Universität Stuttgart
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Item Open Access Tailored nanocomposites for 3D printed micro-optics(2020) Weber, Ksenia; Werdehausen, Daniel; König, Peter; Thiele, Simon; Schmid, Michael; Decker, Manuel; Oliveira, Peter William de; Herkommer, Alois; Giessen, HaraldItem Open Access Efficient approach to compute melting properties fully from ab initio with application to Cu(2017) Zhu, Li-Fang; Grabowski, Blazej; Neugebauer, JörgApplying thermodynamic integration within an ab initio-based free-energy approach is a state-of-the-art method to calculate melting points of materials. However, the high computational cost and the reliance on a good reference system for calculating the liquid free energy have so far hindered a general application. To overcome these challenges, we propose the two-optimized references thermodynamic integration using Langevin dynamics (TOR-TILD) method in this work by extending the two-stage upsampled thermodynamic integration using Langevin dynamics (TU-TILD) method, which has been originally developed to obtain anharmonic free energies of solids, to the calculation of liquid free energies. The core idea of TOR-TILD is to fit two empirical potentials to the energies from density functional theory based molecular dynamics runs for the solid and the liquid phase and to use these potentials as reference systems for thermodynamic integration. Because the empirical potentials closely reproduce the ab initio system in the relevant part of the phase space the convergence of the thermodynamic integration is very rapid. Therefore, the proposed approach improves significantly the computational efficiency while preserving the required accuracy. As a test case, we apply TOR-TILD to fcc Cu computing not only the melting point but various other melting properties, such as the entropy and enthalpy of fusion and the volume change upon melting. The generalized gradient approximation (GGA) with the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) exchange-correlation functional and the local-density approximation (LDA) are used. Using both functionals gives a reliable ab initio confidence interval for the melting point, the enthalpy of fusion, and entropy of fusion.Item Open Access Migration mechanisms of a faceted grain boundary(2018) Hadian, Raheleh; Grabowski, Blazej; Finnis, Michael W.; Neugebauer, JörgWe report molecular dynamics simulations and their analysis for a mixed tilt and twist grain boundary vicinal to the Σ7 symmetric tilt boundary of the type {123} in aluminum. When minimized in energy at 0K, a grain boundary of this type exhibits nanofacets that contain kinks. We observe that at higher temperatures of migration simulations, given extended annealing times, it is energetically favorable for these nanofacets to coalesce into a large terrace-facet structure. Therefore, we initiate the simulations from such a structure and study as a function of applied driving force and temperature how the boundary migrates. We find the migration of a faceted boundary can be described in terms of the flow of steps. The migration is dominated at lower driving force by the collective motion of the steps incorporated in the facet, and at higher driving forces by the step detachment from the terrace-facet junction and propagation of steps across the terraces. The velocity of steps on terraces is faster than their velocity when incorporated in the facet, and very much faster than the velocity of the facet profile itself, which is almost stationary. A simple kinetic Monte Carlo model matches the broad kinematic features revealed by the molecular dynamics. Since the mechanisms seem likely to be very general on kinked grain-boundary planes, the step-flow description is a promising approach to more quantitative modeling of general grain boundaries.Item Open Access Ab initio based method to study structural phase transitions in dynamically unstable crystals, with new insights on the β to ω transformation in titanium(2019) Korbmacher, Dominique; Glensk, Albert; Duff, Andrew Ian; Finnis, Michael W.; Grabowski, Blazej; Neugebauer, JörgWe present an approach that enables an efficient and accurate study of dynamically unstable crystals over the full temperature range. The approach is based on an interatomic potential fitted to ab initio molecular dynamics energies for both the high- and low-temperature stable phases. We verify by comparison to explicit ab initio simulations that such a bespoke potential, for which we use here the functional form of the embedded atom method, provides accurate transformation temperatures and atomistic features of the transformation. The accuracy of the potential makes it an ideal tool to study the important impact of finite size and finite time effects. We apply our approach to the dynamically unstable β (bcc) titanium phase and study in detail the transformation to the low-temperature stable hexagonal ω phase. We find a large set of previously unreported linear-chain disordered (LCD) structures made up of three types of [111]β linear-chain defects that exhibit randomly disordered arrangements in the (111)β plane.Item Open Access Phonon lifetimes throughout the Brillouin zone at elevated temperatures from experiment and ab Initio(2019) Glensk, Albert; Grabowski, Blazej; Hickel, Tilmann; Neugebauer, Jörg; Neuhaus, Jürgen; Hradil, Klaudia; Petry, Winfried; Leitner, MichaelWe obtain phonon lifetimes in aluminium by inelastic neutron scattering experiments, by ab initio molecular dynamics, and by perturbation theory. At elevated temperatures significant discrepancies are found between experiment and perturbation theory, which disappear when using molecular dynamics due to the inclusion of full anharmonicity and the correct treatment of the multiphonon background. We show that multiple-site interactions are small and that local pairwise anharmonicity dominates phonon-phonon interactions, which permits an efficient computation of phonon lifetimes.Item Open Access Photo-excited dynamics in the excitonic insulator Ta2NiSe5(2018) Werdehausen, Daniel; Takayama, Tomohiro; Albrecht, Gelon; Lu, Yangfan; Takagi, Hidenori; Kaiser, StefanThe excitonic insulator is an intriguing correlated electron phase formed of condensed excitons. A promising candidate is the small band gap semiconductor Ta2NiSe5. Here we investigate the quasiparticle and coherent phonon dynamics in Ta2NiSe5 in a time resolved pump probe experiment. Using the models originally developed by Kabanov et al for superconductors (Kabanov et al 1999 Phys. Rev. B 59 1497), we show that the material’s intrinsic gap can be described as almost temperature independent for temperatures up to about 250 K to 275 K. This behavior supports the existence of the excitonic insulator state in Ta2NiSe5. The onset of an additional temperature dependent component to the gap above these temperatures suggests that the material is located in the BEC-BCS crossover regime. Furthermore, we show that this state is very stable against strong photoexcitation, which reveals that the free charge carriers are unable to effectively screen the attractive Coulomb interaction between electrons and holes, likely due to the quasi 1D structure of Ta2NiSe5.Item Open Access Impact of asymmetric martensite and austenite nucleation and growth behavior on the phase stability and hysteresis of freestanding shape-memory nanoparticles(2018) Ko, Won-Seok; Grabowski, Blazej; Neugebauer, JörgMartensitic transformations in nanoscaled shape-memory alloys exhibit characteristic features absent for the bulk counterparts. Detailed understanding is required for applications in micro- and nanoelectromechanical systems, and experimental limitations render atomistic simulation an important complementary approach. Using a recently developed, accurate potential we investigate the phase transformation in freestanding Ni-Ti shape-memory nanoparticles with molecular-dynamics simulations. The results confirm that the decrease in the transformation temperature with decreasing particle size is correlated with an overstabilization of the austenitic surface energy over the martensitic surface energy. However, a detailed atomistic analysis of the nucleation and growth behavior reveals an unexpected difference in the mechanisms determining the austenite finish and martensite start temperature. While the austenite finish temperature is directly affected by a contribution of the surface energy difference, the martensite start temperature is mostly affected by the transformation strain, contrary to general expectations. This insight not only explains the reduced transformation temperature but also the reduced thermal hysteresis in freestanding nanoparticles.Item Open Access Vibrational quenching of weakly bound cold molecular ions immersed in their parent gas(2020) Jachymski, Krzysztof; Meinert, FlorianHybrid ion–atom systems provide an excellent platform for studies of state-resolved quantum chemistry at low temperatures, where quantum effects may be prevalent. Here we study theoretically the process of vibrational relaxation of an initially weakly bound molecular ion due to collisions with the background gas atoms. We show that this inelastic process is governed by the universal long-range part of the interaction potential, which allows for using simplified model potentials applicable to multiple atomic species. The product distribution after the collision can be estimated by making use of the distorted wave Born approximation. We find that the inelastic collisions lead predominantly to small changes in the binding energy of the molecular ion.Item Open Access Readout and control of an endofullerene electronic spin(2020) Pinto, Dinesh; Paone, Domenico; Kern, Bastian; Dierker, Tim; Wieczorek, René; Singha, Aparajita; Dasari, Durga; Finkler, Amit; Harneit, Wolfgang; Wrachtrup, Jörg; Kern, KlausAtomic spins for quantum technologies need to be individually addressed and positioned with nanoscale precision. C60 fullerene cages offer a robust packaging for atomic spins, while allowing in-situ physical positioning at the nanoscale. However, achieving single-spin level readout and control of endofullerenes has so far remained elusive. In this work, we demonstrate electron paramagnetic resonance on an encapsulated nitrogen spin (14N@C60) within a C60 matrix using a single near-surface nitrogen vacancy (NV) center in diamond at 4.7 K. Exploiting the strong magnetic dipolar interaction between the NV and endofullerene electronic spins, we demonstrate radio-frequency pulse controlled Rabi oscillations and measure spin-echos on an encapsulated spin. Modeling the results using second-order perturbation theory reveals an enhanced hyperfine interaction and zero-field splitting, possibly caused by surface adsorption on diamond. These results demonstrate the first step towards controlling single endofullerenes, and possibly building large-scale endofullerene quantum machines, which can be scaled using standard positioning or self-assembly methods.Item Open Access Fluid membranes - theory of vesicle conformations(Jülich : Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Zentralbibliothek, 1994) Seifert, UdoThe theory of conformations of fluid membranes and vesicles presented in this treatise started from a continuum description based on two relevant degrees of freedom: the local shape, and the local density difference in the two monolayers. Energy minimization, taking into account the geometrical constraints, yields a variety of shapes of various topologies. These shapes are arranged into phase diagrams which separate phases of different symmetry. For vesicles of higher genus, this approach culminates in the prediction of conformal diffusion which amounts to a one-fold continuous degeneracy of the ground state. For bound vesicles and vesicles consisting of two components, an additional energy enters the minimization, which leads to the prediction of a curvature-driven adhesion transition and curvature-induced lateral phase segregation, respectively.