3,155 research outputs found
The small polaron crossover: comparison between exact results and vertex correction approximation
We study the crossover from quasi free electron to small polaron in the
Holstein model for a single electron by means of both exact and self-consistent
calculations in one dimension and on an infinite coordination lattice. We show
that the crossover occurs when both strong coupling and multiphonon conditions
are fulfilled leading to different relevant coupling constants in adiabatic and
anti-adiabatic region of the parameters space. We also show that the
self-consistent calculations obtained by including the first electron-phonon
vertex correction give accurate results in a sizeable region of the phase
diagram well separated from the polaronic crossover.Comment: 6 pages, revtex (europhys.sty,euromacr.tex); 3 postscript figure
Electron-phonon interaction in Strongly Correlated Systems
The Hubbard-Holstein model is a simple model including both electron-phonon
interaction and electron-electron correlations. We review a body of theoretical
work investigating the effects of strong correlations on the electron-phonon
interaction. We focus on the regime, relevant to high-T_c superconductors, in
which the electron correlations are dominant. We find that the electron-phonon
interaction can still have important signatures, even if many anomalies appear,
and the overall effect is far from conventional. In particular in the
paramagnetic phase the effects of phonons are much reduced in the low-energy
properties, while the high-energy physics can be strongly affected by phonons.
Moreover, the electron-phonon interaction can still give rise to important
effects, like phase separation and charge-ordering, and it assumes a
predominance of forward scattering even if the bare interaction is assumed to
be local (momentum independent). Antiferromagnetic correlations reduce the
screening effects due to electron-electron interactions and revive the
electron-phonon effects.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
First-Order Pairing Transition and Single-Particle Spectral Function in the Attractive Hubbard Model
A Dynamical Mean Field Theory analysis of the attractive Hubbard model is
carried out. We focus on the normal state upon restricting to solutions where
superconducting order is not allowed. Nevertheless a clear first-order pairing
transition as a function of the coupling takes place at all the electron
densities out of half-filling. The transition occurs between a Fermi liquid,
stable for . The
spectral function in the Fermi liquid phase is constituted by a low energy
structure around the Fermi level (similar to the Kondo resonance of the
repulsive half-filled model), which disappears discontinuously at , and
two high energy features (lower and upper Hubbard bands), which persist in the
insulating phase.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Phonon softening and dispersion in the 1D Holstein model of spinless fermions
We investigate the effect of electron-phonon interaction on the phononic
properties in the one-dimensional half-filled Holstein model of spinless
fermions. By means of determinantal Quantum Monte Carlo simulation we show that
the behavior of the phonon dynamics gives a clear signal of the transition to a
charge-ordered phase, and the phase diagram obtained in this way is in
excellent agreement with previous DMRG results. By analyzing the phonon
propagator we extract the renormalized phonon frequency, and study how it first
softens as the transition is approached and then subsequently hardens in the
charge-ordered phase. We then show how anharmonic features develop in the
phonon propagator, and how the interaction induces a sizable dispersion of the
dressed phonon in the non-adiabatic regime.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Electron-phonon Interaction close to a Mott transition
The effect of Holstein electron-phonon interaction on a Hubbard model close
to a Mott-Hubbard transition at half-filling is investigated by means of
Dynamical Mean-Field Theory. We observe a reduction of the effective mass that
we interpret in terms of a reduced effective repulsion. When the repulsion is
rescaled to take into account this effect, the quasiparticle low-energy
features are unaffected by the electron-phonon interaction. Phonon features are
only observed within the high-energy Hubbard bands. The lack of electron-phonon
fingerprints in the quasiparticle physics can be explained interpreting the
quasiparticle motion in terms of rare fast processes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 color figures. Slightly revised text and references. Kondo
effect result added in Fig. 2 for comparison with DMFT dat
Phase Separation close to the density-driven Mott transition in the Hubbard-Holstein model
The density driven Mott transition is studied by means of Dynamical
Mean-Field Theory in the Hubbard-Holstein model, where the Hubbard term leading
to the Mott transition is supplemented by an electron-phonon (e-ph) term. We
show that an intermediate e-ph coupling leads to a first-order transition at
T=0, which is accompanied by phase separation between a metal and an insulator.
The compressibility in the metallic phase is substantially enhanced. At quite
larger values of the coupling a polaronic phase emerges coexisting with a
non-polaronic metal.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Slightly revised text. More details in Fig.1 and
2. Smaller size version of Fig.
Electron-phonon interaction and antiferromagnetic correlations
We study effects of the Coulomb repulsion on the electron-phonon interaction
(EPI) in a model of cuprates at zero and finite doping. We find that
antiferromagnetic correlations strongly enhance EPI effects on the electron
Green's function with respect to the paramagnetic correlated system, but the
net effect of the Coulomb interaction is a moderate suppression of the EPI.
Doping leads to additional suppression, due to reduced antiferromagnetic
correlations. In contrast, the Coulomb interaction strongly suppresses EPI
effects on phonons, but the suppression weakens with doping.Comment: 4 pages and 5 figure
Isotope effects in the Hubbard-Holstein model within dynamical mean-field theory
We study the isotope effects arising from the coupling of correlated
electrons with dispersionless phonons by considering the Hubbard-Holstein model
at half-filling within the dynamical mean-field theory. In particular we
calculate the isotope effects on the quasi-particle spectral weight , the
renormalized phonon frequency, and the static charge and spin susceptibilities.
In the weakly correlated regime , where is the Hubbard
repulsion and is the bare electron half-bandwidth, the physical properties
are qualitatively similar to those characterizing the Holstein model in the
absence of Coulomb repulsion, where the bipolaronic binding takes place at
large electron-phonon coupling, and it reflects in divergent isotope responses.
On the contrary in the strongly correlated regime , where the
bipolaronic metal-insulator transition becomes of first order, the isotope
effects are bounded, suggesting that the first order transition is likely
driven by an electronic mechanism, rather then by a lattice instability. These
results point out how the isotope responses are extremely sensitive to phase
boundaries and they may be used to characterize the competition between the
electron-phonon coupling and the Hubbard repulsion.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. The paper has been already accepted on Phys.
Rev.
Doping-driven transition to a time-reversal breaking state in the phase diagram of the cuprates
Motivated by recent tunnelling and Andreev-reflection experiments, we study
the conditions for a quantum transition within the superconducting phase of the
cuprates,in which a bulk imaginary (time-reversal breaking) component
appears in addition to the order parameter.
We examine in detail the role of some important physical features of the
cuprates.In particular we show that a closed Fermi surface,a bilayer splitting,
an orthorhombic distortion,and the proximity to a quantum critical point around
optimal doping favor the appearance of the imaginary component. These findings
could explain why the mixed order parameter is
observed in YBCO and LSCO, and suggest that it could appear also in Bi2212. We
also predict that, in all cuprates, the mixed state should be stable only in a
limited doping region all contained beneath the dome. The
behavior of the specific heat at the secondary transition is discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Expanded text, 1 extra figur
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