147 research outputs found
Weak localisation magnetoresistance and valley symmetry in graphene.
Due to the chiral nature of electrons in a monolayer of graphite (graphene) one can expect weak antilocalisation and a positive weak-field magnetoresistance in it. However, trigonal warping (which breaks p to āp symmetry of the Fermi line in each valley) suppresses antilocalisation, while inter-valley scattering due to atomically sharp scatterers in a realistic graphene sheet or by edges in a narrow wire tends to restore conventional negative magnetoresistance. We show this by evaluating the dependence of the magnetoresistance of graphene on relaxation rates associated with various possible ways of breaking a āhiddenā valley symmetry of the system
Weak localization in graphene.
We review the recently-developed theory of weak localization in monolayer and bilayer graphene. For high-density monolayer graphene and for any-density bilayers, the dominant factor affecting weak localization properties is trigonal warping of graphene bands, which reflects asymmetry of the carrier dispersion with respect to the center of the corresponding valley. The suppression of weak localization by trigonal warping is accompanied by a similar effect caused by random-bond disorder (due to bending of a graphene sheet) and by dislocation/antidislocation pairs. As a result, weak localization in graphene can be observed only in samples with sufficiently strong inter-valley scattering, which is reflected by a characteristic form of negative magnetoresistance in graphene-based structures
Twist instability in strongly correlated carbon nanotubes
We show that strong Luttinger correlations of the electron liquid in armchair
carbon nanotubes lead to a significant enhancement of the onset temperature of
the putative twist Peierls instability. The instability results in a
spontaneous uniform twist deformation of the lattice at low temperatures, and a
gapped ground state. Depending on values of the coupling constants the umklapp
electron scattering processes can assist or compete with the twist instability.
In case of the competition the umklapp processes win in wide tubes. In narrow
tubes the outcome of the competition depends on the relative strength of the
e-e and e-ph backscattering. Our estimates show that the twist instability may
be realized in free standing (5,5) tubes.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Relaxation Dynamics of Photocarriers in One-Dimensional Mott Insulators Coupled to Phonons
We examine recombination processes of photocarriers in one-dimensional Mott
insulators coupled to phonons. Performing density matrix renormalization group
calculations, we find that, even for small electron-phonon coupling, many
phonons are generated dynamically, which cause initial relaxation process after
the irradiation. At the same time, spin-charge coupling coming from mixing of
high- and low-energy states by the irradiation is suppressed. We discuss
differences between Mott and band insulators in terms of relaxation dynamics.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Decay of a plasmon into neutral modes in a carbon nanotube
We evaluate the rate of energy loss of a plasmon in a disorder-free carbon
nanotube. The plasmon decays into neutral bosonic excitations of the electron
liquid. The process is mediated either by phonon-assisted backscattering of a
single electron, or Umklapp backscattering of two electrons. To lowest order in
the backscattering interactions the partial decay rates are additive. At zero
doping the corresponding decay rates scale as power-laws of the temperature
with positive and negative exponents for the two mechanisms, respectively. The
precise values of the exponents depend on the Luttinger liquid parameter. At
finite doping the decay rates are described by universal crossover functions of
frequency and chemical potential measured in units of temperature. In the
evaluation of the plasmon decay, we concentrate on a finite-length geometry
allowing excitation of plasma resonances.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Instability due to long range Coulomb interaction in a liquid of polarizable particles (polarons, etc.)
The interaction Hamiltonian for a system of polarons a la Feynman in the
presence of long range Coulomb interaction is derived and the dielectric
function is computed in mean field. For large enough concentration a liquid of
such particles becomes unstable. The onset of the instability is signaled by
the softening of a collective optical mode in which all electrons oscillate in
phase in their respective self-trapping potential. We associate the instability
with a metallization of the system. Optical experiments in slightly doped
cuprates and doped nickelates are analyzed within this theory.
We discuss why doped cuprates matallize whereas nickelates do not.Comment: 5 pages,1 figur
Transport of Dirac quasiparticles in graphene: Hall and optical conductivities
The analytical expressions for both diagonal and off-diagonal ac and dc
conductivities of graphene placed in an external magnetic field are derived.
These conductivities exhibit rather unusual behavior as functions of frequency,
chemical potential and applied field which is caused by the fact that the
quasiparticle excitations in graphene are Dirac-like. One of the most striking
effects observed in graphene is the odd integer quantum Hall effect. We argue
that it is caused by the anomalous properties of the Dirac quasiparticles from
the lowest Landau level. Other quantities such as Hall angle and Nernst signal
also exhibit rather unusual behavior, in particular when there is an excitonic
gap in the spectrum of the Dirac quasiparticle excitations.Comment: 25 pages, RevTeX4, 8 EPS figures; final version published in PR
Scattering by flexural phonons in suspended graphene under back gate induced strain
We have studied electron scattering by out-of-plane (flexural) phonon modes
in doped suspended graphene and its effect on charge transport. In the
free-standing case (absence of strain) the flexural branch shows a quadratic
dispersion relation, which becomes linear at long wavelength when the sample is
under tension due to the rotation symmetry breaking. In the non-strained case,
scattering by flexural phonons is the main limitation to electron mobility.
This picture changes drastically when strains above are considered. Here we study in particular the
case of back gate induced strain, and apply our theoretical findings to recent
experiments in suspended graphene.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, published versio
Optical absorption of spin ladders
We present a theory of phonon-assisted optical two-magnon absorption in
two-leg spin-ladders. Based on the strong intra-rung-coupling limit we show
that collective excitations of total spin S=0, 1 and 2 exist outside of the
two-magnon continuum. It is demonstrated that the singlet collective state has
a clear signature in the optical spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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