846 research outputs found

    Asymmetry of the electronic states in hole- and electron-doped cuprates: Exact diagonalization study of the t-t'-t''-J model

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    We systematically examine the asymmetry of the electronic states in the hole- and electron-doped cuprates by using the t-t'-t''-J model. Numerically exact diagonalization method is employed for a 20-site square lattice. We impose twisted boundary conditions (BC) instead of standard periodic BC. For static and dynamical correlation functions, averaging procedure over the twisted BC is used to reduce the finite-size effect. We find that antiferromagnetic spin correlation remains strong in electron doping in contrast to the case of hole doping, being similar to the case of the periodic BC. This leads to a remarkable electron-hole asymmetry in the dynamical spin structure factor and two-magnon Raman scattering. By changing the twist, the single-particle spectral function is obtained for all momenta in the Brillouin zone. Examining the spectral function in detail, we find a gap opening at around the k=(pi,0) region for 10% doping of holes (the carrier concentration x=0.1), leading to a Fermi arc that is consistent with experiments. In electron doping, however, a gap opens at around k=(pi/2,pi/2) and persists up to x=0.2, being correlated with the strength of the antiferromagnetic correlation. We find that the magnitude of the gaps is sensitive to t' and t''. A pseudogap is also seen in the optical conductivity for electron doping, and its magnitude is found to be the same as that in the spectral function. We compare calculated quantities with corresponding experimental data, and discuss similarities and differences between them as well as their implications.Comment: 14 pages, 17 figures, Replaced figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Temperature and Dimensionality Dependences of Optical Absorption Spectra in Mott Insulators

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    We investigate the temperature dependence of optical absorption spectra of one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) Mott insulators by using an effective model in the strong-coupling limit of a half-filed Hubbard model. In the numerically exact diagonalization calculations on finite-size clusters, we find that in 1D the energy position of the absorption edge is almost independent of temperature, while in 2D the edge position shifts to lower energy with increasing temperature. The different temperature dependence between 1D and 2D is attributed to the difference of the coupling of the charge and spin degrees of freedom. The implications of the results on experiments are discussed in terms of the dimensionality dependence.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Modeling Antiferromagnetic Phase in Iron Pnictides: Weakly Ordered State

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    We examine electronic states of antiferromagnetic phase in iron pnictides by mean-field calculations of the optical conductivity. We find that a five-band model exhibiting a small magnetic moment, inconsistent with the first-principles calculations, reproduces well the excitation spectra characterized by a multi-peak structure emerging below the N\'{e}el temperature at low energy, together with an almost temperature-independent structure at high energy. Investigating the interlayer magnetoresistance for this model, we also predict its characteristic field dependence reflecting the Fermi surface

    Numerical approach to low-doping regime of the t-J model

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    We develop an efficient numerical method for the description of a single-hole motion in the antiferromagnetic background. The method is free of finite-size effects and allows calculation of physical properties at an arbitrary wavevector. Methodical increase of the functional space leads to results that are valid in the thermodynamic limit. We found good agreement with cumulant expansion, exact- diagonalization approaches on finite lattices as well as self-consistent Born approximations. The method allows a straightforward addition of other inelastic degrees of freedom, such as lattice effects. Our results confirm the existence of a finite quasiparticle weight near the band minimum for a single hole and the existence of string-like peaks in the single-hole spectral function.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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