389 research outputs found

    How universal is the one-particle Green's function of a Luttinger liquid?

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    The one-particle Green's function of the Tomonaga-Luttinger model for one-dimensional interacting Fermions is discussed. Far away from the origin of the plane of space-time coordinates the function falls off like a power law. The exponent depends on the direction within the plane. For a certain form of the interaction potential or within an approximated cut-off procedure the different exponents only depend on the strength of the interaction at zero momentum and can be expressed in terms of the Luttinger liquid parameters KρK_{\rho} and KσK_{\sigma} of the model at hand. For a more general interaction and directions which are determined by the charge velocity vρv_{\rho} and spin velocity vσv_{\sigma} the exponents also depend on the smoothness of the interaction at zero momentum and the asymptotic behavior of the Green's function is not given by the Luttinger liquid parameters alone. This shows that the physics of large space-time distances in Luttinger liquids is less universal than is widely believed.Comment: 5 pages with 2 figure

    Boundary Effects on Spectral Properties of Interacting Electrons in One Dimension

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    The single electron Green's function of the one-dimensional Tomonaga-Luttinger model in the presence of open boundaries is calculated with bosonization methods. We show that the critical exponents of the local spectral density and of the momentum distribution change in the presence of a boundary. The well understood universal bulk behavior always crosses over to a boundary dominated regime for small energies or small momenta. We show this crossover explicitly for the large-U Hubbard model in the low-temperature limit. Consequences for photoemission experiments are discussed.Comment: revised and reformatted paper to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. (Feb. 1996). 5 pages (revtex) and 3 embedded figures (macro included). A complete postscript file is available from http://FY.CHALMERS.SE/~eggert/luttinger.ps or by request from [email protected]

    Interpretation of Photoemission Spectra of (TaSe4)2I as Evidence of Charge Density Wave Fluctuations

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    The competition between different and unusual effects in quasi-one-dimensional conductors makes the direct interpretation of experimental measurements of these materials both difficult and interesting. We consider evidence for the existence of large charge-density-wave fluctuations in the conducting phase of the Peierls insulator (TaSe4)2I, by comparing the predictions of a simple Lee, Rice and Anderson theory for such a system with recent angle-resolved photoemission spectra. The agreement obtained suggests that many of the unusual features of these spectra may be explained in this way. This view of the system is contrasted with the behaviour expected of a Luttinger liquid.Comment: Archive copy of published paper. 19 pages, 12 figures, uses IOP macro

    Phase diagram of the one-dimensional extended Hubbard model with attractive and/or repulsive interactions at quarter filling

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    We study the phase diagram of the one dimensional (1D) UVU-V model at quarter filling in the most general case where the on-site and first-neighbour interactions UU and VV can be both attractive and repulsive. The results have been obtained using exact diagonalization of small clusters and variational techniques, as well as exact results in various limits. We have analyzed four properties of the groundstate: i)~whether it is insulating or metallic; \hbox{ii)~whether} it is homogenous or phase separated; iii)~whether it has a spin gap; iv)~whether it has dominant superconducting fluctuations. With eight phases, the resulting phase diagram is unexpectedly rich. The four phases not found in the weak coupling limit are: i) an insulating phase when UU and VV are large enough; ii) a region of phase separation when VV is attractive; iii) another region of phase separation when VV is large enough and UU small; iv) a region with dominant superconducting fluctuations when VV is intermediate and UU small. The actual nature of this last phase, which has pairs but no spin gap, is not fully clear yet.Comment: 24 pages, RevTeX (4 postscript figures attached to the end

    Spectral function of the 1D Hubbard model in the U+U\to +\infty limit

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    We show that the one-particle spectral functions of the one-dimensional Hubbard model diverge at the Fermi energy like ωεF3/8|\omega-\varepsilon_F|^{-3/8} in the U+U\to +\infty limit. The Luttinger liquid behaviour ωεFα|\omega-\varepsilon_F|^\alpha, where α1/8\alpha \to 1/8 as U+U\to +\infty , should be limited to ωεFt2/U|\omega-\varepsilon_F| \sim t^2/U (for UU large but finite), which shrinks to a single point, ω=εF\omega=\varepsilon_F,in that limit. The consequences for the observation of the Luttinger liquid behaviour in photoemission and inverse photoemission experiments are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 2 figures on reques

    Spectral properties of one dimensional insulators and superconductors

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    Conformal field theory and Bethe ansatz are used to investigate the low energy features of the spectral function in one dimensional models which exhibit a gap in the spin or in the charge excitation spectrum. Exotic behavior is found in the superconducting case, where the Green function displays momentum dependent Luttinger Liquid exponents. The predictions of the formalism are confirmed by Lanczos diagonalizations in the tJtJ model up to 32 sites. These results may be relevant in connection to photoemission experiments in quasi one dimensional insulators or superconductors.Comment: 11 pages , RevTeX , 3 uuencoded picture

    Remnant Fermi surface in the presence of an underlying instability in layered 1T-TaS_2

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    We report high resolution angle-scanned photoemission and Fermi surface (FS) mapping experiments on the layered transition-metal dichalcogenide 1T-TaS_2 in the quasi commensurate (QC) and the commensurate (C) charge-density-wave (CDW) phase. Instead of a nesting induced partially removed FS in the CDW phase we find a pseudogap over large portions of the FS. This remnant FS exhibits the symmetry of the one-particle normal state FS even when passing from the QC-phase to the C-phase. Possibly, this Mott localization induced transition represents the underlying instability responsible for the pseudogapped FS

    Non-fermi-liquid single particle lineshape of the quasi-one-dimensional non-CDW metal Li_{0.9}Mo_{6}O_{17} : comparison to the Luttinger liquid

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    We report the detailed non-Fermi liquid (NFL) lineshape of the dispersing excitation which defines the Fermi surface (FS) for quasi-one-dimensional Li_{0.9}Mo_{6}O_{17}. The properties of Li_{0.9}Mo_{6}O_{17} strongly suggest that the NFL behavior has a purely electronic origin. Relative to the theoretical Luttinger liquid lineshape, we identify significant similarities, but also important differences.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figure

    Insulator-Metal Transition in One Dimension Induced by Long-Range Electronic Interactions

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    The effects of a long range electronic potential on a one dimensional commensurate Charge Density Wave (CDW) state are investigated. Using numerical techniques it is shown that a transition to a metallic ground state is reached as the range of the electron-electron repulsion increases. In this metallic state, the optical conductivity exhibits a large Drude weight. Possible interpretations of our results are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, Revtex, minor misprints corrected and a reference to earlier work by V. Emery and C. Noguera adde

    Correlation gap in the optical spectra of the two-dimensional organic metal (BEDT-TTF)_4[Ni(dto)_2]

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    Optical reflection measurements within the highly conducting (a,b)-plane of the organic metal (BEDT-TTF)_4[Ni(dto)_2] reveal the gradual development of a sharp feature at around 200 cm as the temperature is reduced below 150 K. Below this frequency a narrow Drude-like response is observed which accounts for the metallic behavior. Since de Haas-von Alphen oscillations at low temperatures confirm band structure calculations of bands crossing the Fermi energy, we assign the observed behavior to a two-dimensional metallic state in the proximity of a correlation induced metal-insulator transition.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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