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1.
Phys Rev E ; 104(4-2): 045208, 2021 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34781538

RESUMEN

We have performed measurements of the ir absorption of SiO_{2} nanoparticles confined in an argon radiofrequency plasma discharge using a Fourier transform infrared spectrometer. By varying the gas pressure of the discharge and duty cycle of the applied radiofrequency voltage, we observed a shift of the absorption peak of SiO_{2}. We attributed this shift to charge-dependent absorption features of SiO_{2}. The charge-dependent shift has been calculated for SiO_{2} particles, and from comparisons with the experiment the particle charge has been retrieved using our infrared phonon resonance shift method. With the two different approaches of changing the gas pressure and altering the duty cycle, we are able to deduce a relative change of the particle charge with pressure variations and an absolute estimate of the charge with the duty cycle.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 126(15): 157202, 2021 Apr 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33929225

RESUMEN

Employing unbiased large-scale time-dependent density-matrix renormalization-group simulations, we demonstrate the generation of a charge-current vortex via spin injection in the Rashba system. The spin current is polarized perpendicular to the system plane and injected from an attached antiferromagnetic spin chain. We discuss the conversion between spin and orbital angular momentum in the current vortex that occurs because of the conservation of the total angular momentum and the spin-orbit interaction. This is in contrast to the spin Hall effect, in which the angular-momentum conservation is violated. Finally, we predict the electromagnetic field that accompanies the vortex with regard to possible future experiments.

3.
Nat Mater ; 19(8): 855-860, 2020 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32203461

RESUMEN

Much of the recent attention directed towards topological insulators is motivated by their hallmark feature of protected chiral edge states. In electronic (or fermionic) topological insulators, these states originate from time-reversal symmetry and allow carriers with opposite spin-polarization to propagate in opposite directions at the edge of an insulating bulk. By contrast, photonic (or bosonic) systems are generally assumed to be precluded from supporting edge states that are intrinsically protected by time-reversal symmetry. Here, we experimentally demonstrate counter-propagating chiral states at the edge of a time-reversal-symmetric photonic waveguide structure. The pivotal step in our approach is the design of a Floquet driving protocol that incorporates effective fermionic time-reversal symmetry, enabling the realization of the photonic version of an electronic topological insulator. Our findings allow for fermionic properties to be harnessed in bosonic systems, thereby offering alternative opportunities for photonics as well as acoustics, mechanical waves and cold atoms.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 123(19): 190403, 2019 Nov 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31765212

RESUMEN

In Hermitian topological systems, the bulk-boundary correspondence strictly constrains boundary transport to values determined by the topological properties of the bulk. We demonstrate that this constraint can be lifted in non-Hermitian Floquet insulators. Provided that the insulator supports an anomalous topological phase, non-Hermiticity allows us to modify the boundary states independently of the bulk, without sacrificing their topological nature. We explore the ensuing possibilities for a Floquet topological insulator with non-Hermitian time-reversal symmetry, where the helical transport via counterpropagating boundary states can be tailored in ways that overcome the constraints imposed by Hermiticity. Non-Hermitian boundary state engineering specifically enables the enhancement of boundary transport relative to bulk motion, helical transport with a preferred direction, and chiral transport in the same direction on opposite boundaries. We explain the experimental relevance of our findings for the example of photonic waveguide lattices.

5.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 9811, 2017 08 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28851997

RESUMEN

Analyzing the scattering and conversion process between photons and phonons coupled via radiation pressure in a circular quantum dot on a honeycomb array of optomechanical cells, we demonstrate the emergence of optomechanical Dirac physics. Specifically we prove the formation of polaritonic quasi-bound states inside the dot, and angle-dependent Klein tunneling of light and emission of sound, depending on the energy of the incident photon, the photon-phonon interaction strength, and the radius of the dot. We furthermore demonstrate that forward scattering of light or sound can almost switched off by an optically tuned Fano resonance; thereby the system may act as an optomechanical translator in a future photon-phonon based circuitry.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 118(12): 120401, 2017 Mar 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28388192

RESUMEN

We demonstrate numerically the existence of a nontrivial topological Haldane phase for the one-dimensional extended (U-V) Hubbard model with a mean density of one particle per site, not only for bosons but also for anyons, despite a broken reflection parity symmetry. The Haldane insulator, surrounded by superfluid, Mott insulator, and density-wave phases in the V-U parameter plane, is protected by combined (modified) spatial-inversion and time-reversal symmetries, which is verified within our matrix-product-state based infinite density-matrix renormalization group scheme by analyzing generalized transfer matrices. With regard to an experimental verification of the anyonic Haldane insulator state the calculated asymmetry of the dynamical density structure factor should be of particular importance.

7.
Sci Rep ; 6: 22548, 2016 Mar 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26935887

RESUMEN

We study the competition between unconventional superconducting pairing and charge density wave (CDW) formation for the two-dimensional Edwards Hamiltonian at half filling, a very general two-dimensional transport model in which fermionic charge carriers couple to a correlated background medium. Using the projective renormalization method we find that a strong renormalization of the original fermionic band causes a new hole-like Fermi surface to emerge near the center of the Brillouin zone, before it eventually gives rise to the formation of a charge density wave. On the new, disconnected parts of the Fermi surface superconductivity is induced with a sign-changing order parameter. We discuss these findings in the light of recent experiments on iron-based oxypnictide superconductors.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 113(2): 020401, 2014 Jul 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25062142

RESUMEN

We discuss the existence of a nontrivial topological phase in one-dimensional interacting systems described by the extended Bose-Hubbard model with a mean filling of one boson per site. Performing large-scale density-matrix renormalization group calculations we show that the presence of nearest-neighbor repulsion enriches the ground-state phase diagram of the paradigmatic Bose-Hubbard model by stabilizing a novel gapped insulating state, the so-called Haldane insulator, which, embedded into superfluid, Mott insulator, and density wave phases, is protected by the lattice inversion symmetry. The quantum phase transitions between the different insulating phases were determined from the central charge via the von Neumann entropy. The Haldane phase reveals a characteristic fourfold degeneracy of the entanglement spectrum. We finally demonstrate that the intensity maximum of the dynamical charge structure factor, accessible by Bragg spectroscopy, features the gapped dispersion known from the spin-1 Heisenberg chain.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 109(11): 116407, 2012 Sep 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23005659

RESUMEN

We demonstrate that fermion-boson models with nonlocal interactions can be simulated at finite band filling with the continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo method. We apply this method to explore the influence of the electron-phonon interaction range for a half-filled band in one dimension, covering the full range from the Holstein to the Fröhlich regime. The phase diagram contains metallic, Peierls, and phase-separated regions. Nonlocal interactions suppress the Peierls instability, and thereby lead to almost degenerate power-law exponents for charge and pairing correlations.

10.
Phys Rev Lett ; 108(6): 066402, 2012 Feb 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22401092

RESUMEN

The experimentally observed metal-to-insulator transition in hydrogenated graphene is numerically confirmed for actual sized graphene samples and realistic impurity concentrations. The eigenstates of our tight-binding model with substitutional disorder corroborate the formation of electron-hole puddles with characteristic length scales comparable to the ones found in experiments. The puddles cause charge inhomogeneities and tend to suppress Anderson localization. Even though, monitoring the charge carrier quantum dynamics and performing a finite-size scaling of the local density of states distribution, we find strong evidence for the existence of localized states in graphene nanoribbons with short-range but also correlated long-range disorder.

11.
Phys Rev Lett ; 101(11): 116403, 2008 Sep 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18851305

RESUMEN

We develop an approximation-free diagrammatic Monte Carlo technique to study fermionic particles interacting with each other simultaneously through both an attractive Coulomb potential and bosonic excitations of the underlying medium. Exemplarily we apply the method to the long-standing exciton-polaron problem and present numerically exact results for the wave function, ground-state energy, binding energy and effective mass of this quasiparticle. Focusing on the electron-hole pair bound-state formation, we discuss various limiting cases of a generic exciton-polaron model. The frequently used instantaneous approximation to the retarded interaction due to the exchange of phonons is found to be of very limited applicability.

12.
Nanotechnology ; 19(33): 335707, 2008 Aug 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21730633

RESUMEN

We present a model system that might serve as a blueprint for the controlled layout of graphene based nanodevices. The systems consists of chains of B(7) clusters implanted in a graphene matrix, where the boron clusters are not directly connected. We show that the graphene matrix easily accepts these alternating B(7)-C(6) chains and that the implanted boron components may dramatically modify the electronic properties of graphene based nanomaterials. This suggests a functionalization of graphene nanomaterials, where the semiconducting properties might be supplemented by parts of the graphene matrix itself, but the basic wiring will be provided by alternating chains of implanted boron clusters that connect these areas.

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