We have investigated two-electron bound state formation in a square
two-dimensional t-J-U model with hopping anisotropies for zero electron
density; these anisotropies are introduced to mimic the hopping energies
similar to those expected in stripe-like arrangements of holes and spins found
in various transition metal oxides. In this report we provide analytical
solutions to this problem, and thus demonstrate that bound-state formation
occurs at a critical exchange coupling, J_c, that decreases to zero in the
limit of extreme hopping anisotropy t_y/t_x -> 0. This result should be
contrasted with J_c/t = 2 for either a one-dimensional chain, or a
two-dimensional plane with isotropic hopping. Most importantly, this behaviour
is found to be qualitatively similar to that of two electrons on the two-leg
ladder problem in the limit of t_interchain/t_intrachain -> 0. Using the latter
result as guidance, we have evaluated the pair correlation function, thus
determining that the bound state corresponds to one electron moving along one
chain, with the second electron moving along the opposite chain, similar to two
electrons confined to move along parallel, neighbouring, metallic stripes. We
emphasize that the above results are not restricted to the zero density limit -
we have completed an exact diagonalization study of two holes in a 12 X 2
two-leg ladder described by the t-J model and have found that the
above-mentioned lowering of the binding energy with hopping anisotropy persists
near half filling.Comment: 6 pages, 3 eps figure