We study the effects of bond-charge interaction (or correlated hopping) on
the properties of the extended ({\it i.e.,} with both on-site (U) and
nearest-neighbor (V) repulsions) Hubbard model in one dimension at
half-filling. Energy gaps and correlation functions are calculated by Lanczos
diagonalization on finite systems. We find that, irrespective of the sign of
the bond-charge interaction, X, the charge--density-wave (CDW) state is more
robust than the spin--density-wave (SDW) state. A small bond-charge interaction
term is enough to make the differences between the CDW and SDW correlation
functions much less dramatic than when X=0. For X=t and fixed V<2t (t
is the uncorrelated hopping integral), there is an intermediate phase between a
charge ordered phase and a phase corresponding to singly-occupied sites, the
nature of which we clarify: it is characterized by a succession of critical
points, each of which corresponding to a different density of doubly-occupied
sites. We also find an unusual slowly decaying staggered spin-density
correlation function, which is suggestive of some degree of ordering. No
enhancement of pairing correlations was found for any X in the range
examined.Comment: 10 pages, 7 PostScript figures, RevTeX 3; to appear in Phys Rev