87 research outputs found

    Origin of the high Neel temperature in SrTcO3

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    We investigate the origin of the high Neel temperature recently found in Tc perovskites. The electronic structure in the magnetic state of SrTcO3 and its 3d analogue SrMnO3 is calculated within a framework combining band-structure and many-body methods. In agreement with experiment, the Neel temperature of SrTcO3 is found to be four times larger than that of SrMnO3. We show that this is because the Tc-compound lies on the verge of the itinerant-to-localized transition, and also has a larger bandwidth, while the Mn-compound lies deeper into the localized side. For SrTcO3 we predict that the Neel temperature depends weakly on applied pressure, in clear violation of Bloch's rule, signaling the complete breakdown of the localized picture.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figures, published versio

    Non-local self energies in pyrochlore iridates from ab-initio TRILEX calculations, and their relevance for the Weyl semimetal phase

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    Motivated by recent experiments and computational results on pyrochlore iridates, we compare single-particle properties of Y2Ir2O7 obtained from single-site dynamical mean-field calculations with results within the TRILEX approximation, where the latter takes non-local correlations into account. Our calculations are all based on ab-initio calculations within density-functional theory, and take spin-orbit coupling into account. In order to make the treatment within TRILEX feasible, we first define a single-band jeff = 1/2 model, by comparing its spectral features within DMFT to a three-band model that includes both jeff = 1/2 and jeff = 3/2 orbitals. Our calculations show consistently a paramagnetic metallic phase at small interaction values, and an insulating antiferromagnetic phase at larger interaction values. The critical interactions, however, differ between single-site and TRILEX calculations. The antiferromagnetic phase shows the already predicted all-in/all-out magnetic ordering. Different to the single-site results, the TRILEX calculation gives also evidence for the Weyl-semimetal regime in the vicinity of the metal-insulator transition

    Topological insulator on honeycomb lattices and ribbons without inversion symmetry

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    We study the Kane-Mele-Hubbard model with an additional inversion-symmetry-breaking term. Using the topological Hamiltonian approach, we calculate the Z2\mathbb{Z}_2 invariant of the system as function of spin-orbit coupling, Hubbard interaction UU, and inversion-symmetry-breaking on-site potential. The phase diagram calculated in that way shows that, on the one hand, a large term of the latter kind destroys the topological non-trivial state. On the other hand, however, this inversion-symmetry-breaking field can enhance the topological state, since for moderate values the transition from the non-trivial topological to the trivial Mott insulator is pushed to larger values of interaction UU. This feature of an enhanced topological state is also found on honeycomb ribbons. With inversion symmetry, the edge of the zigzag ribbon is magnetic for any value of UU. This magnetic moment destroys the gapless edge mode. Lifting inversion symmetry allows for a finite region in interaction strength UU below which gapless edge modes exist.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure

    Quantum Fluctuations, Temperature and Detuning Effects in Solid-Light Systems

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    The superfluid to Mott insulator transition in cavity polariton arrays is analyzed using the variational cluster approach, taking into account quantum fluctuations exactly on finite length scales. Phase diagrams in one and two dimensions exhibit important non-mean-field features. Single-particle excitation spectra in the Mott phase are dominated by particle and hole bands separated by a Mott gap. In contrast to Bose-Hubbard models, detuning allows for changing the nature of the bosonic particles from quasi-localized excitons to polaritons to weakly interacting photons. The Mott state with density one exists up to temperatures T/g≳0.03T/g\gtrsim0.03, implying experimentally accessible temperatures for realistic cavity couplings gg.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Letter
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