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First Principles Calculations of Electron Transport and Structural Damage by Intense IrradiationOrtiz, Carlos January 2009 (has links)
First principle electronic structure theory is used to describe the effect of crystal binding on radiation detectors, electron transport properties, and structural damage induced by intense irradiation. A large database containing general electronic structure results to which data mining algorithms can be applied in the search for new functional materials, a case study is presented for scintillator detector materials. Inelastic cross sections for the generation of secondary electron cascades through impact ionization are derived from the dielectric response of an electron gas and evolved in time with Molecular Dynamics (MD). Qualitative and quantitive estimates are presented for the excitation and relaxation of a sample irradiated with Free Electron Laser pulses. A study is presented in where the structural damage on covalent bonded crystals following intense irradiation is derived from a Tight Binding approach and evolved in time with MD in where the evolution of the sample is derived from GW theory for the quasiparticle spectra and a dedicated Boltzmann transport equation for the impact ionization.
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Magnetization Study of the Heavy-Fermion System Yb(Rh1-xCox)2Si2 and of the Quantum Magnet NiCl2-4SC(NH2)2Pedrero Ojeda, Luis 25 June 2013 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis presents a comprehensive study of the magnetic properties and of quantum phase transitions (QPTs) of two different systems which have been investigated by means of low-temperature magnetization measurements. The systems are the heavy-fermion Yb(Rh1-xCox)2Si2 (metallic) and the quantum magnet NiCl2-4SC(NH2)2 (insulator). Although they are very different materials, they share two common properties: magnetism and QPTs. Magnetism originates in Yb(Rh1-xCox)2Si2 from the trivalent state of the Yb3+ ions with effective spin S = 1=2. In NiCl2-4SC(NH2)2, the magnetic Ni2+ ions have spin S = 1. These magnetic ions are located on a body-centered tetragonal lattice in both systems and, in this study, the QPTs are induced by an external magnetic field.
In Yb(Rh1-xCox)2Si2 the evolution of magnetism from itinerant in slightly Co-doped YbRh2Si2 to local in YbCo2Si2 is examined analyzing the magnetic moment versus chemical pressure x phase diagram in high-quality single crystals, which indicates a continuous change of dominating energy scale from the Kondo to the RKKY one. The physics of the antiferromagnet YbCo2Si2 can be completely understood. On the other hand, the physics of pure and slightly Co-containing YbRh2Si2 is much more complex, due to the itinerant character of magnetism and the vicinity of the system to an unconventional quantum critical point (QCP). The field-induced AFM QCP in Yb(Rh0.93Co0.07)2Si2 and in pure YbRh2Si2 under a pressure of 1.5GPa is characterized by means of the magnetic Grüneisen ratio. The final part of this thesis describes quantum criticality near the field-induced QCP in NiCl2-4SC(NH2)2 .
These results will be compared to the theory of QPTs in Ising and XY antiferromagnets. Since the XY -AFM ordering can be described as BEC of magnons by mapping the spin-1 system into a gas of hardcore bosons, the temperature dependence of the magnetization for a BEC is analytically derived and compared to the results just below the critical field. The remarkable agreement between the BEC theory and experiments in this quantum magnet is one of the most prominent examples of the concept of universality.
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Slow Dynamics In Soft Condensed Matter : From Supercooled Liquids To Thermotropic Liquid CrystalsChakrabarti, Dwaipayan 06 1900 (has links)
This thesis, which contains fourteen chapters in two parts, presents theoretical and computer simulation studies of dynamics in supercooled liquids and thermotropic liquid crystals. These two apparently diverse physical systems are unified by a startling similarity in their complex slow dynamics. Part I consists of six chapters on supercooled liquids while Part II comprises seven chapters on thermotropic liquid crystals. The fourteenth chapter provides a concluding note.
Part I starts with an introduction to supercooled liquids given in chapter 1. This chapter discusses basic features of supercooled liquids and the glass transition and portrays some of the theoretical frameworks and formalisms that are widely recognized to have contributed to our present understanding.
Chapter 2 introduces a new model of binary mixture in order to study dynamics across the supercooled regime. The system consists of an equimolar mixture of the Lennard-Jones spheres and the Gay-Berne ellipsoids of revolution, and thus one of its components has orientational degrees of freedom (ODOF). A decoupling between trans-lational diffusion and rotational diffusion is found to occur below a temperature where the second rank orientational correlation time starts showing a steady deviation from the Arrhenius temperature behavior. At low temperatures, the optical Kerr effect (OKE) signal derived from the system shows a short-to-intermediate time power law decay with a very weak dependence on temperature, if at all, of the power law exponent as has been observed experimentally. At the lowest temperature investigated, jump motion is found to occur in both the translational and orientational degrees of freedom.
Chapter 3 studies how the binary mixture, introduced in the previous chapter, explores its underlying potential energy landscape. The study reveals correlations between the decoupling phenomena, observed almost universally in supercooled molecular liquids, and the manner of exploration of the energy landscape of the system. A significant deviation from the Debye model of rotational diffusion in the dynamics of ODOF is found to begin at a temperature at which the average inherent structure energy of the system starts falling as the temperature decreases. Further, the coupling between rotational diffusion and translational diffusion breaks down at a still lower temperature, where a change occurs in the temperature dependence of the average inherent structure energy.
Chapters 4-6 describe analytical and numerical approaches to solve kinetic models of glassy dynamics for various observables. The β process is modeled as a thermally activated event in a two-level system and the a process is described as a β relaxation mediated cooperative transition in a double-well. The model resembles a landscape picture, conceived by Stillinger [Science 267, 1935 (1995)], where the a process is assumed to involve a concerted series of the β processes, the latter being identified as elementary relaxations involving transitions between contiguous basins. For suitable choice of parameter values, the model could reproduce many of the experimentally observed features of anomalous heat capacity behavior during a temperature cycle through the glass transition as described in chapter 4. The overshoot of the heat capacity during the heating scan that marks the glass transition is found to be caused by a delayed energy relaxation. Chapter 5 shows that the model can also predict a frequency dependent heat capacity that reflects the two-step relaxation behavior. The high-frequency peak in the heat capacity spectra appears with considerably larger amplitude than the low-frequency peak, the latter being due to the a relaxation. The model, when simplified with a modified description of the a process that involves an irreversible escape from a metabasin, can be solved analytically for the relaxation time. This version of the model captures salient features of the structural relaxation in glassy systems as described in chapter 6.
In Part II, thermotropic liquid crystals are studied in molecular dynamics simulations using primarily the family of the Gay-Berne model systems. To start with, chapter 7 provides a brief introduction to thermotropic liquid crystals, especially from the perspective of the issues discussed in the following chapters. This chapter ends up with a detail description of the family of the Gay-Berne models.
Chapter 8 demonstrates that a model system for calamitic liquid crystal (comprising rod-like molecules) could capture the short-to-intermediate time power law decay in the OKE signal near the isotropic-nematic (I-N) phase transition as observed experimentally. The single-particle second rank orientational time correlation function (OTCF) for the model liquid crystalline system is also found to sustain a power law decay regime in the isotropic phase near the I-N transition. On transit across the I-N phase boundary, two power law decay regimes, separated by a plateau, emerge giving rise to a step-like feature in the single-particle second rank OTCF. When the time evolution of the rotational non-Gaussian parameter is monitored as a diagnostic of spatially heterogeneous dynamics, a dominant peak is found to appear following a shoulder at short times, signaling the growth of pseudonematic domains. These observations are compared with those relevant ones obtained for the supercooled binary mixture, as discussed in chapter 2, in the spirit of the analogy suggested recently by Fayer and coworkers [J. Chem. Phys. 118, 9303 (2003)].
In chapter 9, orientational dynamics across the I-N transition are investigated in a variety of model systems of thermotropic liquid crystals. A model discotic system that consists of disc-like molecules as well as a lattice system have been considered in the quest of a universal short-to-intermediate time power law decay in orientational relaxation, if any. A surprisingly general power law decay at short to intermediate times in orientational relaxation is observed in all these systems. While the power law decay of the OKE signal has been recently observed experimentally in calamitic systems near the I-N phase boundary and in the nematic phase by Fayer and coworkers [J. Chem. Phys. 116, 6339 (2002), J. Phys. Chem. B 109, 6514 (2005)], the prediction for the discotic system can be tested in experiments.
Chapter 10 presents the energy landscape view of phase transitions and slow dynamics in thermotropic liquid crystals by determining the inherent structures of a family of one-component Gay-Berne model systems. This study throws light on the interplay between the orientational order and the translational order in the mesophases the systems exhibit. The onset of the growth of the orientational order in the parent phase is found to induce a translational order, resulting in a smectic-like layer in the underlying inherent structures. The inherent structures, surprisingly, never seem to sustain orientational order alone if the parent nematic phase is sandwiched between the high-temperature isotropic phase and the low-temperature smectic phase. The Arrhenius temperature dependence of the orientational relaxation time breaks down near the I-N transition and this breakdown is found to occur at a temperature below which the system explores increasingly deeper potential energy minima. There exists a remarkable similarity in the manner of exploration of the potential energy landscape between the Gay-Berne systems studied here and the well known Kob-Andersen binary mixture reported previously [Nature, 393, 554 (1998)].
In search of a dynamical signature of the coupling between orientational order and translational order, anisotropic translational diffusion in the nematic phase has been investigated in the Gay-Berne model systems as described in chapter 11. The translational diffusion coefficient parallel to the director D// is found to first increase and then decrease as the temperature drops through the nematic phase. This reversal occurs where the smectic order parameter of the underlying inherent structures becomes significant for the first time. The non-monotonic temperature behavior of D// can thus be viewed from an energy landscape analysis as a dynamical signature of the coupling between orientational and translational order at the microscopic level. Such a view is likely to form the foundation of a theoretical framework to explain the anisotropic translation diffusion.
Chapter 12 investigates the validity of the Debye model of rotational diffusion near the I-N phase boundary with a molecular dynamics simulation study of a Gay-Berne model system for calamitic liquid crystals. The Debye model is found to break down near the I-N phase transition. The breakdown, unlike the one observed in supercooled molecular liquids where a jump diffusion model is often invoked, is attributed to the growth of orientational pair correlation. A mode-coupling theory analysis is provided in support of the explanation.
Chapter 13 presents a molecular dynamics study of a binary mixture of prolate ellipsoids of revolution with different aspect ratios interacting with each other through a generalized Gay-Berne potential. Such a study allows to investigate directly the aspect ratio dependence of the dynamical behavior.
In the concluding note, chapter 14 starts with a brief summary of the outcome of the thesis and ends up with suggestion of a few relevant problems that may prove worthwhile to be addressed in future.
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Ferromagnetische Korrelationen in Kondo-Gittern: YbT2Si2 und CeTPO (T = Übergangsmetall)Krellner, Cornelius 02 November 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die Kondo-Gitter YbT2Si2 (T = Rh, Ir, Co) und CeTPO (T = Ru, Os, Fe, Co) untersucht. In diesen Systemen treten starke ferromagnetische Korrelationen der 4f-Momente zusammen mit ausgeprägter Kondo-Wechselwirkung auf, deren theoretische Beschreibung bislang sehr kontrovers diskutiert wird. Diese Arbeit liefert damit einen essentiellen experimentellen Beitrag zur Physik von ferromagnetischen Kondo-Gittern. So konnten qualitativ hochwertige Einkristalle von YbRh2Si2 hergestellt und erstmalig an einem Schwere-Fermion-System deren kritische Fluktuationen um den magnetischen Phasenübergang analysiert werden. Weiterhin konnte das bis dahin unverstandene Auftreten einer Elektron-Spin-Resonanz (ESR)-Linie in YbT2Si2 auf ferromagnetische Korrelationen zurückgeführt werden. Außerdem wurde mit CeFePO ein neues Schwere-Fermion-System mit starken ferromagnetischen Korrelationen entdeckt sowie mit dem isoelektronischen CeRuPO der seltene Fall eines ferromagnetisch geordneten Kondo-Gitters realisiert. / Within the context of this thesis the Kondo lattices YbT2Si2 (T = Rh, Ir, Co) and CeTPO (T = Ru, Os, Fe, Co) were investigated. In these systems strong ferromagnetic correlations of the 4f-moments together with pronounced Kondo interactions are present, whose theoretical description are pres-ently controversial discussed. Therefore, this work gives an essential experimental contribution to the physics of ferromagnetic Kondo lattices. The main results include the growth of high-quality single crystals of YbRh2Si2 and the first analysis of the critical fluctuations around the magnetic phase transition in a heavy fermion system. Furthermore, the unexpected observation of an electron spin resonance in YbT2Si2 could be ascribed to ferromagnetic correlations. Moreover, a new heavy fermion system CeFePO with strong ferromagnetic correlations was found and with the isoelec-tronic CeRuPO the rare case of a ferromagnetic Kondo-lattice discovered.
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La structure de Jordan des matrices de transfert des modèles de boucles et la relation avec les hamiltoniens XXZMorin-Duchesne, Alexi 08 1900 (has links)
Les modèles sur réseau comme ceux de la percolation, d’Ising et de Potts servent
à décrire les transitions de phase en deux dimensions. La recherche de leur solution
analytique passe par le calcul de la fonction de partition et la diagonalisation de matrices de transfert. Au point critique, ces modèles statistiques bidimensionnels sont
invariants sous les transformations conformes et la construction de théories des
champs conformes rationnelles, limites continues des modèles statistiques, permet
un calcul de la fonction de partition au point critique. Plusieurs chercheurs pensent
cependant que le paradigme des théories des champs conformes rationnelles peut
être élargi pour inclure les modèles statistiques avec des matrices de transfert non diagonalisables. Ces modèles seraient alors décrits, dans la limite d’échelle, par
des théories des champs logarithmiques et les représentations de l’algèbre de Virasoro
intervenant dans la description des observables physiques seraient indécomposables.
La matrice de transfert de boucles D_N(λ, u), un élément de l’algèbre de Temperley-
Lieb, se manifeste dans les théories physiques à l’aide des représentations
de connectivités ρ (link modules). L’espace vectoriel sur lequel agit cette représentation se décompose en secteurs étiquetés par un paramètre physique, le nombre d de défauts. L’action de cette représentation ne peut que diminuer ce nombre ou le laisser constant. La thèse est consacrée à l’identification de la structure de Jordan de D_N(λ, u) dans ces représentations. Le paramètre β = 2 cos λ = −(q + 1/q) fixe la théorie : β = 1 pour la percolation et √2 pour le modèle d’Ising, par exemple.
Sur la géométrie du ruban, nous montrons que D_N(λ, u) possède les mêmes blocs de Jordan que F_N, son plus haut coefficient de Fourier. Nous étudions la non
diagonalisabilité de F_N à l’aide des divergences de certaines composantes de ses
vecteurs propres, qui apparaissent aux valeurs critiques de λ. Nous prouvons dans
ρ(D_N(λ, u)) l’existence de cellules de Jordan intersectorielles, de rang 2 et couplant des secteurs d, d′ lorsque certaines contraintes sur λ, d, d′ et N sont satisfaites.
Pour le modèle de polymères denses critique (β = 0) sur le ruban, les valeurs
propres de ρ(D_N(λ, u)) étaient connues, mais les dégénérescences conjecturées. En
construisant un isomorphisme entre les modules de connectivités et un sous-espace
des modules de spins du modèle XXZ en q = i, nous prouvons cette conjecture.
Nous montrons aussi que la restriction de l’hamiltonien de boucles à un secteur
donné est diagonalisable et trouvons la forme de Jordan exacte de l’hamiltonien
XX, non triviale pour N pair seulement.
Enfin nous étudions la structure de Jordan de la matrice de transfert T_N(λ, ν)
pour des conditions aux frontières périodiques. La matrice T_N(λ, ν) a des blocs de Jordan intrasectoriels et intersectoriels lorsque λ = πa/b, et a, b ∈ Z×. L’approche
par F_N admet une généralisation qui permet de diagnostiquer des cellules intersectorielles dont le rang excède 2 dans certains cas et peut croître indéfiniment avec N. Pour les blocs de Jordan intrasectoriels, nous montrons que les représentations de connectivités sur le cylindre et celles du modèle XXZ sont isomorphes sauf pour certaines valeurs précises de q et du paramètre de torsion v. En utilisant le comportement de la transformation i_N^d dans un voisinage des valeurs critiques (q_c, v_c), nous construisons explicitement des vecteurs généralisés de Jordan de rang 2 et
discutons l’existence de blocs de Jordan intrasectoriels de plus haut rang. / Lattice models such as percolation, the Ising model and the Potts model are useful
for the description of phase transitions in two dimensions. Finding analytical solutions is done by calculating the partition function, which in turn requires finding
eigenvalues of transfer matrices. At the critical point, the two dimensional statistical models are invariant under conformal transformations and the construction of rational conformal field theories, as the continuum limit of these lattice models, allows one to compute the partition function at the critical point. Many researchers think however that the paradigm of rational conformal conformal field theories can be extended to include models with non diagonalizable transfer matrices. These models would then be described, in the scaling limit, by logarithmic conformal field theories and the representations of the Virasoro algebra coming into play would be indecomposable.
We recall the construction of the double-row transfer matrix D_N(λ, u) of the
Fortuin-Kasteleyn model, seen as an element of the Temperley-Lieb algebra. This transfer matrix comes into play in physical theories through its representation in link modules (or standard modules). The vector space on which this representation acts decomposes into sectors labelled by a physical parameter d, the number of defects, which remains constant or decreases in the link representations. This thesis is devoted to the identification of the Jordan structure of D_N(λ, u) in the link representations.
The parameter β = 2 cos λ = −(q + 1/q) fixes the theory : for instance β = 1 for percolation and √2 for the Ising model.
On the geometry of the strip with open boundary conditions, we show that D_N(λ, u) has the same Jordan blocks as its highest Fourier coefficient, F_N. We study
the non-diagonalizability of F_N through the divergences of some of the eigenstates of ρ(F_N) that appear at the critical values of λ. The Jordan cells we find in ρ(D_N(λ, u)) have rank 2 and couple sectors d and d′ when specific constraints on λ, d, d′ and N are satisfied.
For the model of critical dense polymers (β = 0) on the strip, the eigenvalues
of ρ(D_N(λ, u)) were known, but their degeneracies only conjectured. By constructing an isomorphism between the link modules on the strip and a subspace of spin
modules of the XXZ model at q = i, we prove this conjecture. We also show that the restriction of the Hamiltonian to any sector d is diagonalizable, and that the XX
Hamiltonian has rank 2 Jordan cells when N is even.
Finally, we study the Jordan structure of the transfer matrix T_N(λ, ν) for periodic
boundary conditions. When λ = πa/b and a, b ∈ Z×, the matrix T_N(λ, ν) has Jordan blocks between sectors, but also within sectors. The approach using F_N admits
a generalization to the present case and allows us to probe the Jordan cells
that tie different sectors. The rank of these cells exceeds 2 in some cases and can
grow indefinitely with N. For the Jordan blocks within a sector, we show that the
link modules on the cylinder and the XXZ spin modules are isomorphic except for
specific curves in the (q, v) plane. By using the behavior of the transformation i_N^d in a neighborhood of the critical values (q_c, v_c), we explicitly build Jordan partners of rank 2 and discuss the existence of Jordan cells with higher rank.
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Structure et dynamique des communautés multi-espèces : le rôle de l’espaceLarose-Filotas, Élise 05 1900 (has links)
Cette thèse porte sur le rôle de l’espace dans l’organisation et dans la dynamique des communautés écologiques multi-espèces. Deux carences peuvent être identifiées dans les études théoriques actuelles portant sur la dimension spatiale des communautés écologiques : l’insuffisance de modèles multi-espèces représentant la dimension spatiale explicitement, et le manque d’attention portée aux interactions positives, tel le mutualisme, en dépit de la reconnaissance de leur ubiquité dans les systèmes écologiques. Cette thèse explore cette problématique propre à l’écologie des communautés, en utilisant une approche théorique s’inspirant de la théorie des systèmes complexes et de la mécanique statistique. Selon cette approche, les communautés d’espèces sont considérées comme des systèmes complexes dont les propriétés globales émergent des interactions locales entre les organismes qui les composent, et des interactions locales entre ces organismes et leur environnement.
Le premier objectif de cette thèse est de développer un modèle de métacommunauté multi-espèces, explicitement spatial, orienté à l’échelle des individus et basé sur un réseau d’interactions interspécifiques générales comprenant à la fois des interactions d’exploitation, de compétition et de mutualisme. Dans ce modèle, les communautés locales sont formées par un processus d’assemblage des espèces à partir d’un réservoir régional. La croissance des populations est restreinte par une capacité limite et leur dynamique évolue suivant des mécanismes simples de reproduction et de dispersion des individus. Ces mécanismes sont dépendants des conditions biotiques et abiotiques des communautés locales et leur effet varie en fonction des espèces, du temps et de l’espace. Dans un deuxième temps, cette thèse a pour objectif de déterminer l’impact d’une connectivité spatiale croissante sur la dynamique spatiotemporelle et sur les propriétés structurelles et fonctionnelles de cette métacommunauté. Plus précisément, nous évaluons différentes propriétés des communautés en fonction du niveau de dispersion des espèces : i) la similarité dans la composition des communautés locales et ses patrons de corrélations spatiales; ii) la biodiversité locale et régionale, et la distribution locale de l’abondance des espèces; iii) la biomasse, la productivité et la stabilité dynamique aux échelles locale et régionale; et iv) la structure locale des interactions entre les espèces. Ces propriétés sont examinées selon deux schémas spatiaux. D’abord nous employons un environnement homogène et ensuite nous employons un environnement hétérogène où la capacité limite des communautés locales évoluent suivant un gradient.
De façon générale, nos résultats révèlent que les communautés écologiques spatialement distribuées sont extrêmement sensibles aux modes et aux niveaux de dispersion des organismes. Leur dynamique spatiotemporelle et leurs propriétés structurelles et fonctionnelles peuvent subir des changements profonds sous forme de transitions significatives suivant une faible variation du niveau de dispersion. Ces changements apparaissent aussi par l’émergence de patrons spatiotemporels dans la distribution spatiale des populations qui sont typiques des transitions de phases observées généralement dans les systèmes physiques.
La dynamique de la métacommunauté présente deux régimes. Dans le premier régime, correspondant aux niveaux faibles de dispersion des espèces, la dynamique d’assemblage favorise l’émergence de communautés stables, peu diverses et formées d’espèces abondantes et fortement mutualistes. La métacommunauté possède une forte diversité régionale puisque les communautés locales sont faiblement connectées et que leur composition demeure ainsi distincte. Par ailleurs dans le second régime, correspondant aux niveaux élevés de dispersion, la diversité régionale diminue au profit d’une augmentation de la diversité locale. Les communautés locales sont plus productives mais leur stabilité dynamique est réduite suite à la migration importante d’individus. Ce régime est aussi caractérisé par des assemblages incluant une plus grande diversité d’interactions interspécifiques. Ces résultats suggèrent qu’une augmentation du niveau de dispersion des organismes permet de coupler les communautés locales entre elles ce qui accroît la coexistence locale et favorise la formation de communautés écologiques plus riches et plus complexes.
Finalement, notre étude suggère que le mutualisme est fondamentale à l’organisation et au maintient des communautés écologiques. Les espèces mutualistes dominent dans les habitats caractérisés par une capacité limite restreinte et servent d’ingénieurs écologiques en facilitant l’établissement de compétiteurs, prédateurs et opportunistes qui bénéficient de leur présence. / This thesis is a study of the role of space in the organization and dynamics of multi-species ecological communities. Two weaknesses can be identified from previous theoretical studies concerned with the spatial dimension of ecological communities: the scarcity of multi-species models based on a spatially explicit representation of space, and the lack of attention toward positive interspecific interactions, such as mutualism, despite the recognition of their ubiquity in ecological systems. This thesis explores this problematic by adopting a theoretical framework based on complex system theory and statistical mechanics. Following this approach, ecological communities can be viewed as complex systems whose global properties emerge from the local interactions between the organisms that composed them, and between the organisms and their environment.
The first objective of this thesis is to develop a multi-species metacommunity model which is spatially explicit, individual-based, and centered on a general interspecific interaction web containing exploitation, competition as well as mutualism. In this model, local communities are created by an assembly process whereby species are drawn from a regional pool. Population growth is restricted by a carrying capacity and its dynamics is driven by simple reproduction and dispersal mechanisms acting at the level of single individual. These mechanisms depend on the biotic and abiotic conditions of the local communities and their effect varies with species, time and space. The second objective of this thesis is to determine the impact of an increasing spatial connectivity on the dynamics, and structural and functional properties of this metacommunity. More precisely, we set out to evaluate different community properties under changes in the level of species dispersal: i) the similarity in local community composition and its patterns of spatial correlations, ii) the local and regional diversity and the local species abundance, iii) the local and regional biomass, productivity and dynamical stability, and iv) the structure of the local interaction webs. These properties are examined under two spatial schemes. First, we employ a homogeneous environment, and second we employ a heterogeneous environment whereby the carrying capacity of local communities evolves along a gradient.
In general, our results reveal that spatially distributed ecological communities are extremely sensitive to the modes and levels of species dispersal. Their spatiotemporal dynamics as well as their structural and functional properties can undergo profound changes in the form of significant transitions under slight changes of the level of dispersal. These changes are also highlighted by the emergence of spatiotemporal patterns in the spatial distribution of the populations, which are characteristics of phase transition generally observed in physical systems.
The metacommunity presents two dynamical regimes. In the first regime, corresponding to weak levels of species dispersal, the assembly dynamics promotes the emergence of species-poor but stable communities made of abundant and strongly mutualistic species. The metacommunity has a high regional diversity since weakly connected communities conserve a distinct assemblage of species. On the other hand, in the second regime, corresponding to strong dispersal rates, regional diversity decreases at the benefit of an increase in local diversity. Local communities are more productive but their stability is reduced due to the important migration of individuals. This regime is also characterized by assemblages containing a richer diversity of interspecific interactions. These results suggest that an augmentation in the level of species dispersal permits organisms to couple local communities together which increases local coexistence and promotes the organization of richer and more complex ecological communities.
Finally, our results suggest that mutualism is fundamental to the organization and persistence of ecological communities. Mutualistic species dominate in habitats characterized by a restricted carrying capacity and serve as ecological engineer by facilitating the establishment of competitors, predators and opportunists which benefit from their presence.
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Exploring the Frustrated Spin-Chain Compound Linarite by NMR and Thermodynamic InvestigationsSchäpers, Markus 28 October 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Within the last decades low-dimensional frustrated quantum spin systems have attracted great interest in the field of modern research. In these systems a competition of various magnetic interactions takes place, leading to an energetically degenerated magnetic ground state, and thus to the occurrence of exotic, unconventional physical properties at low temperatures.
This thesis focuses on the quasi one-dimensional frustrated spin chain system linarite, PbCuSO4(OH)2. In this compound the basic building blocks are CuO4 plaquettes which are connected to each other along one crystallographic direction, analogue to a chain. The frustration in linarite is established due to the competition between the magnetic interactions. The nearest-neighbor magnetic spins are coupled ferromagnetically along the chain via a coupling constant J1, while the next-nearest neighbors are coupled antiferromagnetically via a coupling constant J2. For this configuration it is not possible to satisfy all magnetic couplings simultaneously, hence the system is magnetically frustrated.
In this work, comprehensive thermodynamic and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies demonstrate that linarite is one of the richest and most fascinating compounds in the class of low-dimensional frustrated magnets. By means of susceptibility, magnetization, specific heat, magnetocaloric effect, magnetostriction, and thermal-expansion measurements a rich magnetic phase diagram could be mapped out below a temperature of 2.8 K. The phase diagram contains five different magnetic regions/phases for an external magnetic field pointing along the chain direction. Based on the thermodynamic studies it was possible to calculate the exchange integrals within the frustrated J1-J2 model and extensions of it by using various theoretical approaches.
The magnetic microscopic nature of the different long-range magnetic phases present in linarite were investigated by NMR measurements and by collaborative neutron scattering experiments. The ground state (phase I) is identified as an incommensurate elliptical helical structure. Via a theoretical modelling the 1H-NMR spectrum of the ground state could be explained, revealing a rearrangement of the zero-field structure in an external magnetic field of 2.0 T used for the NMR studies. By further increasing the external field the system undergoes a complex spin flop transition in two steps (phase I - phase III - phase IV). In phase III a phase separation takes place where one part of the spins form a circular spiral structure while the remaining fraction form a simple antiferromagnetic structure. In phase IV the remaining circular spiral structure vanishes, so that all spins collectively form the antiferromagnetic collinear phase. The most peculiar physical properties studied in this thesis take place in region V at high fields, showing only tiny features in the thermodynamic properties. The magnetic spins in region V form a sine-wave modulated spin-density structure as identified via NMR and neutron investigations. It is discussed whether region V is related to a multipolar phase or if the spin-density wave structure could possibly coexist with such a phase.
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Growth and Studies of Phase Transitions in Multifunctional Perovskite MaterialsYadav, Ruchika January 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Crystal growth and characterization of few multifunctional materials with perovskite (ABX3) structure are discussed in this thesis. Efforts were made to modify the magnetic and electric behaviour of these materials by selective tuning of A, B and X components. Structural, magnetic and dielectric characterization are detailed in various chapters for doped (A and B site) rare-earth manganites and organometallic compounds with different (Chloride or formate) anions.
The relevant aspects of crystal structure and its relationship with ordered ground states are discussed in the introductory chapter. A detailed review of prominent theories pertaining to magnetic and ferroelectric ordering in the literature is provided. Growth of various inorganic compounds by solid-state reaction and floating zone method as well as use of solvothermal techniques for growing organometallic compounds are discussed. Material preparation, optimization of crystal growth processes and results of characterization are addressed in various chapters.
The effect of Yttrium doping on structural, magnetic and dielectric properties of rare-earth manganites (RMnO3 where R = Nd, Pr) has been investigated. Neutron diffraction studies (Pr compounds) confirm A-type antiferromagnetic structure and fall in transition temperature as the Yttrium doping level increases. Diffraction experiments in conjunction with dc magnetization and ac susceptibility studies reveal magnetic frustration in excess Yttrium dopedcompounds. When mutliglass properties of 50% B-site doped Nd2NiMnO6 were investigated, evidence of re-entrant cluster glass phase was seen probably due to presence of anti-site disorder. The relaxor-like dielectric behaviour arises from crossover of relaxation time in grain and grain boundary regions. Multiferroic behaviour of the organometallic compound (C2H5NH3)2CuCl4 as well as the ferroelectric transition were investigated in detail. The role of Hydrogen bond ordering in driving structural transitions is elucidated by low temperature dielectric and Raman studies in (C2H5NH3)2CdCl4. It was found possible to tune the magnetic and ferroelectric properties in metal formate compounds (general formula AB(HCOO)3) by selectively choosing organic cations [(CH3)2NH2+; C(NH3)3+] and transition metal ion [B = Mn, Co and Cu]. The nature of magnetic ordering and transition temperature could be altered by the transition metal ion. The effect of reorientation of organic cations which leads to ferroelectric nature is discussed using dielectric and pyroelectric data. Significant results are summarized in the chapter outlining general conclusions. Future prospects of work based on these observations are also provided. The conclusions are corroborated by detailed analysis of experimental data.
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Potentialités des techniques de caractérisation in-situ et en temps réel pour sonder, comprendre et contrôler les processus de nucléation-croissance durant le dépôt de films minces métalliques / Potentiality of in-situ and real-time characterization techniques to probe, understandand control nucleation and growth processes during thin metal films growthColin, Jonathan 14 October 2015 (has links)
Ce travail porte sur la compréhension des mécanismes de nucléation-croissance et le développement de contraintes associé lors du dépôt par pulvérisation de films minces métalliques. Le développement d’un dispositif de mesure in-situ en cours de croissance de la résistivité électrique est présenté et les potentialités offertes par son couplage avec deux autres diagnostics in-situ : la mesure de courbure du substrat et la spectroscopie différentielle de surface, ainsi qu’avec des caractérisations structurales, morphologiques et chimiques ex-situ (DRX, XRR, METHR, EELS, AFM) ont permis de mettre en évidence : le rôle clé joué par la température homologue et la structure d’équilibre du matériau déposé pour guider le mode de croissance 2D ou 3D et les contraintes associées. Pour les métaux à croissance 3D étudiés (Ag, Au, Pd et Ir) tous de structure CC, nous avons montré que l’amplitude du pic de tension associée au stade de coalescence était liée à la mobilité atomique des adatomes ; son maximum correspondant à la continuité du film. Nous avons montré que l’épaisseur de coalescence et donc la microstructure et la contrainte des éléments de forte mobilité pouvaient être contrôlées par la présence d’un surfactant en cours de croissance. Il est exposé que pour les métaux de faible mobilité atomique (Mo, W, Ta, Fe) et/ou de structure CC, la croissance débute par la stabilisation d’une amorphe suivie par la cristallisation vers la phase d’équilibre CC (Mo, Fe) ou la structure quadratique dans le cas du Ta, induite par la minimisation des énergies de surface/interface. Les premiers stades de croissance complexes du système Pd/Si liés à une forte réactivité d’interface ont été expliqués par la formation d’un siliciure d’interface tout d’abord amorphe qui cristallise, lorsque l’épaisseur de Pd déposée devient suffisante, par ségrégation dynamique du Si dans le métal. La très forte dissymétrie des interfaces Pd/Si et Si/Pd ainsi que le rôle de la température et du réservoir de Si sur la formation du siliciure ont été étudiés. Les interdépendances entre contrainte de croissance en régime stationnaire, microstructure, énergie déposée et cinétique de croissance dans le cas de métaux de faible mobilité ont été élucidées et le rôle majeur des joints de grains et des puits de surface sur la relaxation des défauts de types interstitiels en excès induits lors de dépôts énergétiques démontré. Une extension aux dépôts énergétiques du modèle cinétique de Chason de développement des contraintes est proposée. / Size reduction for the race towards nanoscale devices impacts physical properties of materials due to morphology, microstructure, defects and presence of surfaces and interfaces, but also makes challenging their structural characterizations. Moreover, thin film growth by physical vapor deposition is a non-equilibrium process involving dynamics effects, which inherently affects nanostructure formation. Thanks to the development and use of in situ and real-time diagnostics, easily implementable in a vacuum chamber, as those based on the wafer curvature measurement, electrical resistivity or also the surface reflectance spectroscopy, described in this work, we are able to address these issues. An original 4 points probe resistivity setup, in situ and real-time, in a magnetron chamber, has been developed for this study, allowing samples introduction by a load-lock system and the growth of homogeneous, dense metallic films. Potentialities of these techniques are highlighted by studying magnetron sputtered metallic systems with various atomic mobility and interfacial reactivity. The sensibility of these techniques, at the sub monolayer scale, allows a better understanding of the firsts growth stages, nucleation processes, phase transformations and defects incorporation. Influence of microstructure (grain size), kinetics (growth rate) and deposited energy has been systematically studied. The main results obtained revealed: a correlation between the magnitude of tensile stress associated with the coalescence stage and the atomic mobility of adatoms during Volmer-Weber growth of Ag, Au, Pd and Ir thin films on a-SiOx; a two dimensional growth mode for films of lower mobility (Fe, Mo, Ta) on a-Si, with the stabilization of an amorphous layer before the crystallization of the equilibrium bcc structure (Fe and Mo) or the metastable tetragonal structure in the case of Ta, driven by the minimization of surface/interface energies; the strong reactivity of Pd films sputtered on Si or Ge (amorphous or crystalline) substrates, leading to the room-temperature formation of a crystalline silicide (germanide) Pd2Si (or Pd2Ge) phase whose crystallographic orientation depends on the nature of the sublayer and where the silicon is the fast diffuser; the complementary roles of surface and grain boundaries on the steady-state compressive stress regime observed under energetic conditions of growth (10-100eV). To account for these observations, an extension of Chason’s theoretical model is presented.
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Exploring the Frustrated Spin-Chain Compound Linarite by NMR and Thermodynamic InvestigationsSchäpers, Markus 07 October 2014 (has links)
Within the last decades low-dimensional frustrated quantum spin systems have attracted great interest in the field of modern research. In these systems a competition of various magnetic interactions takes place, leading to an energetically degenerated magnetic ground state, and thus to the occurrence of exotic, unconventional physical properties at low temperatures.
This thesis focuses on the quasi one-dimensional frustrated spin chain system linarite, PbCuSO4(OH)2. In this compound the basic building blocks are CuO4 plaquettes which are connected to each other along one crystallographic direction, analogue to a chain. The frustration in linarite is established due to the competition between the magnetic interactions. The nearest-neighbor magnetic spins are coupled ferromagnetically along the chain via a coupling constant J1, while the next-nearest neighbors are coupled antiferromagnetically via a coupling constant J2. For this configuration it is not possible to satisfy all magnetic couplings simultaneously, hence the system is magnetically frustrated.
In this work, comprehensive thermodynamic and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies demonstrate that linarite is one of the richest and most fascinating compounds in the class of low-dimensional frustrated magnets. By means of susceptibility, magnetization, specific heat, magnetocaloric effect, magnetostriction, and thermal-expansion measurements a rich magnetic phase diagram could be mapped out below a temperature of 2.8 K. The phase diagram contains five different magnetic regions/phases for an external magnetic field pointing along the chain direction. Based on the thermodynamic studies it was possible to calculate the exchange integrals within the frustrated J1-J2 model and extensions of it by using various theoretical approaches.
The magnetic microscopic nature of the different long-range magnetic phases present in linarite were investigated by NMR measurements and by collaborative neutron scattering experiments. The ground state (phase I) is identified as an incommensurate elliptical helical structure. Via a theoretical modelling the 1H-NMR spectrum of the ground state could be explained, revealing a rearrangement of the zero-field structure in an external magnetic field of 2.0 T used for the NMR studies. By further increasing the external field the system undergoes a complex spin flop transition in two steps (phase I - phase III - phase IV). In phase III a phase separation takes place where one part of the spins form a circular spiral structure while the remaining fraction form a simple antiferromagnetic structure. In phase IV the remaining circular spiral structure vanishes, so that all spins collectively form the antiferromagnetic collinear phase. The most peculiar physical properties studied in this thesis take place in region V at high fields, showing only tiny features in the thermodynamic properties. The magnetic spins in region V form a sine-wave modulated spin-density structure as identified via NMR and neutron investigations. It is discussed whether region V is related to a multipolar phase or if the spin-density wave structure could possibly coexist with such a phase.
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