137 research outputs found
One-electron spectral functions of the attractive Hubbard model at intermediate coupling
We calculate the one-electron spectral function of the attractive-U Hubbard
model in two dimensions. We work in the intermediate coupling and low density
regime and evaluate analytically the self-energy. The results are obtained in a
framework based on the self-consistent T-matrix approximation. We also
calculate the chemical potential of the bound pairs as a function of
temperature. On the basis of this calculation we analyze the low-temperature
resistivity and specific heat in the normal state of this system. We compare
our results with recent beautiful tunneling experiments in the underdoped
regime of HTSC-materials.Comment: 2 pages, LT22 Conference paper, phbauth and elsart style files
include
Correlation effects on the electronic structure of TiOCl: a NMTO+DMFT study
Using the recently developed N-th order muffin-tin orbital-based downfolding
technique in combination with the Dynamical Mean Field theory, we investigate
the electronic properties of the much discussed Mott insulator TiOCl in the
undimerized phase. Inclusion of correlation effects through this approach
provides a description of the spectral function into an upper and a lower
Hubbard band with broad valence states formed out of the orbitally polarized,
lower Hubbard band. We find that these results are in good agreement with
recent photo-emission spectra.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Anomalous Spin Dynamics of Hubbard Model on Honeycomb Lattices
In this paper, the honeycomb Hubbard model in optical lattices is
investigated using O(3) non-linear sigma model. A possible quantum non-magnetic
insulator in a narrow parameter region is found near the metal-insulator
transition. We study the corresponding dynamics of magnetic properties, and
find that the narrow region could be widened by hole doping.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
Landau Theory of the Finite Temperature Mott Transition
In the context of the dynamical mean-field theory of the Hubbard model, we
identify microscopically an order parameter for the finite temperature Mott
endpoint. We derive a Landau functional of the order parameter. We then use the
order parameter theory to elucidate the singular behavior of various physical
quantities which are experimentally accessible.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Room temperature magnetism in LaVO3/SrVO3 superlattices by geometrically confined doping
Based on the Hubbard model of strongly correlated systems, a reduction in the
bandwidth of the electrons can yield a substantial change in the properties of
the material. One method to modify the bandwidth is geometrically confined
doping, i.e. the introduction of a (thin) dopant layer in a material. In this
paper, the magnetic properties of LaVO/SrVO superlattices, in which the
geometrically confined doping is produced by a one monolayer thick SrVO
film, are presented. In contrast to the solid solution LaSrVO,
such superlattices have a finite magnetization up to room temperature.
Furthermore, the total magnetization of the superlattice depends on the
thickness of the LaVO layer, indicating an indirect coupling of the
magnetization that emerges at adjacent dopant layers. Our results show that
geometrically confined doping, like it can be achieved in superlattices,
reveals a way to induce otherwise unaccessible phases, possibly even with a
large temperature scale.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Ferromagnetism, paramagnetism and a Curie-Weiss metal in an electron doped Hubbard model on a triangular lattice
Motivated by the unconventional properties and rich phase diagram of NaxCoO2
we consider the electronic and magnetic properties of a two-dimensional Hubbard
model on an isotropic triangular lattice doped with electrons away from
half-filling. Dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) calculations predict that for
negative inter-site hopping amplitudes (t<0) and an on-site Coulomb repulsion,
U, comparable to the bandwidth, the system displays properties typical of a
weakly correlated metal. In contrast, for t>0 a large enhancement of the
effective mass, ferromagnetism and a Curie-Weiss magnetic susceptibility are
found in a broad electron doping range. Our observation of Nagaoka
ferromagnetism is consistent with the A-type antiferromagnetism (i.e.
ferromagnetic layers stacked antiferromagnetically) observed in neutron
scattering experiments on NaxCoO2. We propose that `Curie-Weiss metal' phase
observed in NaxCoO2 is a consequence of the crossover from ``bad metal'' with
incoherent quasiparticles at temperatures T>T* and Fermi liquid behavior with
enhanced parameters below T*, where T* is a low energy coherence scale induced
by strong local Coulomb electron correlations. We propose a model which
contains the charge ordering phenomena observed in the system which, we
propose, drives the system close to the Mott insulating phase even at large
dopings.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Stripe phases — possible ground state of the high-Tc superconductors
Based on the mean-field method applied either to the extended single-band Hubbard model or
to the single-band Peierls-Hubbard Hamiltonian we study the stability of both site-centered and
bond-centered charge domain walls. The difference in energy between these phases is found to be
small. Therefore, moderate perturbations to the pure Hubbard model, such as next nearest neighbor
hopping, lattice anisotropy, or coupling to the lattice, induce phase transitions, shown in the
corresponding phase diagrams. In addition, we determine for stable phases charge and magnetization
densities, double occupancy, kinetic and magnetic energies, and investigate the role of a finite
electron-lattice coupling. We also review experimental signatures of stripes in the superconducting
copper oxides
Analyzing the success of T-matrix diagrammatic theories in representing a modified Hubbard model
We present a systematic study of various forms of renormalization that can be
applied in the calculation of the self-energy of the Hubbard model within the
T-matrix approximation. We compare the exact solutions of the attractive and
repulsive Hubbard models, for linear chains of lengths up to eight sites, with
all possible taxonomies of the T-matrix approximation. For the attractive
Hubbard model, the success of a minimally self-consistent theory found earlier
in the atomic limit (Phys. Rev. B 71, 155111 (2005)) is not maintained for
finite clusters unless one is in the very strong correlation limit. For the
repulsive model, in the weak correlation limit at low electronic densities --
that is, where one would expect a self-consistent T-matrix theory to be
adequate -- we find the fully renormalized theory to be most successful. In our
studies we employ a modified Hubbard interaction that eliminates all Hartree
diagrams, an idea which was proposed earlier (Phys. Rev. B 63, 035104 (2000)).Comment: Includes modified discussion of 1st-order phase transition. Accepted
for publication in J. Phys.: Condensed Matte
Disorder Induced Stripes in d-Wave Superconductors
Stripe phases are observed experimentally in several copper-based high-Tc
superconductors near 1/8 hole doping. However, the specific characteristics may
vary depending on the degree of dopant disorder and the presence or absence of
a low- temperature tetragonal phase. On the basis of a Hartree-Fock decoupling
scheme for the t-J model we discuss the diverse behavior of stripe phases. In
particular the effect of inhomogeneities is investigated in two distinctly
different parameter regimes which are characterized by the strength of the
interaction. We observe that small concen- trations of impurities or vortices
pin the unidirectional density waves, and dopant disorder is capable to
stabilize a stripe phase in parameter regimes where homogeneous phases are
typically favored in clean systems. The momentum-space results exhibit
universal features for all coexisting density-wave solutions, nearly unchanged
even in strongly disordered systems. These coexisting solutions feature
generically a full energy gap and a particle-hole asymmetry in the density of
states.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figure
New tissue priors for improved automated classification of subcortical brain structures on MRI.
Despite the constant improvement of algorithms for automated brain tissue classification, the accurate delineation of subcortical structures using magnetic resonance images (MRI) data remains challenging. The main difficulties arise from the low gray-white matter contrast of iron rich areas in T1-weighted (T1w) MRI data and from the lack of adequate priors for basal ganglia and thalamus. The most recent attempts to obtain such priors were based on cohorts with limited size that included subjects in a narrow age range, failing to account for age-related gray-white matter contrast changes. Aiming to improve the anatomical plausibility of automated brain tissue classification from T1w data, we have created new tissue probability maps for subcortical gray matter regions. Supported by atlas-derived spatial information, raters manually labeled subcortical structures in a cohort of healthy subjects using magnetization transfer saturation and R2* MRI maps, which feature optimal gray-white matter contrast in these areas. After assessment of inter-rater variability, the new tissue priors were tested on T1w data within the framework of voxel-based morphometry. The automated detection of gray matter in subcortical areas with our new probability maps was more anatomically plausible compared to the one derived with currently available priors. We provide evidence that the improved delineation compensates age-related bias in the segmentation of iron rich subcortical regions. The new tissue priors, allowing robust detection of basal ganglia and thalamus, have the potential to enhance the sensitivity of voxel-based morphometry in both healthy and diseased brains
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