469 research outputs found

    Theory of AC Anomalous Hall Conductivity in d-electron systems

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    To elucidate the intrinsic nature of anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in dd-electron systems, we study the AC anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC) in a tight-binding model with (dxz,dyzd_{xz},d_{yz})-orbitals. We drive a general expression for the AC AHC σxy(ω)\sigma_{xy}(\omega), which is valid for finite quasiparticle damping rate γ\gamma=/2τ\hbar/2\tau, and find that the AC AHC is strongly dependent on γ\gamma. When γ=+0\gamma=+0, the AC AHC shows a spiky peak at finite energy Δ\Delta that originates from the interband particle-hole excitation, where Δ\Delta represents the minimum band-splitting measured from the Fermi level. In contrast, we find that this spiky peak is quickly suppressed when γ\gamma is finite. By using a realistic value of γ(ω)\gamma(\omega) at ω=Δ/2\omega=\Delta/2 in dd-electron systems, the spiky peak is considerably suppressed. In the present model, the obtained results also represents the AC spin Hall conductivity in a paramagnetic state.Comment: 13pages, 9 figure

    Spin Hall effect in Sr2RuO4 and transition metals (Nb,Ta)

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    We study the intrinsic spin Hall conductivity (SHC) and the dd-orbital Hall conductivity (OHC) in metallic dd-electron systems based on the multiorbital tight-binding model. The obtained Hall conductivities are much larger than that in pp-type semiconductors. The origin of these huge Hall effects is the "effective Aharonov-Bohm phase" induced by the signs of inter-orbital hopping integrals as well as atomic spin-orbit interaction. Huge SHC and OHC due to this mecahnism is ubiquitous in multiorbital transition metals.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of SNS conference in Sendai, 200

    Theory of Thermal Conductivity in High-Tc Superconductors below Tc: Comparison between Hole-Doped and Electron-Doped Systems

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    In hole-doped high-Tc superconductors, thermal conductivity increases drastically just below Tc, which has been considered as a hallmark of a nodal gap. In contrast, such a coherence peak in thermal conductivity is not visible in electron-doped compounds, which may indicate a full-gap state such as a (d+is)-wave state. To settle this problem, we study the thermal conductivity in the Hubbard model using the fluctuation-exchange (FLEX) approximation, which predicts that the nodal d-wave state is realized in both hole-doped and electron-doped compounds. The contrasting behavior of thermal conductivity in both compounds originates from the differences in the hot/cold spot structure. In general, a prominent coherence peak in thermal conductivity appears in line-node superconductors only when the cold spot exists on the nodal line.Comment: 5 pages, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. Vol.76 No.

    Theory of Thermoelectric Power in High-Tc Superconductors

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    We present a microscopic theory for the thermoelectric power (TEP) in high-Tc cuprates. Based on the general expression for the TEP, we perform the calculation of the TEP for a square lattice Hubbard model including all the vertex corrections necessary to satisfy the conservation laws. In the present study, characteristic anomalous temperature and doping dependences of the TEP in high-Tc cuprates, which have been a long-standing problem of high-Tc cuprates, are well reproduced for both hole- and electron-doped systems, except for the heavily under-doped case. According to the present analysis, the strong momentum and energy dependences of the self-energy due to the strong antiferromagnetic fluctuations play an essential role in reproducing experimental anomalies of the TEP.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 70 (2001) No.10. Figure 2 has been revise

    Theory of Anomalous Hall Effect in a Heavy fermion System with a Strong Anisotropic Crystal Field

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    In a heavy fermion system, there exists the anomalous Hall effect caused by localized ff-orbital freedom, in addition to the normal Hall effect due to the Lorentz force. In 1994, we found that the Hall coefficient caused by the anomalous Hall effect (RHAHER_H^{AHE}) is predominant and the relation RHAHEρ2R_H^{AHE} \propto \rho^2 (ρ\rho is the electrical resistivity) holds at low temperatures in many compounds. In this work, we study the system where the magnetic susceptibility is highly anisotropic due to the strong crystalline electric field on ff-orbitals. Interestingly, we find that RHAHER_H^{AHE} is nearly isotropic in general. This tendency is frequently observed experimentally, which has casted suspicion that the anomalous Hall effect may be irrelevant in real materials. Our theory corresponds to corrections and generalizations of the pioneering work on ferromagnetic metals by Karplus and Luttinger.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. (No.8

    Effect of Nonmagnetic Impurity in Nearly Antiferromagnetic Fermi Liquid: Magnetic Correlations and Transport Phenomena

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    In nearly antiferromagnetic (AF) metals such as high-Tc superconductors (HTSC's), a single nonmagnetic impurity frequently causes nontrivial widespread change of the electronic states. To elucidate this long-standing issue, we study a Hubbard model with a strong onsite impurity potential based on an improved fluctuation-exchange (FLEX) approximation, which we call the GV^I-FLEX method. This model corresponds to the HTSC with dilute nonmagnetic impurity concentration. We find that (i) both local and staggered susceptibilities are strongly enhanced around the impurity. By this reason, (ii) the quasiparticle lifetime as well as the local density of states (DOS) are strongly suppressed in a wide area around the impurity (like a Swiss cheese hole), which causes the ``huge residual resistivity'' beyond the s-wave unitary scattering limit. We stress that the excess quasiparticle damping rate caused by impurities has strong momentum-dependence due to non-s-wave scatterings induced by many-body effects, so the structure of the ``hot spot/cold spot'' in the host system persists against impurity doping. This result could be examined by the ARPES measurements. In addition, (iii) only a few percent of impurities can causes a ``Kondo-like'' upturn of resistivity (dρ/dT<0d\rho/dT<0) at low temperatures when the system is very close to the AF quantum critical point (QCP). The results (i)-(iii) obtained in the present study, which cannot be derived by the simple FLEX approximation, naturally explains the main impurity effects in HTSC's. We also discuss the impurity effect in heavy fermion systems and organic superconductors.Comment: 22 pages, to be published in PR

    Universality in heavy-fermion systems with general degeneracy

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    We discuss the relation between the T^{2}-coefficient of electrical resistivity AA and the T-linear specific-heat coefficient γ\gamma for heavy-fermion systems with general NN, where NN is the degeneracy of quasi-particles. A set of experimental data reveals that the Kadowaki-Woods relation; A/γ2=1105μΩ(Kmol/mJ)2A/\gamma^{2} = 1*10^{-5} {\mu\Omega}(K mol/mJ)^{2}, collapses remarkably for large-N systems, although this relation has been regarded to be commonly applicable to the Fermi-liquids. Instead, based on the Fermi-liquid theory we propose a new relation; A~/γ~2=1×105\tilde{A}/\tilde{\gamma}^2=1\times10^{-5} with A~=A/(1/2)N(N1)\tilde{A} = A/(1/2)N(N-1) and γ~=γ/(1/2)N(N1)\tilde{\gamma} = \gamma/(1/2)N(N-1). This new relation exhibits an excellent agreement with the data for whole the range of degenerate heavy-fermions.Comment: 2 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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