378 research outputs found
Superconductivity in the two-dimensional Hubbard model?
A refined variational wave function for the two-dimensional repulsive Hubbard
model is studied numerically, with the aim of approaching the difficult
crossover regime of intermediate values of U. The issue of a superconducting
ground state with d-wave symmetry is investigated for an average electron
density n=0.8125 and for U=8t. Due to finite-size effects a clear-cut answer to
this fundamental question has not yet been reached.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, Proc. 30th Int. Conf. of Theoretical Physics,
Ustron, Poland, 2006, to be published in phys. stat. so
Fate of the Wigner crystal on the square lattice
The phase diagram of a system of electrons hopping on a square lattice and
interacting through long-range Coulomb forces is studied as a function of
density and interaction strength. The presence of a lattice strongly enhances
the stability of the Wigner crystal phase as compared to the case of the
two-dimensional electron gas.Comment: ECRYS-2005 proceeding
Momentum distribution of itinerant electrons in the one-dimensional Falicov-Kimball model
The momentum distribution of itinerant electrons in the one-dimensional
Falicov-Kimball model is calculated for various ground-state phases. In
particular, we examine the periodic phases with period two, three and four
(that are ground-states for all Coulomb interactions) as well as the phase
separated states (that are ground states for small Coulomb interactions). For
all periodic phases examined the momentum distribution is a smooth function of
with no sign of any discontinuity or singular behavior at the Fermi surface
. An unusual behavior of (a local maximum) is found at
for electron concentrations outside half-filling. For the phase separated
ground states the momentum distribution exhibits discontinuity at . This behavior is interpreted in terms of a Fermi liquid.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, late
Wilson's renormalization group applied to 2D lattice electrons in the presence of van Hove singularities
The weak coupling instabilities of a two dimensional Fermi system are
investigated for the case of a square lattice using a Wilson renormalization
group scheme to one loop order. We focus on a situation where the Fermi surface
passes through two saddle points of the single particle dispersion. In the case
of perfect nesting, the dominant instability is a spin density wave but d-wave
superconductivity as well as charge or spin flux phases are also obtained in
certain regions in the space of coupling parameters. The low energy regime in
the vicinity of these instabilities can be studied analytically. Although
saddle points play a major role (through their large contribution to the single
particle density of states), the presence of low energy excitations along the
Fermi surface rather than at isolated points is crucial and leads to an
asymptotic decoupling of the various instabilities. This suggests a more
mean-field like picture of these instabilities, than the one recently
established by numerical studies using discretized Fermi surfaces.Comment: gzipped tar file, 31 pages including 10 figures, minor correction of
misprint
Incipient quantum melting of the one-dimensional Wigner lattice
A one--dimensional tight--binding model of electrons with long--range Coulomb
interactions is studied in the limit where double site occupancy is forbidden
and the Coulomb coupling strength is large with respect to the hopping
amplitude . The quantum problem of a kink--antikink pair generated in the
Wigner lattice (the classical ground state for ) is solved for fillings
, where is an integer larger than 1. The pair energy becomes
negative for a relatively high value of , . This signals
the initial stage of the quantum melting of the Wigner lattice
Superconductivity in the Repulsive Hubbard Model
The two-dimensional repulsive Hubbard model has been investigated by a variety of methods, from small to largeU. Superconductivity with d-wave symmetry is consistently found close to half filling. After a brief review of the various methods a variational many-electron state is discussed in more detail. This trial state is a natural extension of the Gutzwiller ansatz and provides a substantial improvement thereo
Variational Wave Function for Generalized Wigner Lattices in One Dimension
We study a system of electrons on a one-dimensional lattice, interacting
through the long range Coulomb forces, by means of a variational technique
which is the strong coupling analog of the Gutzwiller approach. The problem is
thus the quantum version of Hubbard's classical model of the generalized Wigner
crystal [J. Hubbard, Phys. Rev. B 17, 494 (1978)]. The magnetic exchange energy
arising from quantum fluctuations is calculated, and turns out to be smaller
than the energy scale governing charge degrees of freedom. This approach could
be relevant in insulating quasi-one-dimensional compounds where the long range
Coulomb interactions are not screened. In these compounds charge order often
appears at high temperatures and coexists with magnetic order at low
temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, proceedings of ECRYS-200
Variational ground states of the two-dimensional Hubbard model
Recent refinements of analytical and numerical methods have improved our
understanding of the ground-state phase diagram of the two-dimensional (2D)
Hubbard model. Here we focus on variational approaches, but comparisons with
both Quantum Cluster and Gaussian Monte Carlo methods are also made. Our own
ansatz leads to an antiferromagnetic ground state at half filling with a
slightly reduced staggered order parameter (as compared to simple mean-field
theory). Away from half filling, we find d-wave superconductivity, but confined
to densities where the Fermi surface passes through the antiferromagnetic zone
boundary (if hopping between both nearest-neighbour and next-nearest-neighbour
sites is considered). Our results agree surprisingly well with recent numerical
studies using the Quantum Cluster method. An interesting trend is found by
comparing gap parameters (antiferromagnetic or superconducting) obtained with
different variational wave functions. They vary by an order of magnitude and
thus cannot be taken as a characteristic energy scale. In contrast, the order
parameter is much less sensitive to the degree of sophistication of the
variational schemes, at least at and near half filling.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, to be published in New J. Phy
Superconductivity and antiferromagnetism in the two-dimensional Hubbard model: a variational study
A variational ground state of the repulsive Hubbard model on a square lattice
is investigated numerically for an intermediate coupling strength (U = 8t) and
for moderate sizes (from 6 x 6 to 10 x 10). Our ansatz is clearly superior to
other widely used variational wave functions. The results for order parameters
and correlation functions provide new insight for the antiferromagnetic state
at half filling as well as strong evidence for a superconducting phase away
from half filling.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Ground-state phase diagram of a half-filled one-dimensional extended Hubbard model
The density-matrix renormalization group is used to study the phase diagram
of the one-dimensional half-filled Hubbard model with on-site (U) and
nearest-neighbor (V) repulsion, and hopping t. A critical line V_c(U)
approximately equal to U/2 separates a Mott insulating phase from a
charge-density-wave phase. The formation of bound charge excitations for V > 2t
changes the phase transition from continuous to first order at a tricritical
point U_t = 3.7t, V_t=2t. A frustrating effective antiferromagnetic spin
coupling induces a bond-order-wave phase on the critical line V_c(U) for U_t <
U < 7-8 t.Comment: 4 pages (REVTEX 4), 3 EPS figures, shorter abstract, text and
references modifie
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