394 research outputs found
A class of solvable models in Condensed Matter Physics
In this paper, we show that there is a large class of fermionic systems for
which it is possible to find, for any dimension, a finite closed set of
eigenoperators and eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian. Then, the hierarchy of the
equations of motion closes and analytical expressions for the Green's functions
are obtained in terms of a finite number of parameters, to be self-consistently
determined. Several examples are given. In particular, for these examples it is
shown that in the one-dimensional case it is possible to derive by means of
algebraic constraints a set of equations which allow us to determine the
self-consistent parameters and to obtain a complete exact solution
The Hubbard model: bosonic excitations and zero-frequency constants
A fully self-consistent calculation of the bosonic dynamics of the Hubbard
model is developed within the Composite Operator Method. From one side we
consider a basic set of fermionic composite operators (Hubbard fields) and
calculate the retarded propagators. On the other side we consider a basic set
of bosonic composite operators (charge, spin and pair) and calculate the causal
propagators. The equations for the Green's functions (GF) (retarded and
causal), studied in the polar approximation, are coupled and depend on a set of
parameters not determined by the dynamics. First, the pair sector is
self-consistently solved together with the fermionic one and the zero-frequency
constants (ZFC) are calculated not assuming the ergodic value, but fixing the
representation of the GF in such a way to maintain the constrains required by
the algebra of the composite fields. Then, the scheme to compute the charge and
spin sectors, ZFCs included, is given in terms of the fermionic and pair
correlators
Self-energy-functional theory
Self-energy-functional theory is a formal framework which allows to derive
non-perturbative and thermodynamically consistent approximations for lattice
models of strongly correlated electrons from a general dynamical variational
principle. The construction of the self-energy functional and the corresponding
variational principle is developed within the path-integral formalism.
Different cluster mean-field approximations, like the variational cluster
approximation and cluster extensions of dynamical mean-field theory are derived
in this context and their mutual relationship and internal consistency are
discussed.Comment: chapter in "Theoretical Methods for Strongly Correlated Systems",
edited by A. Avella and F. Mancini, Springer (2011), 38 pages, 10 figure
Equation of Motion Method for Composite Field Operators
The Green's function formalism in Condensed Matter Physics is reviewed within
the equation of motion approach. Composite operators and their Green's
functions naturally appear as building blocks of generalized perturbative
approaches and require fully self-consistent treatments in order to be properly
handled. It is shown how to unambiguously set the representation of the Hilbert
space by fixing both the unknown parameters, which appear in the linearized
equations of motion and in the spectral weights of non-canonical operators, and
the zero-frequency components of Green's functions in a way that algebra and
symmetries are preserved. To illustrate this procedure some examples are given:
the complete solution of the two-site Hubbard model, the evaluation of spin and
charge correlators for a narrow-band Bloch system, the complete solution of the
three-site Heisenberg model, and a study of the spin dynamics in the
Double-Exchange model.Comment: 20 RevTeX4 pages, 4 embedded figure
Green's Function Formalism for Highly Correlated Systems
We present the Composite Operator Method (COM) as a modern approach to the
study of strongly correlated electronic systems, based on the equation of
motion and Green's function method. COM uses propagators of composite operators
as building blocks at the basis of approximate calculations and algebra
constrains to fix the representation of Green's functions in order to maintain
the algebraic and symmetry properties
The Hubbard model with intersite interaction within the Composite Operator Method
We study the one- and two- dimensional extended Hubbard model by means of the
Composite Operator Method within the 2-pole approximation. The fermionic
propagator is computed fully self-consistently as a function of temperature,
filling and Coulomb interactions. The behaviors of the chemical potential
(global indicator) and of the double occupancy and nearest-neighbor density-
density correlator (local indicators) are analyzed in detail as primary sources
of information regarding the instability of the paramagnetic (metal and
insulator) phase towards charge ordering driven by the intersite Coulomb
interaction. Very rich phase diagrams (multiple first and second order phase
transitions, critical points, reentrant behavior) have been found and discussed
with respect to both metal-insulator and charge ordering transitions: the
connections with the experimental findings relative to some manganese compounds
are analyzed. Moreover, the possibility of improving the capability of
describing cuprates with respect to the simple Hubbard model is discussed
through the analysis of the Fermi surface and density of states features. We
also report about the specific heat behavior in presence of the intersite
interaction and the appearance of crossing points.Comment: 15 pages, 36 figure
Exact properties of the chemical potential-density relation at finite temperature in the Hubbard model
We draw some rigorous conclusions about the functional properties of the
relation in the Hubbard model based on symmetry considerations and
unitary transformations. It is shown that the charge susceptibility reaches its
local extreme at half-filling. Exact expressions are obtained in two limiting
cases
Emery vs. Hubbard model for cuprate superconductors: a Composite Operator Method study
Within the Composite Operator Method (COM), we report the solution of the
Emery model (also known as p-d or three band model), which is relevant for the
cuprate high-Tc superconduc- tors. We also discuss the relevance of the
often-neglected direct oxygen-oxygen hopping for a more accurate, sometimes
unique, description of this class of materials. The benchmark of the solution
is performed by comparing our results with the available quantum Monte Carlo
ones. Both single- particle and thermodynamic properties of the model are
studied in detail. Our solution features a metal-insulator transition at half
filling. The resulting metal-insulator phase diagram agrees qual- itatively
very well with the one obtained within Dynamical Mean-Field Theory. We discuss
the type of transition (Mott-Hubbard (MH) or charge-transfer (CT)) for the
microscopic (ab-initio) parameter range relevant for cuprates getting, as
expected a CT type. The emerging single-particle scenario clearly suggests a
very close relation between the relevant sub-bands of the three- (Emery) and
the single- band (Hubbard) models, thus providing an independent and
non-perturbative proof of the validity of the mapping between the two models
for the model parameters optimal to describe cuprates. Such a result confirms
the emergence of the Zhang-Rice scenario, which has been recently questioned.
We also report the behavior of the specific heat and of the entropy as
functions of the temperature on varying the model parameters as these
quantities, more than any other, depend on and, consequently, reveal the most
relevant energy scales of the system.Comment: 20 pages, 19 figure
Entanglement in the F-AF zig-zag Heisenberg chain
We present a study of the entanglement properties of the F-AF zig-zag
Heisenberg chain done by means of the Density Matrix Renormalization Group
method. In particular, we have selected the concurrence as measure of
entanglement and checked its capability to signal the presence of quantum phase
transitions within the previously found ergodicity phase diagram [E. Plekhanov,
A. Avella, and F. Mancini, Phys. Rev. B \textbf{74}, 115120 (2006)]. By
analyzing the behavior of the concurrence, we have been able not only to
determine the position of the transition lines within the phase diagram of the
system, but also to identify a well defined region in the parameter space of
the model that shows a complex spin ordering indicating the presence of a new
phase of the system.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures to be published in Journal of Optoelectronics and
Advanced Materials, presented at ESM '0
Ergodicity of the extended anisotropic 1D Heisenberg model: response at low temperatures
We present the results of exact diagonalization calculations of the isolated
and isothermal on-site static susceptibilities in the anisotropic extended
Heisenberg model on a linear chain with periodic boundary conditions. Based on
the ergodicity considerations we conclude that the isothermal susceptibility
will diverge as both in finite clusters and in the bulk system in two
non-ergodic regions of the phase diagram of the system.Comment: reported at the International Conference on Magnetism, August 20-25,
2006 Kyoto, Japa
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