386 research outputs found

    Enhancement of the thermal expansion of organic charge transfer salts by strong electronic correlations

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    Organic charge transfer salts exhibit thermal expansion anomalies similar to those found in other strongly correlated electron systems. The thermal expansion can be anisotropic and have a non-monotonic temperature dependence. We show how these anomalies can arise from electronic effects and be significantly enhanced, particularly at temperatures below 100 K, by strong electronic correlations. For the relevant Hubbard model the thermal expansion is related to the dependence of the entropy on the parameters (tt, t′t', and UU) in the Hamiltonian or the temperature dependence of bond orders and double occupancy. The latter are calculated on finite lattices with the Finite Temperature Lanczos Method. Although many features seen in experimental data, in both the metallic and Mott insulating phase, are described qualitatively, the calculated magnitude of the thermal expansion is smaller than that observed experimentally.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure

    Luttinger sum rule for finite systems of correlated electrons

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    The validity of the Luttinger sum rule is considered for finite systems of interacting electrons, where the Fermi volume is determined by location of zeroes of Green's function. It is shown that the sum rule in the paramagnetic state is evidently violated within the planar t-J model at low doping while for the related Hubbard model, even in the presence of next-nearest-neighbor hopping, no clearcut exception is found.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Breakdown of the Luttinger sum rule within the Mott-Hubbard insulator

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    The validity of the Luttinger sum rule is investigated within the prototype tight-binding model of interacting fermions in one dimension, i.e., the t-V model including the next-nearest neighbor hopping t' in order to break the particle-hole symmetry. Scaling analysis of finite-system results at half-filling reveals evident breakdown of the sum rule in the regime of large gap at V >> t, while the sum rule appears to recover together with vanishing of the Mott-Hubbard gap.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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