We investigate the effect of helicity in isolated polymers on the topological chirality of their knots with computer simulations. Polymers are described by generic worm-like chains (WLC), where helical conformations are promoted by chiral coupling between segments that are neighbors along the chain contour. The sign and magnitude of the coupling coefficient determine the sense and strength of helicity. The corrugation of the helix is adjusted via the radius of a spherical, hard excluded volume around each WLC segment. Open and compact helices are, respectively, obtained for that is either zero or smaller than the length of the WLC bond, and that is a few times larger than the bond length. We use a Monte Carlo algorithm to sample polymer conformations for different values of , spanning the range from achiral polymers to chains with well-developed helices. Monitoring the average helix torsion and fluctuations of chiral order as a function of , for two very different chain lengths, demonstrates that the coil-helix transition in this model is not a phase transition but a crossover. Statistical analysis of conformations forming the simplest chiral knots, 3, 5, and 5, demonstrates that topological mirror symmetry is broken─knots formed by helices with a given sense prefer one handedness over the other. For the 3 and 5 knots, positive helical sense favors positive handedness. Intriguingly, an opposite trend is observed for 5 knots, where positive helical sense promotes negative handedness. We argue that this special coupling between helicity and topological chirality stems from a generic mechanism: conformations where some of the knot crossings are found in "braids" formed by two tightly interwoven sections of the polymer.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsmacrolett.2c00600 | DOI Listing |
Adv Mater
December 2024
School of Nano-Tech and Nano-Bionics, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui, 230026, P. R. China.
Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) with strong exciton effects have enabled diverse light emitting devices, however, their Ångstrom thickness makes it challenging to efficiently manipulate exciton emission by themselves. Although their nanostructured multi-layer counterparts can effectively manipulate optical field at deep subwavelength thickness scale, these indirect band gap multi-layer TMDs are lack of strong luminescence, hindering their applications in light emitting devices. Here, the integration of monolayer TMDs is presented with nanostructured multi-layer TMDs, combining both strong exciton emission and optical manipulation in a single ultra-thin platform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoscale Horiz
December 2024
Electrical and Computer Engineering, The Grainger College of Engineering, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, USA.
Antiferromagnetic materials have several unique properties, such as a vanishingly small net magnetization, which generates weak dipolar fields and makes them robust against perturbation from external magnetic fields and rapid magnetization dynamics, as dictated by the geometric mean of their exchange and anisotropy energies. However, experimental and theoretical techniques to detect and manipulate the antiferromagnetic order in a fully electrical manner must be developed to enable advanced spintronic devices with antiferromagnets as their active spin-dependent elements. Among the various antiferromagnetic materials, conducting antiferromagnets offer high electrical and thermal conductivities and strong electron-spin-phonon interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 2024
School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3FD, United Kingdom.
Quasiparticles are low-energy excitations with important roles in condensed matter physics. An intriguing example is provided by Majorana quasiparticles, which are equivalent to their antiparticles. Despite being implicated in neutrino oscillations and topological superconductivity, their experimental realizations remain very rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNano Lett
December 2024
Institute of Applied Physics, Faculty of Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9190401, Israel.
Magnetic skyrmions, topologically stabilized chiral spin textures in magnetic thin films, have garnered considerable interest due to their efficient manipulation and resulting potential as efficient nanoscale information carriers. One intriguing approach to address the challenge of tuning skyrmion properties involves using chiral molecules. Chiral molecules can locally manipulate magnetic properties by inducing magnetization through spin exchange interactions and by creating spin currents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanophotonics
April 2024
School of Physics and Electronics, Shandong Normal University, Jinan, 250014, China.
The generation of vector beams using metasurfaces is crucial for the manipulation of light fields and has significant application potential, ranging from classical physics to quantum science. This paper introduces a novel dielectric metasurface composed of quarter-wave plate (QWP) meta-atoms, known as a QWP metasurface, designed to generate focused vector beams (VBs) of Bell-like states under right circularly polarized illumination. The propagation phase imparted on both the co- and cross-polarized components of the output field constructs hyperbolic and helical phase profiles with topological charge , whereas the Pancharatnam-Berry (PB) phase acts only on the cross-polarized component to construct another helical phase profile with topological charge .
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