8,205 research outputs found
FORC Analysis of homogeneous nucleation in the two-dimensional kinetic Ising model
The first-order reversal curve (FORC) method is applied to the
two-dimensional kinetic Ising model. For the system size and magnetic field
chosen, the system reverses by the homogeneous nucleation and growth of many
droplets. This makes the dynamics of reversal nearly deterministic, in contrast
to the strongly disordered systems previously studied by the FORC method.
Consequently, the FORC diagrams appear different from those obtained in
previous studies. The Kolmogorov-Johnson-Mehl-Avrami (KJMA) theory of phase
transformation by nucleation and growth is applied to the system. Reasonable
agreement with the Monte Carlo simulations is found, and the FORC method
suggests how the KJMA theory could be extended.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, presented at 2004 MMM meeting, to appear in
conference proceedings in J. Appl. Phys. (May 2005); rephrased several
section
Model for reflection and transmission matrices of nanowire end facets
Nanowires show a large potential for various electrooptical devices, such as
light emitting diodes, solar cells and nanowire lasers. We present a direct
method developed to calculate the modal reflection and transmission matrix at
the end facets of a waveguide of arbitrary cross section, resulting in a
generalized version of the Fresnel equations. The reflection can be
conveniently computed using Fast Fourier Transforms. We demonstrate that the
reflection is qualitatively described by two main parameters, the modal field
confinement and the average Fresnel reflection of the plane waves constituting
the waveguide mode.Comment: 11 pages,14 figure
Finite-size-scaling analysis of the XY universality class between two and three dimensions: An application of Novotny's transfer-matrix method
Based on Novotny's transfer-matrix method, we simulated the (stacked)
triangular Ising antiferromagnet embedded in the space with the dimensions
variable in the range 2 \le d \le 3. Our aim is to investigate the criticality
of the XY universality class for 2 \le d \le 3. For that purpose, we employed
an extended version of the finite-size-scaling analysis developed by Novotny,
who utilized this scheme to survey the Ising criticality (ferromagnet) for 1
\le d \le 3. Diagonalizing the transfer matrix for the system sizes N up to
N=17, we calculated the -dependent correlation-length critical exponent
\nu(d). Our simulation result \nu(d) appears to interpolate smoothly the known
two limiting cases, namely, the KT and d=3 XY universality classes, and the
intermediate behavior bears close resemblance to that of the analytical formula
via the 1/N-expansion technique. Methodological details including the
modifications specific to the present model are reported
Equilibrium temperatures of mass transfer cooled walls in high-speed flow of an absorbing-emitting gas
Equilibrium temperatures of mass transfer cooled walls in high speed flow of absorbing-emitting ga
A rejection-free Monte Carlo method for the hard-disk system
We construct a rejection-free Monte Carlo method for the hard-disk system.
Rejection-free Monte Carlo methods preserve the time-evolution behavior of the
standard Monte Carlo method, and this relationship is confirmed for our method
by observing nonequilibrium relaxation of a bond-orientational order parameter.
The rejection-free method gives a greater computational efficiency than the
standard method at high densities. The rejection free method is implemented in
a shrewd manner using optimization methods to calculate a rejection probability
and to update the system. This method should allow an efficient study of the
dynamics of two-dimensional solids at high density.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures. This paper has been combined into the
cond-mat/0508652, and published in Phys. Rev.
Deterministic spatio-temporal control of nano-optical fields in optical antennas and nano transmission lines
We show that pulse shaping techniques can be applied to tailor the ultrafast
temporal response of the strongly confined and enhanced optical near fields in
the feed gap of resonant optical antennas (ROAs). Using finite-difference
time-domain (FDTD) simulations followed by Fourier transformation, we obtain
the impulse response of a nano structure in the frequency domain, which allows
obtaining its temporal response to any arbitrary pulse shape. We apply the
method to achieve deterministic optimal temporal field compression in ROAs with
reduced symmetry and in a two-wire transmission line connected to a symmetric
dipole antenna. The method described here will be of importance for experiments
involving coherent control of field propagation in nanophotonic structures and
of light-induced processes in nanometer scale volumes.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Calculation of the Raman G peak intensity in monolayer graphene: role of Ward identities
The absolute integrated intensity of the single-phonon Raman peak at 1580
cm^{-1} is calculated for a clean graphene monolayer. The resulting intensity
is determined by the trigonal warping of the electronic bands and the
anisotropy of the electron-phonon coupling, and is proportional to the second
power of the excitation frequency. The main contribution to the process comes
from the intermediate electron-hole states with typical energies of the order
of the excitation frequency, contrary to what has been reported earlier. This
occurs because of strong cancellations between different terms of the
perturbation theory, analogous to Ward identities in quantum electrodynamics
Optically Thin Metallic Films for High-radiative-efficiency Plasmonics
Plasmonics enables deep-subwavelength concentration of light and has become
important for fundamental studies as well as real-life applications. Two major
existing platforms of plasmonics are metallic nanoparticles and metallic films.
Metallic nanoparticles allow efficient coupling to far field radiation, yet
their synthesis typically leads to poor material quality. Metallic films offer
substantially higher quality materials, but their coupling to radiation is
typically jeopardized due to the large momentum mismatch with free space. Here,
we propose and theoretically investigate optically thin metallic films as an
ideal platform for high-radiative-efficiency plasmonics. For far-field
scattering, adding a thin high-quality metallic substrate enables a higher
quality factor while maintaining the localization and tunability that the
nanoparticle provides. For near-field spontaneous emission, a thin metallic
substrate, of high quality or not, greatly improves the field overlap between
the emitter environment and propagating surface plasmons, enabling high-Purcell
(total enhancement > ), high-quantum-yield (> 50 %) spontaneous emission,
even as the gap size vanishes (35 nm). The enhancement has almost
spatially independent efficiency and does not suffer from quenching effects
that commonly exist in previous structures.Comment: Supporting Information not included but freely available from
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b0085
Transfer-matrix approach to the three-dimensional bond percolation: An application of Novotny's formalism
A transfer-matrix simulation scheme for the three-dimensional (d=3) bond
percolation is presented. Our scheme is based on Novotny's transfer-matrix
formalism, which enables us to consider arbitrary (integral) number of sites N
constituting a unit of the transfer-matrix slice even for d=3. Such an
arbitrariness allows us to perform systematic finite-size-scaling analysis of
the criticality at the percolation threshold. Diagonalizing the transfer matrix
for N =4,5,...,10, we obtain an estimate for the correlation-length critical
exponent nu = 0.81(5)
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