29 research outputs found
Singlet and triplet bipolarons on the triangular lattice
We study the Coulomb-Fr\"ohlich model on a triangular lattice, looking in
particular at states with angular momentum. We examine a simplified model of
crab bipolarons with angular momentum by projecting onto the low energy
subspace of the Coulomb-Fr\"ohlich model with large phonon frequency. Such a
projection is consistent with large long-range electron-phonon coupling and
large repulsive Hubbard . Significant differences are found between the band
structure of singlet and triplet states: The triplet state (which has a flat
band) is found to be significantly heavier than the singlet state (which has
mass similar to the polaron). We test whether the heavier triplet states
persist to lower electron-phonon coupling using continuous time quantum Monte
Carlo (QMC) simulation. The triplet state is both heavier and larger,
demonstrating that the heavier mass is due to quantum interference effects on
the motion. We also find that retardation effects reduce the differences
between singlet and triplet states, since they reintroduce second order terms
in the hopping into the inverse effective mass.Comment: Proceedings of SNS 200
Mobile small polaron
Extending the Froehlich polaron problem to a discrete ionic lattice we study a polaronic state with a small radius of the wave function but a large size of the lattice distortion. We calculate the energy dispersion and the effective mass of the polaron with the 1/\lambda perturbation theory and with the exact Monte Carlo method in the nonadiabatic and adiabatic regimes, respectively. The "small" Froehlich polaron is found to be lighter than the small Holstein polaron by one or more orders of magnitude
Two-electron elastic tunneling in low-dimensional conductors
We solve the Lippmann-Schwinger equation describing one-dimensional elastic scattering of preformed pairs (e.g., bipolarons) off a short-range scattering center, and find the two-particle transmission through a thin potential barrier. While the pair transmission is smaller than the single-electron transmission in the strong-coupling limit, it is remarkably larger in the weak-coupling limit. We also calculate current-voltage characteristics of a molecule-barrier-molecule junction. They show unusual temperature and voltage behaviors which are experimentally verifiable at low temperatures in bulk and nanoscale molecular conductors
Bistable molecular conductors with a field-switchable dipole group
A class of bistable "stator-rotor" molecules is proposed, where a stationary
bridge (stator) connects the two electrodes and facilitates electron transport
between them. The rotor part, which has a large dipole moment, is attached to
an atom of the stator via a single sigma bond. Hydrogen bonds formed between
the rotor and stator make the symmetric orientation of the dipole unstable. The
rotor has two potential minima with equal energy for rotation about the sigma
bond. The dipole orientation, which determines the conduction state of the
molecule, can be switched by an external electric field that changes the
relative energy of the two potential minima. Both orientation of the rotor
correspond to asymmetric current-voltage characteristics that are the reverse
of each other, so they are distinguishable electrically. Such bistable
stator-rotor molecules could potentially be used as parts of molecular
electronic devices.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Superlight small bipolarons
Recent angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has identified that a finite-range Fröhlich electron-phonon interaction (EPI) with c-axis polarized optical phonons is important in cuprate superconductors, in agreement with an earlier proposal by Alexandrov and Kornilovitch. The estimated unscreened EPI is so strong that it could easily transform doped holes into mobile lattice bipolarons in narrow-band Mott insulators such as cuprates. Applying a continuous-time quantum Monte-Carlo algorithm (CTQMC) we compute the total energy, effective mass, pair radius, number of phonons and isotope exponent of lattice bipolarons in the region of parameters where any approximation might fail taking into account the Coulomb repulsion and the finite-range EPI. The effects of modifying the interaction range and different lattice geometries are discussed with regards to analytical strong-coupling/non-adiabatic results. We demonstrate that bipolarons can be simultaneously small and light, provided suitable conditions on the electron-phonon and electron-electron interaction are satisfied. Such light small bipolarons are a necessary precursor to high-temperature Bose-Einstein condensation in solids. The light bipolaron mass is shown to be universal in systems made of triangular plaquettes, due to a novel crab-like motion. Another surprising result is that the triplet-singlet exchange energy is of the first order in the hopping integral and triplet bipolarons are heavier than singlets in certain lattice structures at variance with intuitive expectations. Finally, we identify a range of lattices where superlight small bipolarons may be formed, and give estimates for their masses in the anti-adiabatic approximation
Superlight small bipolarons in the presence of strong Coulomb repulsion
We study a lattice bipolaron on a staggered triangular ladder and triangular and hexagonal lattices with both long-range electron-phonon interaction and strong Coulomb repulsion using a novel continuous-time quantum Monte-Carlo (CTQMC) algorithm extended to the Coulomb-Frohlich model with two particles. The algorithm is preceded by an exact integration over phonon degrees of freedom, and as such is extremely efficient. The bipolaron effective mass and bipolaron radius are computed. Lattice bipolarons on such lattices have a novel crablike motion, and are small but very light in a wide range of parameters, which leads to a high Bose-Einstein condensation temperature. We discuss the relevance of our results with current experiments on cuprate high-temperature superconductors and propose a route to room temperature superconductivity
Singlet and triplet bipolarons on the triangular lattice
We study the Coulomb–Fröhlich model on a triangular lattice, looking in particular at states with angular momentum. We examine a simplified model of crab bipolarons with angular momentum by projecting onto the low energy subspace of the Coulomb–Fröhlich model with large phonon frequency. Such a projection is consistent with large long-range electron–phonon coupling and large repulsive Hubbard U. Significant differences are found between the band structure of singlet and triplet states: The triplet state (which has a flat band) is found to be significantly heavier than the singlet state (which has mass similar to the polaron). We test whether the heavier triplet states persist to lower electron–phonon coupling using continuous time quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulation. The triplet state is both heavier and larger, demonstrating that the heavier mass is due to quantum interference effects on the motion. We also find that retardation effects reduce the differences between singlet and triplet states, since they reintroduce second order terms in the hopping into the inverse effective mass
Effects of lattice geometry and interaction range on polaron dynamics
We study the effects of lattice type on polaron dynamics using a continuous-time quantum Monte-Carlo approach. Holstein and screened Froehlich polarons are simulated on a number of different Bravais lattices. The effective mass, isotope coefficients, ground state energy and energy spectra, phonon numbers, and density of states are calculated. In addition, the results are compared with weak and strong coupling perturbation theory. For the Holstein polaron, it is found that the crossover between weak and strong coupling results becomes sharper as the coordination number is increased. In higher dimensions, polarons are much less mobile at strong coupling, with more phonons contributing to the polaron. The total energy decreases monotonically with coupling. Spectral properties of the polaron depend on the lattice type considered, with the dimensionality contributing to the shape and the coordination number to the bandwidth. As the range of the electron-phonon interaction is increased, the coordination number becomes less important, with the dimensionality taking the leading role
Erratum: effects of lattice geometry and interaction range on polaron dynamics
Erratum: effects of lattice geometry and interaction range on polaron dynamic
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Ubiquitous light real-space pairing from long-range hopping and interactions
We systematically examine how long-range hopping and its synergy with extended interactions leads to light bound pairs. Pair properties are determined for a dilute extended Hubbard model with large on-site repulsion (U) and both near- and next-nearest neighbor hopping (t and t' ) and attraction (V and V'), for cubic and tetragonal lattices. The presence of t' and V' promotes light pairs. For tetragonal lattices, t' d-symmetric pairs form. Close packing transition temperatures, T*, are estimated for the Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of pairs to be kBT* ~ 0.1Ě„t , where Ě„t is the geometric mean of the hoppings on the Cartesian axes. When pairs have d-symmetry, the condensate has d-wave character. Thus, the presence of both t' and V' leads ubiquitously to small strongly bound pairs with an inverse mass that is linear in hopping, which could lead to high temperature BECs