70 results on '"Anisimov VI"'
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2. LDA plus DMFT implemented with the pseudopotential plane-wave approach
- Author
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Trimarchi, G, Leonov, I, Binggeli, N, Korotin, D, and Anisimov, VI
- Subjects
Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,ELECTRONIC-STRUCTURE ,CORRELATED SYSTEMS ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,BRILLOUIN-ZONE INTEGRATIONS ,TETRAHEDRON METHOD ,MEAN-FIELD THEORY - Abstract
We present a joint implementation of dynamical-mean-field theory (DMFT) with the pseudopotential plane-wave approach, via Wannier functions, for the determination of the electronic properties of strongly correlated materials. The scheme uses, as input for the DMFT calculations, a tight-binding Hamiltonian obtained from the plane-wave calculations by projection onto atomic-centered symmetry-constrained Wannier functions for the correlated orbitals. We apply this scheme to two prototype systems: a paramagnetic correlated metal, SrVO3, and a paramagnetic correlated system, V2O3, which exhibits a metal-insulator transition. Comparisons with available linear-muffin-tin-orbital (LMTO) plus DMFT calculations demonstrate the suitability of the joint DMFT pseudopotential plane-wave approach to describe the electronic properties of strongly correlated materials. This opens the way to future developments using the pseudopotential plane-wave DMFT approach to address total-energy properties, such as structural properties.
- Published
- 2008
3. Electron structure and optical properties of the Ce2Fe17 intermetallic compound
- Author
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Nekrasov, Ia, Knyazev, Yv, Yury Kuz'min, Kuchin, Ag, and Anisimov, Vi
4. Electronic correlations and intrinsic magnetism of interstitial quasi-atomic states in Li 8 Au electride.
- Author
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Novoselov DY, Korotin DM, Shorikov AO, Anisimov VI, and Oganov AR
- Abstract
We investigate the electronic sub-system of a recently designed Li
8 Au superconducting electride to reveal its many-body correlated nature and magnetic properties. Using maximally localized Wannier functions (MLWFs) to describe the interstitial anion electron (IAE) states, it was found that these states are partially occupied with a population of 1.5e- and have negligible hybridization with the almost completely filled p-Au states. The averaged interaction screened Hubbard parameter U for quasi-atomic IAE states evaluated by the constrained random-phase approximation (CRPA) method is 2 eV, comparable to the width of the electride band suggesting moderate electronic correlations. Using dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) approach we found that IAEs in Li8 Au electride behave as magnetic centers and possess their own well localised magnetic moments of 0.5 μB per quasi-atomic IAE. The obtained results deepen the understanding of the significance of many-body effects in the IAE subsystem of electronic states and reveal the mechanism for the formation of intrinsic magnetic moments on IAEs, which behave like ferromagnetic quasi-atoms in the Li8 Au electride. Overall, the observed correlation effects in Li8 Au emphasize their importance in materials with excess electrons confined in cavities.- Published
- 2024
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5. First-principles definition of ionicity and covalency in molecules and solids.
- Author
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Anisimov VI, Oganov AR, Korotin DM, Novoselov DY, Shorikov AO, and Belozerov AS
- Abstract
The notions of ionicity and covalency of chemical bonds, effective atomic charges, and decomposition of the cohesive energy into ionic and covalent terms are fundamental yet elusive. For example, different approaches give different values of atomic charges. Pursuing the goal of formulating a universal approach based on firm physical grounds (first-principles or non-empirical), we develop a formalism based on Wannier functions with atomic orbital symmetry and capable of defining these notions and giving numerically robust results that are in excellent agreement with traditional chemical thinking. Unexpectedly, in diamond-like boron phosphide (BP), we find charges of +0.68 on phosphorus and -0.68 on boron atoms, and this anomaly is explained by the Zintl-Klemm nature of this compound. We present a simple model that includes energies of the highest occupied cationic and lowest unoccupied anionic atomic orbitals, coordination numbers, and strength of interatomic orbital overlap. This model captures the essential physics of bonding and accurately reproduces all our results, including anomalous BP., (© 2024 Author(s). Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.)
- Published
- 2024
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6. Exploring correlation effects and volume collapse during electride dimensionality change in Ca 2 N.
- Author
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Novoselov DY, Mazannikova MA, Korotin DM, Shorikov AO, Anisimov VI, and Oganov AR
- Abstract
We investigate the role of interstitial electronic states in the metal-to-semiconductor transition and the origin of the volume collapse in Ca
2 N during the pressure-induced phase transitions accompanied by changes of electride subspace dimensionality. Our findings highlight the importance of correlation effects in the electride subsystem as an essential component of the complex phase transformation mechanism. By employing a simplified model that incorporates the distortion of the local environment surrounding the interstitial quasi-atom (ISQ) which emerges under pressure and solving this model by Dynamical Mean Field Theory (DMFT), we successfully reproduced the evolution between the metallic and semiconducting phases and captured the remarkable volume collapse. Central to this observation is a significant enhancement of the localization of excess electrons and the emergence of antiferromagnetic pairing among them, leading to a spin-state transition with a notable reduction in the magnetic moment on the interstitial states.- Published
- 2023
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7. Computational prediction of new magnetic materials.
- Author
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Rahmanian Koshkaki S, Allahyari Z, Oganov AR, Solozhenko VL, Polovov IB, Belozerov AS, Katanin AA, Anisimov VI, Tikhonov EV, Qian GR, Maksimtsev KV, Mukhamadeev AS, Chukin AV, Korolev AV, Mushnikov NV, and Li H
- Abstract
The discovery of new magnetic materials is a big challenge in the field of modern materials science. We report the development of a new extension of the evolutionary algorithm USPEX, enabling the search for half-metals (materials that are metallic only in one spin channel) and hard magnetic materials. First, we enabled the simultaneous optimization of stoichiometries, crystal structures, and magnetic structures of stable phases. Second, we developed a new fitness function for half-metallic materials that can be used for predicting half-metals through an evolutionary algorithm. We used this extended technique to predict new, potentially hard magnets and rediscover known half-metals. In total, we report five promising hard magnets with high energy product (|BH|
MAX ), anisotropy field (Ha ), and magnetic hardness (κ) and a few half-metal phases in the Cr-O system. A comparison of our predictions with experimental results, including the synthesis of a newly predicted antiferromagnetic material (WMnB2 ), shows the robustness of our technique.- Published
- 2022
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8. Localization Mechanism of Interstitial Electronic States in Electride Mayenite.
- Author
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Novoselov DY, Mazannikova MA, Korotin DM, Shorikov AO, Korotin MA, Anisimov VI, and Oganov AR
- Abstract
Electrides contain interstitial electrons with the states that are spatially separated from the crystal framework states and form a detached electronic subsystem. In mayenite [Ca
12 Al14 O32 ]2+ (e- )2 interstitial electrons form a unique charge network where localization and delocalization coexist, pointing to the importance of investigating the many-body nature of electride states. Using density functional theory and dynamical mean-field theory, we show a tendency toward electron localization and antiferromagnetic pairing, which leads to the formation of an experimentally observed peak under the Fermi level. The effect is associated with strong hybridization between interstitial electronic states, which removes the degeneracy and leads to the formation of a singlet state on a bonding molecular orbital as well as with the Coulomb interaction between interstitial electrons. Our work provides a fundamental understanding of the localization mechanism of interstitial electrons in mayenite and proposes a new approach for a proper description of the electronic subsystem of mayenite and other electrides.- Published
- 2022
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9. Novel copper fluoride analogs of cuprates.
- Author
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Rybin N, Novoselov DY, Korotin DM, Anisimov VI, and Oganov AR
- Abstract
On the basis of the first-principles evolutionary crystal structure prediction of stable compounds in the Cu-F system, we predict two experimentally unknown stable phases - Cu2F5 and CuF3. Cu2F5 comprises two interacting magnetic subsystems with Cu atoms in the oxidation states +2 and +3. CuF3 contains magnetic Cu3+ ions forming a lattice by antiferromagnetic coupling. We showed that some or all of Cu3+ ions can be reduced to Cu2+ by electron doping, as in the well-known KCuF3. Significant similarities between the electronic structures calculated in the framework of DFT+U suggest that doped CuF3 and Cu2F5 may exhibit high-Tc superconductivity with the same mechanism as in cuprates.
- Published
- 2021
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10. Itinerant magnetism of chromium under pressure: a DFT+DMFT study.
- Author
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Belozerov AS, Katanin AA, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We consider electronic and magnetic properties of chromium, a well-known itinerant antiferromagnet, by a combination of density functional theory (DFT) and dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT). We find that electronic correlation effects in chromium, in contrast to its neighbors in the periodic table, are weak, leading to the quasiparticle mass enhancement factor m */ m ≈ 1.2. Our results for local spin-spin correlation functions and distribution of weights of atomic configurations indicate that the local magnetic moments are not formed. Similarly to previous results of DFT at ambient pressure, the non-uniform magnetic susceptibility as a function of momentum possesses close to the wave vector Q
H = (0, 0, 2 π / a ) ( a is the lattice constant) sharp maxima, corresponding to Kohn anomalies. We find that these maxima are preserved by the interaction and are not destroyed by pressure. Our calculations qualitatively capture a decrease of the Néel temperature with pressure and a breakdown of itinerant antiferromagnetism at pressure of ∼9 GPa in agreement with experimental data, although the Néel temperature is significantly overestimated because of the mean-field nature of DMFT., (© 2021 IOP Publishing Ltd.)- Published
- 2021
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11. Weak Coulomb correlations stabilize the electride high-pressure phase of elemental calcium.
- Author
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Novoselov DY, Korotin DM, Shorikov AO, Oganov AR, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
Theoretical studies using the state-of-the-art density functional theory and dynamicalmean-field theory (DFT + DMFT) method show that weak electronic correlation effects are crucial for reproducing the experimentally observed pressure-induced phase transitions of calcium from β-tin to Cmmm and then to the simple cubic structure. The formation of an electride state in calcium leads to the emergence of partially filled and localized electronic states under compression. The electride state was described using a basis containing molecular orbitals centered on the interstitial site and Ca-d states. We investigate the influence of Coulomb correlations on the structural properties of elemental Ca, noting that approaches based on the Hartree-Fock method (DFT + U or hybrid functional schemes) are poorly suited for describing correlated metals. We find that only the DFT + DMFT method reproduces the correct sequence of high-pressure phase transitions of Ca at low temperatures., (© 2020 IOP Publishing Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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12. Electronic correlations in uranium hydride UH 5 under pressure.
- Author
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Shorikov AO, Skornyakov SL, Anisimov VI, and Oganov AR
- Abstract
We report results of calculations based on density functional theory and dynamical mean-field theory for the electronic structure of uranium hydride UH
5 under pressure, a compound of the uranium-based hydride family some members of which have been predicted to be superconducting. The effective electronic mass enhancement m */ m ∼ 1.4 indicates that the Coulomb correlations have a moderate strength. However, the topology of the Fermi surface changes strongly at the influence of the correlation effects: one hourglass-like pocket running along the Γ- A direction splits into two elliptical pockets centered at the A point. This result shows the possibility of an unconventional pairing mechanism for uranium hydrides in addition to the electron-phonon pairing that was studied in previous investigations., (© 2020 IOP Publishing Ltd.)- Published
- 2020
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13. Electronic correlation effects and local magnetic moments in L1 0 phase of FeNi.
- Author
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Belozerov AS, Katanin AA, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We study the electronic and magnetic properties of L1
0 phase of FeNi, a perspective rare-earth-free permanent magnet, by using a combination of density functional and dynamical mean-field theory. Although L10 FeNi has a slightly tetragonally distorted fcc lattice, we find that magnetic properties of its constituent Fe atoms resemble those in pure bcc Fe. In particular, our results indicate the presence of well-localized magnetic moments on Fe sites, which are formed due to Hund's exchange. At the same time, magnetism of Ni sites is much more itinerant. Similarly to pure bcc Fe, the self-energy of Fe 3d states is found to show the non-Fermi-liquid behavior. This can be explained by peculiarities of density of Fe 3d states, which has pronounced peaks near the Fermi level. Our study of local spin correlation function and momentum dependence of particle-hole bubble suggests that the magnetic exchange in this substance is expected to be of RKKY-type, with iron states providing local-moment contribution, and the states corresponding to nickel sites (including virtual hopping to iron sites) providing itinerant contribution., (© 2020 IOP Publishing Ltd.)- Published
- 2020
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14. Charge and spin degrees of freedom in strongly correlated systems: Mott states opposite Hund's metals.
- Author
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Novoselov DY, Korotin DM, Shorikov AO, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
A correlated metallic state can arise as a result of the presence either strong charge or strong spin fluctuations. In the first case, as was shown first in (2004 Phys. Today 57 53) for the Hubbard model on the Bethe lattice, the system is a correlated metallic state close to the Mott-insulator state if the ratio of the value of the Coulomb interaction parameter U and the band width W is [Formula: see text]. The later case exist if [Formula: see text] and Hund's exchange parameter [Formula: see text]. In both cases narrowing of the bands near the Fermi level and renormalization of the effective electron mass is observed, although the mechanism for realizing this state will be fundamentally different. We performed the electronic structure calculations of the paramagnetic phase [Formula: see text]-iron which is a typical Hund's metal. We showed that the statistical distribution of charge between possible electronic d-configurations has a very weak dependence on the exchange interaction and is specific for metals. At the same time, the distribution of statistical weights between different spin configurations fundamentally changes with the inclusion of J. If we neglect Hund's interaction by setting J = 0, the contributions from the low-spin configurations for all possible charge states dominate. The exchange interaction causes a redistribution of probability in favor of high-spin multiplets, leading to the formation of a larger local moment. We also performed calculations for the two-bands half-filled model. By varying the values of the Coulomb and Hund's exchange interaction parameters, we reproduced the region of the phase diagram of the model in which the system undergoes a transition from the Mott-insulator state to the Hund's metal. This transition is accompanied by a change in the statistical probability distribution of possible multiple configurations. In the region corresponding to the Hund's metal state, a change of J leads to the effect of weights redistribution similar that we observe in [Formula: see text]-iron.
- Published
- 2020
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15. Influence of Molecular Orbitals on Magnetic Properties of [x].
- Author
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Shorikov AO, Skornyakov SL, Anisimov VI, Streltsov SV, and Poteryaev AI
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Ferric Compounds chemistry, Magnetic Phenomena, Models, Theoretical, Quantum Theory
- Abstract
Recent discoveries of various novel iron oxides and hydrides, which become stable at very high pressure and temperature, are extremely important for geoscience. In this paper, we report the results of an investigation on the electronic structure and magnetic properties of the hydride FeO 2 H x , using density functional theory plus dynamical mean-field theory (DFT+DMFT) calculations. An increase in the hydrogen concentration resulted in the destruction of dimeric oxygen pairs and, hence, a specific band structure of FeO 2 with strongly hybridized Fe- t 2 g -O- p z anti-bonding molecular orbitals, which led to a metallic state with the Fe ions at nearly 3+. Increasing the H concentration resulted in effective mass enhancement growth which indicated an increase in the magnetic moment localization. The calculated static momentum-resolved spin susceptibility demonstrated that an incommensurate antiferromagnetic (AFM) order was expected for FeO 2 , whereas strong ferromagnetic (FM) fluctuations were observed for FeO 2 H.
- Published
- 2020
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16. Potential capabilities of aircraft laser landing systems.
- Author
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Kaloshin GA, Matvienko GG, Shishkin SA, Anisimov VI, Butuzov VV, Zhukov VV, Stolyarov GV, and Pasyuk VP
- Abstract
We present calculations of the efficiency of the laser landing system (LLS), based on determining the minimum required fluxes of scattered radiation from fixed extended landmarks (FELs), which are LLS indicators in the case of visual FEL detection under real operation conditions. It is shown that, when the meteorological visibility range S
m =800 m, for reliable detection of laser beams from the glissade slope group at ranges L∼1.0-1.6 km under nighttime conditions, the minimum required powers are Pmin =0.5 W for λ=0.52 and 0.64 μm, given deviations from the glissade path by the angle ϕ=0°-5°. The green and red rays are visible at distances L=1-1.2 km under twilight conditions. Our calculations corroborated the possibility of creating a new-generation laser-based LLS capable of ensuring aircraft landing under the conditions of International Civil Aviation Organization category 1 (decision height of 60 m at the minimum visibility equal 800 m).- Published
- 2016
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17. Paramagnetic properties of Fe-Mn and Fe-V alloys: a DMFT study.
- Author
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Belozerov AS and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We calculate magnetic susceptibility of paramagnetic bcc Fe-Mn and Fe-V alloys by two different approaches. The first approach employs the coherent potential approximation (CPA) combined with the dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT). The material-specific Hamiltonians in the Wannier function basis are obtained by density functional theory. In the second approach, we construct supercells modeling the binary alloys and study them using DMFT. Both approaches lead to a qualitative agreement with experimental data. In particular, the decrease of Curie temperature with Mn content and a maximum at about 10 at.% V are well described in units of the Curie temperature of pure iron. In contrast to the Mn impurities, the V ones are found to be antiferromagnetically coupled to Fe atoms. Our calculations for the two-band Anderson-Hubbard model indicate that the antiferromagnetic coupling is responsible for a maximum in the concentration dependence of Curie temperature in Fe-V alloys.
- Published
- 2016
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18. Pressure-induced magnetic transitions with change of the orbital configuration in dimerised systems.
- Author
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Korotin DM, Anisimov VI, and Streltsov SV
- Abstract
We suggest a possible scenario for magnetic transition under pressure in dimerised systems where electrons are localised on molecular orbitals. The mechanism of transition is not related with competition between kinetic energy and on-site Coulomb repulsion as in Mott-Hubbard systems, or between crystal-field splitting and intra-atomic exchange as in classical atomic spin-state transitions. Instead, it is driven by the change of bonding-antibonding splitting on part of the molecular orbitals. In the magnetic systems with few half-filled molecular orbitals external pressure may result in increase of the bonding-antibonding splitting and localise all electrons on low-lying molecular orbitals suppressing net magnetic moment of the system. We give examples of the systems, where this or inverse transition may occur and by means of ab initio band structure calculations predict that it can be observed in α-MoCl4 at pressure P ~ 11 GPa.
- Published
- 2016
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19. Structural γ-ε phase transition in Fe-Mn alloys from a CPA + DMFT approach.
- Author
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Belozerov AS, Poteryaev AI, Skornyakov SL, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We present a computational scheme for total energy calculations of disordered alloys with strong electronic correlations. It employs the coherent potential approximation combined with the dynamical mean-field theory and allows one to study the structural transformations. The material-specific Hamiltonians in the Wannier function basis are obtained by density functional theory. The proposed computational scheme is applied to study the γ-ε structural transition in paramagnetic Fe-Mn alloys for Mn content from 10 to 20 at.%. The electronic correlations are found to play a crucial role in this transition. The calculated transition temperature decreases with increasing Mn content and is in good agreement with experiment. We demonstrate that in contrast to the α-γ transition in pure iron, the γ-ε transition in Fe-Mn alloys is driven by a combination of kinetic and Coulomb energies. The latter is found to be responsible for the decrease of the γ-ε transition temperature with Mn content.
- Published
- 2015
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20. Correlation-Driven Topological Fermi Surface Transition in FeSe.
- Author
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Leonov I, Skornyakov SL, Anisimov VI, and Vollhardt D
- Abstract
The electronic structure and phase stability of paramagnetic FeSe is computed by using a combination of ab initio methods for calculating band structure and dynamical mean-field theory. Our results reveal a topological change (Lifshitz transition) of the Fermi surface upon a moderate expansion of the lattice. The Lifshitz transition is accompanied with a sharp increase of the local moments and results in an entire reconstruction of magnetic correlations from the in-plane magnetic wave vector, (π,π) to (π,0). We attribute this behavior to a correlation-induced shift of the van Hove singularity originating from the d(xy) and d(xz)/d(yz) bands at the M point across the Fermi level. We propose that superconductivity is strongly influenced, or even induced, by a van Hove singularity.
- Published
- 2015
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21. Hellmann-Feynman forces within the DFT + U in Wannier functions basis.
- Author
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Novoselov D, Korotin DM, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
The most general way to describe localized atomic-like electronic states in strongly correlated compounds is to use Wannier functions. In the present paper we continue development of widely-used DFT + U method with the Wannier function basis set and propose a technique to calculate Hubbard contribution to atomic forces. The technique was implemented as a part of plane-waves pseudopotential code Quantum-ESPRESSO and tested on two compounds: charge transfer insulator NiO with cubic crystal structure and correlated metal SrVO3 with perovskite structure.
- Published
- 2015
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22. Mechanism of magnetic moment collapse under pressure in ferropericlase.
- Author
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Skorikov NA, Shorikov AO, Skornyakov SL, Korotin MA, and Anisimov VI
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Models, Molecular, Spectroscopy, Mossbauer, Ferrous Compounds chemistry, Magnesium Oxide chemistry, Magnetics, Pressure, Quantum Theory
- Abstract
We propose a new scenario for the magnetic collapse under pressure in ferropericlase (FP) (Fe(1/4)Mg(3/4))O without the presence of intermediate spin state, which contradicts the mechanism proposed in (2013 Phys. Rev. B 87 165113). This scenario is supported by results of combined local density approximation + dynamical mean-field theory method calculations for the paramagnetic phase at ambient and high pressures. At ambient pressure, calculation gave (Fe(1/4)Mg(3/4))O as an insulator with Fe 3d-shell in high-spin state. Experimentally observed high-spin to low-spin state transition of the Fe(2+) ion in the pressure range of 35-75 GPa is successfully reproduced in our calculations. The spin crossover is characterized by coexistence of Fe(2+) ions in high and low spin state but intermediate spin state is absent in the whole pressure range. Moreover, the probability of Fe ion d(7) onfiguration with S = 1 grows with pressure due to shortening of metal-oxygen distance. Also, no metal-insulator transition was obtained up to the pressure 140 GPa in agreement with experiment.
- Published
- 2015
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23. Investigation of electronic structure and magnetic properties of CaCo1.86As2 within the CPA method.
- Author
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Korotin MA, Pchelkina ZV, Skorikov NA, Anisimov VI, and Shorikov AO
- Abstract
Recently in iron free arsenide compound CaCo(2)As(2) a 7(1)% of vacancies on the Co sites was detected (Quirinale D G et al 2013 Phys. Rev. B 88 174420). Here we report the investigation of electronic structure and magnetic properties of CaCo(1.86)As(2) within the coherent potential approximation (CPA). First, the CPA calculations are performed on the base of the local spin density approximation. Second, the possible role of Coulomb correlations is checked within the CPA scheme developed recently for strongly correlated systems. Then the spin-orbit coupling, which could be essential for Co, is also taken into account within the CPA calculation. The A type antiferromagnetic ground state and the value of magnetic moment obtained within the CPA approximation are in good agreement with experiment.
- Published
- 2015
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24. Coulomb interaction parameters in bcc iron: an LDA+DMFT study.
- Author
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Belozerov AS and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We study the influence of Coulomb interaction parameters on electronic structure and magnetic properties of paramagnetic bcc Fe by means of the local density approximation plus dynamical mean-field theory approach. We consider the local Coulomb interaction in the density-density form as well as in the form with spin rotational invariance approximated by averaging over all directions of the quantization axis. Our results indicate that the magnetic properties of bcc Fe are mainly affected by the Hund's rule coupling J rather than by the Hubbard U. By employing the constrained density functional theory approach in the basis of Wannier functions of spd character, we obtain U = 4 eV and J = 0.9 eV. In spite of the widespread belief that U = 4 eV is too large for bcc Fe, our calculations with the obtained values of U and J result in a satisfactory agreement with the experiment. The correlation effects caused by U are found to be weak even for large U = 6 eV. The agreement between the calculated and experimental Curie temperatures is further improved if J is reduced to 0.8 eV. However, with the decrease of J, the effective local magnetic moment moves further away from the experimental value.
- Published
- 2014
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25. Electronic correlations determine the phase stability of iron up to the melting temperature.
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Leonov I, Poteryaev AI, Gornostyrev YN, Lichtenstein AI, Katsnelson MI, Anisimov VI, and Vollhardt D
- Abstract
We present theoretical results on the high-temperature phase stability and phonon spectra of paramagnetic bcc iron which explicitly take into account many-body effects. Several peculiarities, including a pronounced softening of the [110] transverse (T1) mode and a dynamical instability of the bcc lattice in harmonic approximation are identified. We relate these features to the α-to-γ and γ-to-δ phase transformations in iron. The high-temperature bcc phase is found to be highly anharmonic and appears to be stabilized by the lattice entropy.
- Published
- 2014
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26. Correlation effects and phonon modes softening with doping in Ba₁-xKxBiO₃.
- Author
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Korotin DM, Novoselov D, and Anisimov VI
- Subjects
- Barium Compounds chemistry, Models, Molecular, Molecular Conformation, Potassium Compounds chemistry, Bismuth chemistry, Oxides chemistry, Phonons
- Abstract
The monoclinic crystal structure of the undoped BaBiO₃ can be described as a cubic perovskite which is distorted by the frozen breathing and tilting phonon modes of the BiO₆ octahedra. The phonon mode softening is experimentally observed (Braden et al 1996 Europhys. Lett. 34 531) in Ba₁-xKxBiO₃ through potassium doping followed by a transition into an ideal cubic perovskite structure at x = 0.37, close to the emergence of superconductivity. In our previous paper (Korotin et al 2012 J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 24 415603) we demonstrated that it is necessary to take into account correlation effects using the DFT+U method in Wannier functions as a basis to obtain a good agreement between the calculated and experimental values of crystal structure distortion and the energy gap in BaBiO₃. In the present work, using the same method, we calculated the breathing mode phonon frequencies as a function of the potassium doping level in Ba₁-xKxBiO₃. The obtained frequencies are in good agreement with experimental values and the breathing mode softening with doping is reproduced, contrary to calculations made without consideration of correlation effects. We show that the cubic crystal structure becomes stable at x = 0.30 in agreement with the experimental transition to cubic perovskite at x = 0.37. The possible connections between the correlation effects, phonon mode softening and superconductivity in Ba₁-xKxBiO₃ are discussed.
- Published
- 2014
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27. First-principles calculation of atomic forces and structural distortions in strongly correlated materials.
- Author
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Leonov I, Anisimov VI, and Vollhardt D
- Abstract
We introduce a novel computational approach for the investigation of complex correlated electron materials which makes it possible to evaluate interatomic forces and, thereby, determine atomic displacements and structural transformations induced by electronic correlations. It combines ab initio band structure and dynamical mean-field theory and is implemented with the linear-response formalism regarding atomic displacements. We apply this new technique to explore structural transitions of prototypical correlated systems such as elemental hydrogen, SrVO3, and KCuF3.
- Published
- 2014
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28. The coherent potential approximation for strongly correlated systems: electronic structure and magnetic properties of NiO-ZnO solid solutions.
- Author
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Korotin MA, Pchelkina ZV, Skorikov NA, Kurmaev EZ, and Anisimov VI
- Subjects
- Quantum Theory, Solutions, Electrons, Magnetics, Nickel chemistry, Zinc Oxide chemistry
- Abstract
A method of electronic structure calculations for strongly correlated disordered materials is developed employing the basic idea of the coherent potential approximation. The evolution of the electronic structure and spin magnetic moment value with the concentration x in strongly correlated Ni1-xZnxO solid solutions is investigated in the framework of this method. The values of the energy gap and magnetic moment obtained are in agreement with the available experimental data.
- Published
- 2014
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29. Investigation of real materials with strong electronic correlations by the LDA+DMFT method.
- Author
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Anisimov VI and Lukoyanov AV
- Abstract
Materials with strong electronic correlations are at the cutting edge of experimental and theoretical studies, capturing the attention of researchers for a great variety of interesting phenomena: metal-insulator, phase and magnetic spin transitions, `heavy fermion' systems, interplay between magnetic order and superconductivity, appearance and disappearance of local magnetic moments, and transport property anomalies. It is clear that the richness of physical phenomena for these compounds is a result of partially filled 3d, 4f or 5f electron shells with local magnetic moments preserved in the solid state. Strong interactions of d and f electrons with each other and with itinerant electronic states of the material are responsible for its anomalous properties. Electronic structure calculations for strongly correlated materials should explicitly take into account Coulombic interactions between d or f electrons. Recent advances in this field are related to the development of the LDA+DMFT method, which combines local density approximation (LDA) with dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) to account for electronic correlation effects. In recent years, LDA+DMFT has allowed the successful treatment not only of simple systems but also of complicated real compounds. Nowadays, the LDA+DMFT method is the state-of-the-art tool for investigating correlated metals and insulators, spin and metal-insulator transitions (MIT) in transition-metal compounds in paramagnetic and magnetically ordered phases.
- Published
- 2014
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30. Ab initio study on the rare-earth iron-pnictides RFeAsO (R = Pr, Nd, Sm, Gd) in the low-temperature Cmma phase.
- Author
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Ertürk E, Gürel T, Lukoyanov AV, Akçay G, Eryiğit R, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We present density functional theory calculations on the iron-based pnictides RFeAsO (R = Pr, Nd, Sm, Gd). The calculations have been carried out using plane waves and the projector augmented wave (PAW) pseudopotential approach. Structural, magnetic and electronic properties are studied within the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) and also within GGA + U in order to investigate the influence of electron correlation effects. The low-temperature Cmma structure is fully optimized by the GGA considering both non-magnetic and magnetic cells. We have found that the spin-polarized structure improves the agreement with experiments on equilibrium lattice parameters, particularly the c lattice parameter and the Fe-As bond-lengths. The electronic band structure, total density of states, and spin-dependent orbital-resolved density of states are also analyzed and discussed in the frameworks of GGA and GGA + U. For all materials, by including an on-site Coulomb correction, the rare-earth 4f states move away from the Fermi level and the Fermi level features of the systems are found to be mostly defined by the 3d electron-electron correlations in Fe.
- Published
- 2014
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31. Electronic correlations and crystal structure distortions in BaBiO3.
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Korotin D, Kukolev V, Kozhevnikov AV, Novoselov D, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
BaBiO3 is a material where Bi4+ ions with half-filled 6s-states form an alternating set of Bi3+ and Bi5+ ions resulting in a charge ordered insulator. The charge ordering is accompanied by breathing distortion of the BiO6 octahedra (extension and contraction of the Bi-O bond lengths). Standard density functional theory (DFT) calculations fail to obtain the crystal structure instability caused by the pure breathing distortions. Combining effects of the breathing distortions and tilting of the BiO6 octahedra allows DFT to reproduce qualitatively an experimentally observed insulator with monoclinic crystal structure but strongly underestimates the breathing distortion parameter and energy gap values. In the present work we reexamine the BaBiO3 problem within the GGA + U method using a Wannier function basis set for the Bi 6s-band. Due to the high oxidation state of bismuth in this material, the Bi 6s-symmetry Wannier function is predominantly extended spatially on surrounding oxygen ions and hence differs strongly from a pure atomic 6s-orbital. That is in sharp contrast to transition metal oxides (with exclusion of high oxidation state compounds) where the major part of the d-band Wannier function is concentrated on the metal ion and a pure atomic d-orbital can serve as a good approximation. The GGA + U calculation results agree well with experimental data, in particular with experimental crystal structure parameters and energy gap values. Moreover, the GGA + U method allows one to reproduce the crystal structure instability due to the pure breathing distortions without octahedra tilting.
- Published
- 2012
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32. Electronic correlations at the α-γ structural phase transition in paramagnetic iron.
- Author
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Leonov I, Poteryaev AI, Anisimov VI, and Vollhardt D
- Abstract
We compute the equilibrium crystal structure and phase stability of iron at the α(bcc)-γ(fcc) phase transition as a function of temperature, by employing a combination of ab initio methods for calculating electronic band structures and dynamical mean-field theory. The magnetic correlation energy is found to be an essential driving force behind the α-γ structural phase transition in paramagnetic iron.
- Published
- 2011
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33. Linear-temperature dependence of static magnetic susceptibility in LaFeAsO from dynamical mean-field theory.
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Skornyakov SL, Katanin AA, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
In this Letter we report the local density approximation with dynamical mean field theory results for magnetic properties of the parent superconductor LaFeAsO in the paramagnetic phase. Calculated uniform magnetic susceptibility shows linear dependence at intermediate temperatures in agreement with experimental data. Contributions to the temperature dependence of the uniform susceptibility are strongly orbitally dependent. For high temperatures (>1000 K) susceptibility first saturates and then decreases with temperature. Our results demonstrate that linear-temperature dependence of static magnetic susceptibility in pnictide superconductors can be reproduced without invoking antiferromagnetic fluctuations.
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- 2011
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34. Electronic structure and magnetic state of transuranium metals under pressure.
- Author
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Lukoyanov AV, Shorikov AO, Bystrushkin VB, Dyachenko AA, Kabirova LR, Tsiovkin YY, Povzner AA, Dremov VV, Korotin MA, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
The electronic structures of bcc Np, fcc Pu, Am, and Cm pure metals under pressure have been investigated employing the LDA + U method with spin-orbit coupling (LDA + U + SO). The magnetic state of the actinide ions was analyzed in both LS and jj coupling schemes to reveal the applicability of corresponding coupling bases. It was demonstrated that whereas Pu and Am are well described within the jj coupling scheme, Np and Cm can be described appropriately neither in a {mσ}, nor in a {jmj} basis, due to intermediate coupling scheme realization in these metals that requires some finer treatment. The LDA + U + SO results for the considered transuranium metals reveal band broadening and gradual 5f electron delocalization under pressure.
- Published
- 2010
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35. Pressure-driven metal-insulator transition in hematite from dynamical mean-field theory.
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Kunes J, Korotin DM, Korotin MA, Anisimov VI, and Werner P
- Abstract
The local density approximation combined with dynamical mean-field theory is applied to study the paramagnetic and magnetically ordered phases of hematite Fe2O3 as a function of volume. As the volume is decreased, a simultaneous first-order insulator-metal and high-spin to low-spin transition occurs close to the experimental value of the critical volume. The high-spin insulating phase is destroyed by a progressive reduction of the spectral gap with increasing pressure, upon closing of which the high-spin phase becomes unstable. We conclude that the transition in Fe2O3 at approximately 50 GPa can be described as an electronically driven volume collapse.
- Published
- 2009
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36. Coulomb repulsion and correlation strength in LaFeAsO from density functional and dynamical mean-field theories.
- Author
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Anisimov VI, Korotin DM, Korotin MA, Kozhevnikov AV, Kuneš J, Shorikov AO, Skornyakov SL, and Streltsov SV
- Abstract
The LDA+DMFT (local density approximation combined with dynamical mean-field theory) computation scheme has been used to calculate spectral properties of LaFeAsO-the parent compound of the new high-T(c) iron oxypnictides. The average Coulomb repulsion [Formula: see text] and Hund's exchange J parameters for iron 3d electrons were calculated using the first-principles constrained density functional theory scheme in the Wannier functions formalism. Resulting values strongly depend on the number of states taken into account in the calculations: when the full set of O-2p, As-4p and Fe-3d orbitals and the corresponding bands are included, the interaction parameters [Formula: see text] eV and J = 0.8 eV are obtained. In contrast, when the basis set is restricted to the Fe-3d orbitals and bands only, the calculation gives much smaller values of [Formula: see text] eV, J = 0.5 eV. Nevertheless, DMFT calculations with both parameter sets and the corresponding basis sets result in a weakly correlated electronic structure that is in agreement with the experimental x-ray and photoemission spectra.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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37. CaCrO3: an anomalous antiferromagnetic metallic oxide.
- Author
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Komarek AC, Streltsov SV, Isobe M, Möller T, Hoelzel M, Senyshyn A, Trots D, Fernández-Díaz MT, Hansen T, Gotou H, Yagi T, Ueda Y, Anisimov VI, Grüninger M, Khomskii DI, and Braden M
- Abstract
Combining infrared reflectivity, transport, susceptibility, and several diffraction techniques, we find compelling evidence that CaCrO3 is a rare case of a metallic and antiferromagnetic transition-metal oxide with a three-dimensional electronic structure. Local spin density approximation calculations correctly describe the metallic behavior as well as the anisotropic magnetic ordering pattern of C type: The high Cr valence state induces via sizable pd hybridization remarkably strong next-nearest-neighbor interactions stabilizing this ordering. The subtle balance of magnetic interactions gives rise to magnetoelastic coupling, explaining pronounced structural anomalies observed at the magnetic ordering transition.
- Published
- 2008
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38. Optical evidence for symmetry changes above the Néel temperature of KCuF3.
- Author
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Deisenhofer J, Leonov I, Eremin MV, Kant Ch, Ghigna P, Mayr F, Iglamov VV, Anisimov VI, and van der Marel D
- Abstract
We report on optical measurements of the 1D Heisenberg antiferromagnet KCuF3. The crystal-field excitations of the Cu2+ ions have been observed and their temperature dependence can be understood in terms of magnetic and exchange-induced dipole mechanisms and vibronic interactions. Above TN we observe a new temperature scale TS characterized by the emergence of narrow absorption features that correlate with changes of the orbital ordering as observed by Paolasini et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 106403 (2002)]. The appearance of these optical transitions provides evidence for a symmetry change above the Néel temperature that affects the orbital ordering and paves the way for the antiferromagnetic ordering.
- Published
- 2008
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39. Structural relaxation due to electronic correlations in the paramagnetic insulator KCuF3.
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Leonov I, Binggeli N, Korotin D, Anisimov VI, Stojić N, and Vollhardt D
- Abstract
A computational scheme for the investigation of complex materials with strongly interacting electrons is formulated which is able to treat atomic displacements, and hence structural relaxation, caused by electronic correlations. It combines ab initio band structure and dynamical mean-field theory and is implemented in terms of plane-wave pseudopotentials. The equilibrium Jahn-Teller distortion and antiferro-orbital order found for paramagnetic KCuF3 agree well with experiment.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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40. Collapse of magnetic moment drives the Mott transition in MnO.
- Author
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Kunes J, Lukoyanov AV, Anisimov VI, Scalettar RT, and Pickett WE
- Abstract
The metal-insulator transition in correlated electron systems, where electron states transform from itinerant to localized, has been one of the central themes of condensed-matter physics for more than half a century. The persistence of this question has been a consequence both of the intricacy of the fundamental issues and the growing recognition of the complexities that arise in real materials, when strong repulsive interactions play the primary role. The initial concept of Mott was based on the relative importance of kinetic hopping (measured by the bandwidth) and onsite repulsion of electrons. Real materials, however, have many further degrees of freedom that, as is recently attracting note, give rise to a rich variety of scenarios for a 'Mott transition'. Here, we report results for the classic correlated insulator MnO that reproduce a simultaneous moment collapse, volume collapse and metallization transition near the observed pressure, and identify the mechanism as collapse of the magnetic moment due to an increase of crystal-field splitting, rather than to variation in the bandwidth.
- Published
- 2008
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41. NiO: correlated band structure of a charge-transfer insulator.
- Author
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Kunes J, Anisimov VI, Skornyakov SL, Lukoyanov AV, and Vollhardt D
- Abstract
The band structure of the prototypical charge-transfer insulator NiO is computed by using a combination of an ab initio band structure method and the dynamical mean-field theory with a quantum Monte-Carlo impurity solver. Employing a Hamiltonian which includes both Ni d and O p orbitals we find excellent agreement with the energy bands determined from angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. This brings an important progress in a long-standing problem of solid-state theory. Most notably we obtain the low-energy Zhang-Rice bands with strongly k-dependent orbital character discussed previously in the context of low-energy model theories.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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42. Doped Mott insulator as the origin of heavy-fermion behavior in LiV2O4.
- Author
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Arita R, Held K, Lukoyanov AV, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We investigate the electronic structure of LiV2O4, for which heavy-fermion behavior has been observed in various experiments, by the combination of the local density approximation and dynamical mean field theory. To obtain results at zero temperature, we employ the projective quantum Monte Carlo method as an impurity solver. Our results show that the strongly correlated a 1g band is a lightly doped Mott insulator which, at low temperatures, shows a sharp (heavy) quasiparticle peak just above the Fermi level, which is consistent with recent photoemission experiments by Shimoyamada et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 026403 (2006)10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.026403].
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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43. A band structure analysis of the coexistence of superconductivity and magnetism in (Ho,Dy)Ni(2)B(2)C.
- Author
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Shorikov AO, Anisimov VI, and Sigrist M
- Abstract
The phenomenological theory of complex interplay of superconductivity and magnetism in Ho(1-x)Dy(x)Ni(2)B(2)C by Doh et al (1999 Phys. Rev. Lett. 83 5350) is based on the multi-band picture with at least one band which is strongly dominated by Ni 3d-electron orbitals. These orbitals are insensitive to the antiferromagnetic order of the (Ho, Dy) 4f-electrons, found in these alloys. In the present study we show by detailed analysis of the band structure that indeed such a band can be identified. This provides a microscopic justification of the basic idea underlying the phenomenological discussion.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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44. Spin gap in Tl2Ru2O7 and the possible formation of Haldane chains in three-dimensional crystals.
- Author
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Lee S, Park JG, Adroja DT, Khomskii D, Streltsov S, McEwen KA, Sakai H, Yoshimura K, Anisimov VI, Mori D, Kanno R, and Ibberson R
- Abstract
Dimensionality is one of the most important parameters of physical phenomena. Only two things determine the universality class of a phase transition: the dimensionality of a given system and the symmetry of the order parameter. In most cases, the dimensionality of a substance is predetermined by its crystal structure. Examples in which the effective dimensionality is reduced are quite rare. Here we show that the three-dimensional cubic system of Tl(2)Ru(2)O(7) most probably evolves into a one-dimensional spin-one Haldane system with a spin gap below 120 K, accompanied by anomalies in the structure, resistivity and susceptibility. We argue that these anomalies are due to an orbital ordering of Ru 4d electrons, with a strong coupling among three degrees of freedom: orbital, spin and lattice. Our work provides a unique example of the spontaneous formation of Haldane system with an insight into the intriguing interplay of different degrees of freedom.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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45. Orbital-assisted metal-insulator transition in VO2.
- Author
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Haverkort MW, Hu Z, Tanaka A, Reichelt W, Streltsov SV, Korotin MA, Anisimov VI, Hsieh HH, Lin HJ, Chen CT, Khomskii DI, and Tjeng LH
- Abstract
We found direct experimental evidence for an orbital switching in the V 3d states across the metal-insulator transition in VO2. We have used soft-x-ray absorption spectroscopy at the V L2,3 edges as a sensitive local probe and have determined quantitatively the orbital polarizations. These results strongly suggest that, in going from the metallic to the insulating state, the orbital occupation changes in a manner that charge fluctuations and effective bandwidths are reduced, that the system becomes more one dimensional and more susceptible to a Peierls-like transition, and that the required massive orbital switching can only be made if the system is close to a Mott insulating regime.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Determination of the orbital moment and crystal-field splitting in LaTiO3.
- Author
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Haverkort MW, Hu Z, Tanaka A, Ghiringhelli G, Roth H, Cwik M, Lorenz T, Schüssler-Langeheine C, Streltsov SV, Mylnikova AS, Anisimov VI, de Nadai C, Brookes NB, Hsieh HH, Lin HJ, Chen CT, Mizokawa T, Taguchi Y, Tokura Y, Khomskii DI, and Tjeng LH
- Abstract
Utilizing a sum rule in a spin-resolved photoelectron spectroscopic experiment with circularly polarized light, we show that the orbital moment in LaTiO3 is strongly reduced from its ionic value, both below and above the Ne el temperature. Using Ti L2,3 x-ray absorption spectroscopy as a local probe, we found that the crystal-field splitting in the t2g subshell is about 0.12-0.30 eV. This large splitting does not facilitate the formation of an orbital liquid.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Mutual experimental and theoretical validation of bulk photoemission spectra of Sr1-xCaxVO3.
- Author
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Sekiyama A, Fujiwara H, Imada S, Suga S, Eisaki H, Uchida SI, Takegahara K, Harima H, Saitoh Y, Nekrasov IA, Keller G, Kondakov DE, Kozhevnikov AV, Pruschke T, Held K, Vollhardt D, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
We report high-resolution high-energy photoemission spectra together with parameter-free LDA + DMFT (local density approximation + dynamical mean-field theory) results for Sr1-xCaxVO3, a prototype 3d(1) system. In contrast to earlier investigations the bulk spectra are found to be insensitive to x. The good agreement between experiment and theory confirms the bulk sensitivity of the high-energy photoemission spectra.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Charge and orbital order in Fe3O4.
- Author
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Leonov I, Yaresko AN, Antonov VN, Korotin MA, and Anisimov VI
- Abstract
Charge and orbital ordering in the low-temperature monoclinic structure of magnetite (Fe3O4) is investigated using the local spin density approximation with Coulomb interaction correction method. While the difference between t(2g) minority occupancies of Fe(2+)(B) and Fe(3+)(B) cations is large and gives direct evidence for charge ordering, the screening is so effective that the total 3d charge disproportion is rather small. The charge order has a pronounced [001] modulation, which is incompatible with the Anderson criterion. The orbital order agrees with the Kugel-Khomskii theory.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. [Potentialities of magnetic resonance imaging in the complex of prenatal radiation diagnosis of fetal malformations].
- Author
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Mikhaĭlov MK, Akberov RF, Anisimov VI, and Iusupov KF
- Subjects
- Adult, Congenital Abnormalities diagnostic imaging, Female, Fetal Diseases diagnostic imaging, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Prognosis, Ultrasonography, Prenatal, Congenital Abnormalities diagnosis, Fetal Diseases diagnosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prenatal Diagnosis
- Abstract
The purpose of the study was to investigate the potentialities of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the complex of prenatal radiation diagnosis of fetal malformations. Twenty-eight female patients with suspected fetal malformations were examined. Ultrasound study was supplemented by MRI according to a specially developed protocol. Various fetal CNS malformations were diagnosed. These included the Arnold-Chiari syndrome, the Dandy-Walker syndrome, occlusive hydrocephaly, lobular holoprosencephaly, porencephaly, diaphragmatic hernias, anomalies of the abdomen and retroperitoneal space, as well as anomalies of facial structures, including median clefts, and dacryocystocele. The use of MRI in the complex prenatal radiation diagnosis makes it possible to visualize fetal malformation more clearly, contributes to the more adequate prediction of the outcome of pregnancy and to the choice of a management policy for a female patient.
- Published
- 2004
50. Prominent quasiparticle peak in the photoemission spectrum of the metallic phase of V2O3.
- Author
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Mo SK, Denlinger JD, Kim HD, Park JH, Allen JW, Sekiyama A, Yamasaki A, Kadono K, Suga S, Saitoh Y, Muro T, Metcalf P, Keller G, Held K, Eyert V, Anisimov VI, and Vollhardt D
- Abstract
We present the first observation of a prominent quasiparticle peak in the photoemission spectrum of the metallic phase of V2O3 and report new spectral calculations that combine the local-density approximation with the dynamical mean-field theory (using quantum Monte Carlo simulations) to show the development of such a distinct peak with decreasing temperature. The experimental peak width and weight are significantly larger than in the theory.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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