44 research outputs found

    Optical conductivity of a granular metal at not very low temperatures

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    We study the finite-temperature optical conductivity, sigma(omega,T), of a granular metal using a simple model consisting of a array of spherical metallic grains. It is necessary to include quantum tunneling and Coulomb blockade effects to obtain the correct temperature dependence of sigma(omega, T), and to consider polarization oscillations to obtain the correct frequency dependence. We have therefore generalized the Ambegaokar-Eckern-Schoen (AES) model for granular metals to obtain an effective field theory incorporating the polarization fluctuations of the individual metallic grains. In contrast to the DC conductivity, which is determined by inter-grain charge transfer and obeys an Arrhenius law at low temperature, the AC conductivity is dominated by a resonance peak for intra-grain polarization oscillations, which has a power-law tail at low frequencies. More importantly, although the resonance frequency agrees with the classical prediction, the resonance width depends on intergrain quantum tunneling and Coulomb blockade parameters, in addition to the classical Drude relaxation within the grain. This additional damping is due to inelastic cotunneling of polarization fluctuations to neighbouring grains and it qualitatively differs from the DC conductivity in its temperature dependence quite unlike the expectation from Drude theory.Comment: Added figures, published version, 16 pages, REVTe

    Effect of granularity on the insulator-superconductor transition in ultrathin Bi films

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    We have studied the insulator-superconductor transition (IST) by tuning the thickness in quench-condensed BiBi films. The resistive transitions of the superconducting films are smooth and can be considered to represent "homogeneous" films. The observation of an IST very close to the quantum resistance for pairs, RNh/4e2R_{\Box}^N \sim h/4e^2 on several substrates supports this idea. The relevant length scales here are the localization length, and the coherence length. However, at the transition, the localization length is much higher than the superconducting coherence length, contrary to expectation for a "homogeneous" transition. This suggests the invalidity of a purely fermionic model for the transition. Furthermore, the current-voltage characteristics of the superconducting films are hysteretic, and show the films to be granular. The relevant energy scales here are the Josephson coupling energy and the charging energy. However, Josephson coupling energies (EJE_J) and the charging energies (EcE_c) at the IST, they are found to obey the relation EJ<EcE_J < E_c. This is again contrary to expectation, for the IST in a granular or inhomogeneous, system. Hence, a purely bosonic picture of the transition is also inconsistent with our observations. We conclude that the IST observed in our experiments may be either an intermediate case between the fermioinc and bosonic mechanisms, or in a regime of charge and vortex dynamics for which a quantitative analysis has not yet been done.Comment: accepted in Physical Review

    The renormalization group for interacting fermions: from Fermi liquids to quantum dots

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    The renormalization group approach as developed by the author for Fermi liquids is applied to clean Fermi liquids and ballistic quantum dots. In the former case Landau theory is shown to be a fixed point and in the latter the Universal Hamiltonian is shown to be a fixed point for weak coupling. The strong coupling phase is analyzed using large N and Random Matrix methods.Comment: Lectures given at the Fifteenth Chris Engelbrecht Summer School South Africa, January 2004. 6 eps figs and springer style file (svmult

    Defects in correlated metals and superconductors

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    In materials with strong local Coulomb interactions, simple defects such as atomic substitutions strongly affect both macroscopic and local properties of the system. A nonmagnetic impurity, for instance, is seen to induce magnetism nearby. Even without disorder, models of such correlated systems are generally not soluble in 2 or 3 dimensions, and so few exact results are known for the properties of such impurities. Nevertheless, some simple physical ideas have emerged from experiments and approximate theories. Here, we first review what we can learn about this problem from 1D antiferromagnetically correlated systems. We then discuss experiments on the high Tc cuprate normal state which probe the effect of impurities on local charge and spin degrees of freedom, and compare with theories of single impurities in correlated hosts, as well as phenomenological effective Kondo descriptions. Subsequently, we review theories of impurities in d-wave superconductors including residual quasiparticle interactions, and compare with experiments in the superconducting state. We argue that existing data exhibit a remarkable similarity to impurity-induced magnetism in the 1D case, implying the importance of electronic correlations for the understanding of these phenomena, and suggesting that impurities may provide excellent probes of the still poorly understood ground state of the cuprates.Comment: 66 pages, 48 figures, review articl
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