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Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta

Researcher at S.N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences

Publications -  224
Citations -  4900

Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta is an academic researcher from S.N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electronic structure & Density functional theory. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 195 publications receiving 4271 citations. Previous affiliations of Tanusri Saha-Dasgupta include Max Planck Society & Indian National Association.

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Band-Structure Trend in Hole-Doped Cuprates and Correlation with T c max

TL;DR: By calculation and analysis of the bare conduction bands in a large number of hole-doped high-temperature superconductors, the range of the intralayer hopping is identified as the essential, material-dependent parameter.
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Electronic Structure of Sr 2 FeMoO 6

TL;DR: In this paper, the unusual electronic structure of 2FeMoO 6 was analyzed by combining ab initio and model Hamiltonian approaches, and the results indicated that there are strong enhancements of the intra-atomic exchange strength at the Mo site as well as the antiferromagnetic coupling strength between Fe and Mo sites.
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Muffin-tin orbitals of arbitrary order

TL;DR: In this article, the authors derived orbital basis sets from scattering theory and expressed them as polynomial approximations to the energy dependence of a set of partial waves, in quantized form.
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Electronic structure, phonons, and dielectric anomaly in ferromagnetic insulating double pervoskite La2NiMnO6.

TL;DR: This study reveals the existence of very soft infrared active phonons that couple strongly with spins at the Ni and Mn sites through modification of the superexchange interaction, and suggests that these modes are the origin for the observed dielectric anomaly in La2NiMnO6.
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Structure, bonding, and magnetism of cobalt clusters from first-principles calculations

TL;DR: The structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of cobalt clusters have been investigated using density functional theory within the pseudopotential plane wave method as discussed by the authors, where the average coordination number is found to dominate over the average bond length to determine the effective hybridization and consequently the cluster magnetic moment.