We study bipartite entanglement entropies in the ground and excited states of
model fermion systems, where a staggered potential, μs, induces a gap in
the spectrum. Ground state entanglement entropies satisfy the `area law', and
the `area-law' coefficient is found to diverge as a logarithm of the staggered
potential, when the system has an extended Fermi surface at μs=0. On the
square-lattice, we show that the coefficient of the logarithmic divergence
depends on the fermi surface geometry and its orientation with respect to the
real-space interface between subsystems and is related to the Widom conjecture
as enunciated by Gioev and Klich (Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 100503 (2006)). For
point Fermi surfaces in two-dimension, the `area-law' coefficient stays finite
as μs→0. The von Neumann entanglement entropy associated with the
excited states follows a `volume law' and allows us to calculate an entropy
density function s_{V}(e), which is substantially different from the
thermodynamic entropy density function sT(e), when the lattice is
bipartitioned into two equal subsystems but approaches the thermodynamic
entropy density as the fraction of sites in the larger subsystem, that is
integrated out, approaches unity.Comment: Some additional calculations are done for excited states providing a
demonstration of `strong typicality' hypothesis of Santos et al (L. F.
Santos, A. Polkovnikov and M. Rigol, Phys. Rev. E 86, 010102(R) (2012)