrium and ab-initio non-equilibrium (Muller-Plathe) simulations for a liquid-Argon model, and finally applied to heavy water at ambient conditions.
Metallic atomic junctions pose the ultimate limit to the scaling of electrical contacts. They serve as model systems to probe electrical and thermal transport down to the atomic level as well as quantum effects occurring in one-dimensional systems. C
We present a quantum-kinetic scheme for the calculation of non-equilibrium transport properties in nanoscale systems. The approach is based on a Liouville-master equation for a reduced density operator and represents a generalization of the well-know
We have analyzed the atomic arrangements and quantum conductance of silver nanowires generated by mechanical elongation. The surface properties of Ag induce unexpected structural properties, as for example, predominance of high aspect ratio rod-like
We formulate a microscopic theory of the decay of a compound nucleus through fission which generalizes earlier microscopic approaches of fission dynamics performed in the framework of the adiabatic hypothesis. It is based on the constrained Hartree-F
With the advent of atomic-resolution transmission electron microscopy (AR-TEM) achieving sub-{AA}ngstrom image resolution and submillisecond time resolution, an era of visual molecular science where chemists can visually study the time evolution of m