144 research outputs found

    Impurity Effect on Ferromagnetic Transition in Double-Exchange Systems

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    Effect of randomness in the double-exchange model is studied. Large fluctuations and spatial random distribution of impurities are taken into account in an essentially exact manner by using the Monte Carlo calculation. The randomness suppresses the ferromagnetism by reducing the coherence of itinerant electrons. The suppression is significant in the critical region where the fluctuations are dominant. Temperature dependences of the magnetization are estimated for finite-size clusters. A characteristic temperature for phase transition T∗T^{*} is estimated from the inflection point, which is expected to give a good approximation for the critical temperature in the thermodynamic limit. Our results suggest that the ferromagnetism becomes unstable more rapidly than predicted in the previous theoretical results by the coherent-potential approximation.Comment: 7 pages including 4 figures, submitted to Proc. ISSP

    Competing Orders and Disorder-induced Insulator to Metal Transition in Manganites

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    Effects of disorder on the two competing phases, i.e., the ferromagnetic metal and the commensurate charge/lattice ordered insulator, are studied by Monte Carlo simulation. The disorder suppresses the charge/lattice ordering more strongly than the ferromagnetic order, driving the commensurate insulator to the ferromagnetic metal near the phase boundary in the pure case. Above the ferromagnetic transition temperature, on the contrary, the disorder makes the system more insulating, which might cause an enhanced colossal magnetoresistance as observed in the half-doped or Cr-substituted manganites. No indication of the percolation or the cluster formation is found, and there remain the charge/lattice fluctuations instead which are enhanced toward the transition temperature.Comment: 5 pages including 4 figure

    Order N Monte Carlo Algorithm for Fermion Systems Coupled with Fluctuating Adiabatical Fields

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    An improved algorithm is proposed for Monte Carlo methods to study fermion systems interacting with adiabatical fields. To obtain a weight for each Monte Carlo sample with a fixed configuration of adiabatical fields, a series expansion using Chebyshev polynomials is applied. By introducing truncations of matrix operations in a systematic and controlled way, it is shown that the cpu time is reduced from O(N^3) to O(N) where N is the system size. Benchmark results show that the implementation of the algorithm makes it possible to perform systematic investigations of critical phenomena using system-size scalings even for an electronic model in three dimensions, within a realistic cpu timescale.Comment: 9 pages with 4 fig

    Universality Class of Ferromagnetic Transition in Three-Dimensional Double-Exchange System - O(N) Monte Carlo Study -

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    Curie temperature and exponents are studied for the three-dimensional double-exchange model. Applying the O(N) Monte Carlo algorithm, we perform systematic finite-size scaling analyses on the data up to 20320^3 sites. The obtained values of the critical exponents are consistent with those of the Heisenberg universality class, and clearly distinct from the mean-field values.Comment: 3 pages including 2 figure

    Non-equilibrium Relaxation Study of Ferromagnetic Transition in Double-Exchange Systems

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    Ferromagnetic transition in double-exchange systems is studied by non-equilibrium relaxation technique combined with Monte Carlo calculations. Critical temperature and critical exponents are estimated from relaxation of the magnetic moment. The results are consistent with the previous Monte Carlo results in thermal equilibrium. The exponents estimated by these independent techniques suggest that the universality class of this transition is the same as that of short-range interaction models but is different from the mean-field one.Comment: 3 pages including 1 figure, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp

    Orbital degeneracy and Mott transition in Mo pyrochlore oxides

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    We present our theoretical results on an effective two-band double-exchange model on a pyrochlore lattice for understanding intricate phase competition in Mo pyrochlore oxides. The model includes the twofold degeneracy of eg′e_g' orbitals under trigonal field splitting, the interorbital Coulomb repulsion, the Hund's-rule coupling between itinerant eg′e_g' electrons and localized a1ga_{1g} spins, and the superexchange antiferromagnetic interaction between the a1ga_{1g} spins. By Monte Carlo simulation with treating the Coulomb repulsion at an unrestricted-type mean-field level, we obtain the low-temperature phase diagram as functions of the Coulomb repulsion and the superexchange interaction. The results include four dominant phases with characteristic spin and orbital orders and the metal-insulator transitions among them. The insulating region is characterized by a `ferro'-type orbital ordering of the eg′e_g' orbitals along the local axis, irrespective of the spin ordering.Comment: 6 pages, proceedings for ICFC

    An Origin of CMR: Competing Phases and Disorder-Induced Insulator-to-Metal Transition in Manganites

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    We theoretically explore the mechanism of the colossal magnetoresistance in manganese oxides by explicitly taking into account the phase competition between the double-exchange ferromagnetism and the charge-ordered insulator. We find that quenched disorder causes a drastic change of the multicritical phase diagram by destroying the charge-ordered state selectively. As a result, there appears a nontrivial phenomenon of the disorder-induced insulator-to-metal transition in the multicritical regime. On the contrary, the disorder induces a highly-insulating state above the transition temperature where charge-ordering fluctuations are much enhanced. The contrasting effects provide an understanding of the mechanism of the colossal magnetoresistance. The obtained scenario is discussed in comparison with other theoretical proposals such as the polaron theory, the Anderson localization, the multicritical-fluctuation scenario, and the percolation scenario.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Wandlitz Days on Magnetism: Local-Moment Ferromagnets: Unique Properties for Modern Application

    Partial Disorder and Metal-Insulator Transition in the Periodic Anderson Model on a Triangular Lattice

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    Ground state of the periodic Anderson model on a triangular lattice is systematically investigated by the mean-field approximation. We found that the model exhibits two different types of partially disordered states: one is at half filling and the other is at other commensurate fillings. In the latter case, the kinetic energy is lowered by forming an extensive network involving both magnetic and nonmagnetic sites, in sharp contrast to the former case in which the nonmagnetic sites are rather isolated. This spatially extended nature of nonmagnetic sites yields a metallic partially-disordered state by hole doping. We discuss the mechanism of the metal-insulator transition by the change of electronic structure.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
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