Browsing by Author "Vazifehshenas, T."
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Item Open Access Many-body effects due to the electron–electron interaction in silicene under an applied exchange field: the case of valley–spin coupling(American Institute of Physics, 2020) Mirzae, M.; Vazifehshenas, T.; Salavati-fard, T.; Farmanbar, M.; Tanatar, BilalWe investigate the many-body effects induced by the electron–electron interaction in a valley–spin-polarized silicene under a perpendicularly applied exchange field. We calculate the real and imaginary parts of the self-energy within the leading order dynamical screening approximation where the screened interaction is obtained from the random phase approximation. Our study on the valley- and spin-dependent real and imaginary parts of the self-energy indicates that the different coupled valley–spin subbands may exhibit distinct characteristics. Moreover, we obtain the corresponding spectral functions and find that the plasmaron and quasiparticle peaks have different spectral weights and broadenings in all states. Interestingly, it seems that there are clear dependencies for the position and broadening of the peaks on valley–spin indexes. In addition, we study the effect of the electron–electron interaction on the renormalized velocity in the on-shell approximation and show that the renormalized velocity in gapped states becomes greater, and in gapless states, it becomes smaller as the wave vector grows.Item Open Access Plasmon-phonon coupling in a valley-spin-polarized two-dimensional electron system: a theoretical study on monolayer silicene(American Physical Society, 2018) Mirzaei, M.; Vazifehshenas, T.; Salavati-Fard, T.; Farmanbar, M.; Tanatar, BilalWe study the hybrid excitations due to the coupling between surface optical phonons of a polar insulator substrate and plasmons in the valley-spin-polarized metal phase of silicene under an exchange field. We perform the calculations within the generalized random-phase approximation where the plasmon-phonon coupling is taken into account by the long-range Fröhlich interaction. Our investigation on two hybridized plasmon branches in different spin and valley subbands shows distinct behavior compared to the uncoupled case. Interestingly, in one valley, it is found that while the high-energy hybrid branch is totally damped in the spin-up state, it can be well defined in the spin-down state. Moreover, we show that the electron-phonon coupling is stronger in both spin-down subbands, regardless of valley index, due to their higher electron densities. In addition, we study the effects of electron-phonon coupling on the quasiparticle scattering rate of four distinct spin-valley locked subbands. The results of our calculations predict a general enhancement in the scattering rate for all subbands and a jump in the case of spin-down states. This sharp increase associated with the damping of hybrid plasmon modes is almost absent in the uncoupled case. The results suggest an effective way for manipulating collective modes of valley-spin-polarized silicene which may become useful in future valleytronic and spintronic applications.Item Open Access Silicene dynamic optical response in the presence of external electric and exchange fields(Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd., 2022-01-04) Mirzaei, M.; Vazifehshenas, T.; Salavati-fard, T.; Tanatar, BilalWe investigate the dynamic optical transition of monolayer silicene in the presence of external electric and exchange fields within the low-energy tight-binding model. Applying external electric and exchange fields breaks the silicene band structure spin and valley degeneracies. Three phases of silicene corresponding to different strengths of perpendicular electric field with respect to the spin–orbit coupling (Δz < Δso, Δz = Δso and Δz > Δso) are considered. We obtain the spin-valley-dependent optical responses to the incoming circularly polarized light using the Kubo formula. We show and discuss how the magnitude and direction of the transverse and longitudinal optical responses of such a system change with the electric and exchange fields. Our calculations suggest that the intraband part of the longitudinal optical response as well as the initial point of the interband part have strong dependencies on the exchange field. Furthermore, we show that one of the spin subbands plays a dominant role in the response to polarized light. Depending on the type of incident light polarization, the dominant subband may change. Our results shed light on the relation between silicene dynamic optical responses and externally applied fields.