scholarly journals Bridging the Physics and Chemistry of Graphene(s): From Hückel’s Aromaticity to Dirac’s Cones and Topological Insulators

Author(s):  
Aristides Zdetsis

By bridging graphene and benzene through a well-defined sequence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and their inherent shell structure, it is shown that graphene is actually a coherent arrangement of interwoven benzene molecules, coordinated by aromaticity, shell structure, and topology, all interrelated and microscopically realized through dynamical flipping of the atomic pz-orbitals, playing the role of pseudospin or “qubits”. This renders graphene resonance structure, “resonating” between two complementary aromaticity patterns, involving 2k, k→∞ kekulé type of resonances resulting in “robust electronic coherence”, with dual “molecular-crystalline” nature, and two valence-conduction bands of opposite parity, driven by inversion symmetry competition, which is essentially a “molecule-versus-crystal” competition, in accord with topological-insulator and many-body theory. The “average picture” converges to the usual band structure with two aromatic π-electrons per ring, and the fingerprints of inversion-competition at the D3h-symmetric Dirac points, which for rectangular nanographene(s) appear as gapless topological edge states without real spin-polarization, contrary to opposite claims. <br>

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aristides Zdetsis

By bridging graphene and benzene through a well-defined sequence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and their inherent shell structure, it is shown that graphene is actually a coherent arrangement of interwoven benzene molecules, coordinated by aromaticity, shell structure, and topology, all interrelated and microscopically realized through dynamical flipping of the atomic pz-orbitals, playing the role of pseudospin or “qubits”. This renders graphene resonance structure, “resonating” between two complementary aromaticity patterns, involving 2k, k→∞ kekulé type of resonances resulting in “robust electronic coherence”, with dual “molecular-crystalline” nature, and two valence-conduction bands of opposite parity, driven by inversion symmetry competition, which is essentially a “molecule-versus-crystal” competition, in accord with topological-insulator and many-body theory. The “average picture” converges to the usual band structure with two aromatic π-electrons per ring, and the fingerprints of inversion-competition at the D3h-symmetric Dirac points, which for rectangular nanographene(s) appear as gapless topological edge states without real spin-polarization, contrary to opposite claims. <br>


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aristides Zdetsis

By bridging graphene and benzene through a well-defined sequence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and their inherent shell structure, it is shown that graphene is actually a coherent arrangement of interwoven benzene molecules, coordinated by aromaticity, shell structure, and topology, all interrelated and microscopically realized through dynamical flipping of the atomic pz-orbitals, playing the role of pseudospin or “qubits”. This renders graphene resonance structure, “resonating” between two complementary aromaticity patterns, involving 2k, k→∞ kekulé type of resonances resulting in “robust electronic coherence”, with dual “molecular-crystalline” nature, and two valence-conduction bands of opposite parity, driven by inversion symmetry competition, which is essentially a “molecule-versus-crystal” competition, in accord with topological-insulator and many-body theory. The “average picture” converges to the usual band structure with two aromatic π-electrons per ring, and the fingerprints of inversion-competition at the D3h-symmetric Dirac points, which for rectangular nanographene(s) appear as gapless topological edge states without real spin-polarization, contrary to opposite claims. <br>


Atoms ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 58
Author(s):  
V. S. Prasannaa ◽  
A. Sunaga ◽  
M. Abe ◽  
M. Hada ◽  
N. Shitara ◽  
...  

In this review article, we survey some of our results pertaining to the search for the electric dipole moment of the electron (eEDM), using heavy polar molecules. In particular, we focus on the relativistic coupled cluster method (RCCM) and its applications to eEDM searches in YbF, HgX (X = F, Cl, Br, and I), BaF, HgA (A = Li, Na, and K), and YbOH. Our results are presented in a systematic manner, by first introducing the eEDM and its measurement using molecules, the importance of relativistic many-body theory, and finally our results, followed by future prospects.


1968 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 392-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
K DIETRICH ◽  
K HARA

1970 ◽  
Vol 31 (C4) ◽  
pp. C4-99-C4-104
Author(s):  
T. P. DAS ◽  
C. M. DUTTA ◽  
N. C. DUTTA

1988 ◽  
Vol 88 (12) ◽  
pp. 7791-7798 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie J. Root ◽  
Frank H. Stillinger ◽  
Gary E. Washington

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document