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Dive into the research topics where Tchavdar N. Todorov is active.

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Featured researches published by Tchavdar N. Todorov.


Nature | 2001

Quantum electronics - Nanotubes go ballistic

C. T. White; Tchavdar N. Todorov

As devices shrink, tiny wires that conduct electrons ballistically — without scattering — have exciting applications. Carbon nanotubes can now do this over hundreds, even thousands, of nanometres, with stunning results.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2004

Transport in nanoscale systems: the microcanonical versus grand-canonical picture

M. Di Ventra; Tchavdar N. Todorov

We analyse a picture of transport in which two large but finite charged electrodes discharge across a nanoscale junction. We identify a functional whose minimization, within the space of all bound many-body wavefunctions, defines an instantaneous steady state. We also discuss factors that favour the onset of steady-state conduction in such systems, make a connection with the notion of entropy, and suggest a novel source of steady-state noise. Finally, we prove that the true many-body total current in this closed system is given exactly by the one-electron total current, obtained from time-dependent density-functional theory.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2004

Beyond Ehrenfest: correlated non-adiabatic molecular dynamics

Andrew P Horsfield; David R. Bowler; A. J. Fisher; Tchavdar N. Todorov; Cristián G Sánchez

A method for introducing correlations between electrons and ions that is computationally affordable is described. The central assumption is that the ionic wavefunctions are narrow, which makes possible a moment expansion for the full density matrix. To make the problem tractable we reduce the remaining many-electron problem to a single-electron problem by performing a trace over all electronic degrees of freedom except one. This introduces both one- and two-electron quantities into the equations of motion. Quantities depending on more than one electron are removed by making a Hartree–Fock approximation. Using the first-moment approximation, we perform a number of tight binding simulations of the effect of an electric current on a mobile atom. The classical contribution to the ionic kinetic energy exhibits cooling and is independent of the bias. The quantum contribution exhibits strong heating, with the heating rate proportional to the bias. However, increased scattering of electrons with increasing ionic kinetic energy is not observed. This effect requires the introduction of the second moment.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Current-driven atomic waterwheels

Daniel Dundas; Eunan J. McEniry; Tchavdar N. Todorov

A current induces forces on atoms inside the conductor that carries it. It is now possible to compute these forces from scratch, and to perform dynamical simulations of the atomic motion under current. One reason for this interest is that current can be a destructive force--it can cause atoms to migrate, resulting in damage and in the eventual failure of the conductor. But one can also ask, can current be made to do useful work on atoms? In particular, can an atomic-scale motor be driven by electrical current, as it can be by other mechanisms? For this to be possible, the current-induced forces on a suitable rotor must be non-conservative, so that net work can be done per revolution. Here we show that current-induced forces in atomic wires are not conservative and that they can be used, in principle, to drive an atomic-scale waterwheel.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2007

Dynamical simulation of inelastic quantum transport

Eunan J. McEniry; David R. Bowler; Daniel Dundas; Andrew P. Horsfield; Cristián G. Sánchez; Tchavdar N. Todorov

A method for correlated quantum electron–ion dynamics is combined with a method for electronic open boundaries to simulate in real time the heating, and eventual equilibration at an elevated vibrational energy, of a quantum ion under current flow in an atomic wire, together with the response of the current to the ionic heating. The method can also be used to extract inelastic current–voltage corrections under steady-state conditions. However, in its present form the open-boundary method contains an approximation that limits the resolution of current–voltage features. The results of the simulations are tested against analytical results from scattering theory. Directions for the improvement of the method are summarized at the end.


Reports on Progress in Physics | 2006

The transfer of energy between electrons and ions in solids

Andrew P Horsfield; David R. Bowler; H Ness; Cristián G. Sánchez; Tchavdar N. Todorov; A. J. Fisher

In this review we consider those processes in condensed matter that involve the irreversible flow of energy between electrons and nuclei that follows from a system being taken out of equilibrium. We survey some of the more important experimental phenomena associated with these processes, followed by a number of theoretical techniques for studying them. The techniques considered are those that can be applied to systems containing many non-equivalent atoms. They include both perturbative approaches (Fermis Golden Rule and non-equilibrium Greens functions) and molecular dynamics based (the Ehrenfest approximation, surface hopping, semi-classical Gaussian wavefunction methods and correlated electron–ion dynamics). These methods are described and characterized, with indications of their relative merits.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2005

Correlated electron-ion dynamics: the excitation of atomic motion by energetic electrons

Andrew P Horsfield; David R. Bowler; A. J. Fisher; Tchavdar N. Todorov; Cristián G Sánchez

Correlated electron-ion dynamics (CEID) is an extension of molecular dynamics that allows us to introduce in a correct manner the exchange of energy between electrons and ions. The formalism is based on a systematic approximation: small amplitude moment expansion. This formalism is extended here to include the explicit quantum spread of the ions and a generalization of the Hartree-Fock approximation for incoherent sums of Slater determinants. We demonstrate that the resultant dynamical equations reproduce analytically the selection rules for inelastic electron-phonon scattering from perturbation theory, which control the mutually driven excitations of the two interacting subsystems. We then use CEID to make direct numerical simulations of inelastic current-voltage spectroscopy in atomic wires, and to exhibit the crossover from ionic cooling to heating as a function of the relative degree of excitation of the electronic and ionic subsystems.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2001

Time-dependent tight binding

Tchavdar N. Todorov

Starting from a Lagrangian mean-field theory, a set of time-dependent tight-binding equations is derived to describe dynamically and self-consistently an interacting system of quantum electrons and classical nuclei. These equations conserve norm, total energy and total momentum. A comparison with other tight-binding models is made. A previous tight-binding result for forces on atoms in the presence of electrical current flow is generalized to the time-dependent domain and is taken beyond the limit of local charge neutrality.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Molecular conduction: Do time-dependent simulations tell you more than the Landauer approach?

Cristián G. Sánchez; Maria Stamenova; Stefano Sanvito; David R. Bowler; Andrew P Horsfield; Tchavdar N. Todorov

A dynamical method for simulating steady-state conduction in atomic and molecular wires is presented which is both computationally and conceptually simple. The method is tested by calculating the current-voltage spectrum of a simple diatomic molecular junction, for which the static Landauer approach produces multiple steady-state solutions. The dynamical method quantitatively reproduces the static results and provides information on the stability of the different solutions.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2004

Power dissipation in nanoscale conductors: classical, semi-classical and quantum dynamics

Andrew P Horsfield; David R. Bowler; A. J. Fisher; Tchavdar N. Todorov; Malachy Montgomery

Modelling Joule heating is a difficult problem because of the need to introduce correct correlations between the motions of the ions and the electrons. In this paper we analyse three different models of current induced heating (a purely classical model, a fully quantum model and a hybrid model in which the electrons are treated quantum mechanically and the atoms are treated classically). We find that all three models allow for both heating and cooling processes in the presence of a current, and furthermore the purely classical and purely quantum models show remarkable agreement in the limit of high biases. However, the hybrid model in the Ehrenfest approximation tends to suppress heating. Analysis of the equations of motion reveals that this is a consequence of two things: the electrons are being treated as a continuous fluid and the atoms cannot undergo quantum fluctuations. A means for correcting this is suggested.

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Daniel Dundas

Queen's University Belfast

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A. P. Sutton

Imperial College London

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David R. Bowler

London Centre for Nanotechnology

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A. J. Fisher

University College London

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Brian Cunningham

Queen's University Belfast

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