4 research outputs found
organic crystals: superconducting versus antiferromagnetic instabilities in an anisotropic triangular lattice Hubbard model
A Hubbard model at half-filling on an anisotropic triangular lattice has been
proposed as the minimal model to describe conducting layers of
organic materials. The model interpolates between the
square lattice and decoupled chains. The materials
present many similarities with cuprates, such as the presence of unconventional
metallic properties and the close proximity of superconducting and
antiferromagnetic phases. As in the cuprates, spin fluctuations are expected to
play a crucial role in the onset of superconductivity. We perform a
weak-coupling renormalization-group analysis to show that a superconducting
instability occurs. Frustration in the antiferromagnetic couplings, which
arises from the underlying geometrical arrangement of the lattice, breaks the
perfect nesting of the square lattice at half-filling. The spin-wave
instability is suppressed and a superconducting instability predominates. For
the isotropic triangular lattice, there are again signs of long-range magnetic
order, in agreement with studies at strong-coupling.Comment: 4 pages, 5 eps figs, to appear in Can. J. Phys. (proceedings of the
Highly Frustrated Magnetism (HFM-2000) conference, Waterloo, Canada, June
2000
Quasiparticle vanishing driven by geometrical frustration
We investigate the single hole dynamics in the triangular t-J model. We study
the structure of the hole spectral function, assuming the existence of a 120
magnetic Neel order. Within the self-consistent Born approximation (SCBA) there
is a strong momentum and t sign dependence of the spectra, related to the
underlying magnetic structure and the particle-hole asymmetry of the model. For
positive t, and in the strong coupling regime, we find that the low energy
quasiparticle excitations vanish outside the neighbourhood of the magnetic
Goldstone modes; while for negative t the quasiparticle excitations are always
well defined. In the latter, we also find resonances of magnetic origin whose
energies scale as (J/t)^2/3 and can be identified with string excitations. We
argue that this complex structure of the spectra is due to the subtle interplay
between magnon-assisted and free hopping mechanisms. Our predictions are
supported by an excellent agreement between the SCBA and the exact results on
finite size clusters. We conclude that the conventional quasiparticle picture
can be broken by the effect of geometrical magnetic frustration.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures. Published versio
Spin stiffness of frustrated Heisenberg antiferromagnets: finite size scaling
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR). Biblioteca Centrale / CNR - Consiglio Nazionale delle RichercheSIGLEITItal