109 research outputs found
Electron and phonon properties and gas storage in carbon honeycomb
A new kind of three-dimensional carbon allotropes, termed carbon honeycomb
(CHC), has recently been synthesized [PRL 116, 055501 (2016)]. Based on the
experimental results, a family of graphene networks are constructed, and their
electronic and phonon properties are calculated by using first principles
methods. All networks are porous metal with two types of electron transport
channels along the honeycomb axis and they are isolated from each other: one
type of channels is originated from the orbital interactions of the carbon
zigzag chains and is topologically protected, while the other type of channels
is from the straight lines of the carbon atoms that link the zigzag chains and
is topologically trivial. The velocity of the electrons can reach ~10^6 m/s.
Phonon transport in these allotropes is strongly anisotropic, and the thermal
conductivities can be very low when compared with graphite by at least a factor
of 15. Our calculations further indicate that these porous carbon networks
possess high storage capacity for gaseous atoms and molecules in agreement with
experiment.Comment: Nanoscale, 201
Nodal surface semimetals: Theory and material realization
We theoretically study the three-dimensional topological semimetals with
nodal surfaces protected by crystalline symmetries. Different from the
well-known nodal-point and nodal-line semimetals, in these materials, the
conduction and valence bands cross on closed nodal surfaces in the Brillouin
zone. We propose different classes of nodal surfaces, both in the absence and
in the presence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC). In the absence of SOC, a class of
nodal surfaces can be protected by spacetime inversion symmetry and sublattice
symmetry and characterized by a index, while another class of
nodal surfaces are guaranteed by a combination of nonsymmorphic two-fold
screw-rotational symmetry and time-reversal symmetry. We show that the
inclusion of SOC will destroy the former class of nodal surfaces but may
preserve the latter provided that the inversion symmetry is broken. We further
generalize the result to magnetically ordered systems and show that protected
nodal surfaces can also exist in magnetic materials without and with SOC, given
that certain magnetic group symmetry requirements are satisfied. Several
concrete nodal-surface material examples are predicted via the first-principles
calculations. The possibility of multi-nodal-surface materials is discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Double Kagome bands in a two-dimensional phosphorus carbide P2C3
The interesting properties of Kagome bands, consisting of Dirac bands and a
flat band, have attracted extensive attention. However, the materials with only
one Kagome band around the Fermi level cannot possess physical properties of
Dirac fermions and strong correlated fermions simultaneously. Here, we propose
a new type of band structure --- double Kagome bands, which can realize
coexistence of the two kinds of fermions. Moreover, the new band structure is
found to exist in a new two-dimensional material, phosphorus carbide P2C3. The
carbide material shows good stability and unusual electronic properties. Strong
magnetism appears in the structure by hole doping of the flat band, which
results in spin splitting of the Dirac bands. The edge states induced by Dirac
and flat bands coexist on the Fermi level, indicating outstanding transport
characteristics. In addition, a possible route to experimentally grow P2C3 on
some suitable substrates such as the Ag (111) surface is also discussed
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