117 research outputs found
Mott--Hubbard transition vs. Anderson localization of correlated, disordered electrons
The phase diagram of correlated, disordered electrons is calculated within
dynamical mean--field theory using the geometrically averaged (''typical'')
local density of states. Correlated metal, Mott insulator and Anderson
insulator phases, as well as coexistence and crossover regimes are identified.
The Mott and Anderson insulators are found to be continuously connected.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Finite temperature strong-coupling expansions for the Kondo lattice model
Strong-coupling expansions, to order , are derived for the Kondo
lattice model of strongly correlated electrons, in 1-, 2- and 3- dimensions at
arbitrary temperature. Results are presented for the specific heat, and spin
and charge susceptibilities.Comment: revtex
Pauli spin susceptibility of a strongly correlated two-dimensional electron liquid
Thermodynamic measurements reveal that the Pauli spin susceptibility of
strongly correlated two-dimensional electrons in silicon grows critically at
low electron densities - behavior that is characteristic of the existence of a
phase transition.Comment: As publishe
Non-Fermi-liquid behavior in the Kondo lattices induced by peculiarities of magnetic ordering and spin dynamics
A scaling consideration of the Kondo lattices is performed with account of
singularities in the spin excitation spectral function. It is shown that a
non-Fermi-liquid (NFL) behavior between two critical values of the bare
coupling constant occurs naturally for complicated magnetic structures with
several magnon branches. This may explain the fact that a NFL behavior takes
place often in the heavy-fermion systems with peculiar spin dynamics. Another
kind of a NFL-like state (with different critical exponents) can occur for
simple antiferromagnets with account of magnon damping, and for paramagnets,
especially with two-dimensional character of spin fluctuations. The mechanisms
proposed lead to some predictions about behavior of specific heat, resistivity,
magnetic susceptibility, and anisotropy parameter, which can be verified
experimentally.Comment: 16 pages, RevTeX, 4 Postscript figures. Extended versio
Tuning Anti-Klein to Klein Tunneling in Bilayer Graphene
We show that in gapped bilayer graphene, quasiparticle tunneling and the corresponding Berry phase can be controlled such that they exhibit features of single-layer graphene such as Klein tunneling. The Berry phase is detected by a high-quality Fabry-Pérot interferometer based on bilayer graphene. By raising the Fermi energy of the charge carriers, we find that the Berry phase can be continuously tuned from 2π down to 0.68π in gapped bilayer graphene, in contrast to the constant Berry phase of 2π in pristine bilayer graphene. Particularly, we observe a Berry phase of π, the standard value for single-layer graphene. As the Berry phase decreases, the corresponding transmission probability of charge carriers at normal incidence clearly demonstrates a transition from anti-Klein tunneling to nearly perfect Klein tunneling
Breakdown of the Kondo Effect in Critical Antiferromagnets
The breakdown of the Kondo effect may be the origin of the anomalous
properties of the heavy-fermion compounds at low temperatures. We study the
dynamics of one impurity embedded in an antiferromagnetic host at the quantum
critical point and show that the impurity is not screened and develops a power
law correlation function. This suggests that the breakdown of the Kondo effect
can simply be a consequence of the system's proximity to the quantum critical
point.Comment: To appear in Physical Review B (Brief Reports
Local quantum critical point and non-Fermi liquid properties
Quantum criticality provides a means to understand the apparent non-Fermi
liquid phenomena in correlated electron systems. How to properly describe
quantum critical points in electronic systems has however been poorly
understood. The issues have become particularly well-defined due to recent
experiments in heavy fermion metals, in which quantum critical points have been
explicitly identified. In this paper, I summarize some recent theoretical work
on the subject, with an emphasis on the notion of ``local quantum
criticality''. I describe the microscopic work based on an extended dynamical
mean field theory, as well as Ginzburg-Landau arguments for the robustness of
the local quantum critical point beyond the microscopics. I also present the
consequences of this picture on the inelastic neutron scattering, NMR, Fermi
surface properties and Hall coefficient, and compare them with the available
experiments. Some analogies with the Mott transition phenomena are also noted.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure; references updated according to the published
versio
Fluctuations in a superconducting quantum critical point of multi-band metals
In multi-band metals quasi-particles arising from different atomic orbitals
coexist at a common Fermi surface. Superconductivity in these materials may
appear due to interactions within a band (intra-band) or among the distinct
metallic bands (inter-band). Here we consider the suppression of
superconductivity in the intra-band case due to hybridization. The fluctuations
at the superconducting quantum critical point (SQCP) are obtained calculating
the response of the system to a fictitious space and time dependent field,
which couples to the superconducting order parameter. The appearance of
superconductivity is related to the divergence of a generalized susceptibility.
For a single band superconductor this coincides with the \textit{Thouless
criterion}. For fixed chemical potential and large hybridization, the
superconducting state has many features in common with breached pair
superconductivity with unpaired electrons at the Fermi surface. The T=0 phase
transition from the superconductor to the normal state is in the universality
class of the density-driven Bose-Einstein condensation. For fixed number of
particles and in the strong coupling limit, the system still has an instability
to the normal sate with increasing hybridization.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Quantum Critical Point in the Spin Glass-Kondo Transition in Heavy Fermion Systems
The Kondo-Spin Glass competition is studied in a theoretical model of a Kondo
lattice with an intra-site Kondo type exchange interaction treated within the
mean field approximation, an inter-site quantum Ising exchange interaction with
random couplings among localized spins and an additional transverse field in
the x direction, which represents a simple quantum mechanism of spin flipping.
We obtain two second order transition lines from the spin-glass state to the
paramagnetic one and then to the Kondo state. For a reasonable set of the
different parameters, the two second order transition lines do not intersect
and end in two distinct QCP.Comment: 20 pages; 1 figure; to appear in Physical Review
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