DPG Phi
Verhandlungen
Verhandlungen
DPG

Regensburg 2019 – wissenschaftliches Programm

Bereiche | Tage | Auswahl | Suche | Aktualisierungen | Downloads | Hilfe

DS: Fachverband Dünne Schichten

DS 4: Frontiers of Electronic-Structure Theory: Focus on the Interface Challenge I (joint session O/CPP/DS/TT)

DS 4.8: Vortrag

Montag, 1. April 2019, 12:30–12:45, H9

impact of continuum electronic states on van der Waals dispersion interactions — •Mohammad Reza Karimpour, Dmitry Fedorov, and Alexandre Tkatchenko — University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Luxembourg

The ubiquitous van der Waals (vdW) forces play an important role for structure, stability, and dynamics of molecules and materials. Their description on atomistic level is important for molecular physics, crystal chemistry, surface science, structural biology, and pharmacy. To this end, the development of simple yet efficient models is of high importance. Normally, such models focus only on fluctuations to bound electron states, described via quantum harmonic oscillator potentials. However, the polarizability of real atomic and molecular systems has important contributions also from fluctuations to continuum states. To study their influence on the vdW dispersion interactions from a general point of view, here we consider models based on the Dirac delta-function potentials. In one-dimensional case, such a potential provides just one bound state whereas all excited states belong to the continuum electron spectrum. We apply both the atomistic method and the scattering picture representing the van der Waals and Casimir approaches for dispersion interactions, respectively. In the atomistic framework we compare our results to the ones of the quantum oscillator models. Within the other picture, we discuss an obtained new scaling law in comparison to the results known for excited atomic systems.

[1] Woods et al., Rev. Mod. Phys. 88, 045003 (2016)

[2] Hermann et al., Chem. Rev. 117, 4714 (2017)

100% | Mobil-Ansicht | English Version | Kontakt/Impressum/Datenschutz
DPG-Physik > DPG-Verhandlungen > 2019 > Regensburg