1,996 research outputs found
Fermi surface dichotomy on systems with fluctuating order
We investigate the effect of a dynamical collective mode coupled with
quasiparticles at specific wavevectors only. This coupling describes the
incipient tendency to order and produces shadow spectral features at high
energies, while leaving essentially untouched the low energy quasiparticles.
This allows to interpret seemingly contradictory experiments on underdoped
cuprates, where many converging evidences indicate the presence of charge
(stripe or checkerboard) order, which remains instead elusive in the Fermi
surface obtained from angle-resolved photoemission experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Gutzwiller Charge Phase Diagram of Cuprates, including Electron-Phonon Coupling Effects
Besides significant electronic correlations, high-temperature superconductors
also show a strong coupling of electrons to a number of lattice modes. Combined
with the experimental detection of electronic inhomogeneities and ordering
phenomena in many high-T_c compounds, these features raise the question as to
what extent phonons are involved in the associated instabilities. Here we
address this problem based on the Hubbard model including a coupling to phonons
in order to capture several salient features of the phase diagram of hole-doped
cuprates. Charge degrees of freedom, which are suppressed by the large Hubbard
U near half-filling, are found to become active at a fairly low doping level.
We find that possible charge order is mainly driven by Fermi surface nesting,
with competition between a near-(pi,pi) order at low doping and antinodal
nesting at higher doping, very similar to the momentum structure of magnetic
fluctuations. The resulting nesting vectors are generally consistent with
photoemission and tunneling observations, evidence for charge density wave
(CDW) order in YBa_2Cu_3O_{7-delta} including Kohn anomalies, and suggestions
of competition between one- and two-q-vector nesting.Comment: This is a revised version of arXiv:1207.5715. 25 pages, 5 figures,
plus Supplement [7 pages, 7 figures], available as a pdf [click on other,
then Download Source, & extract pdf file from zip] Manuscript is under
consideration at the NJ
Advanced Strain-Isolation-Pad Material with Bonded Fibrous Construction
The feasibility of utilizing air lay and liquid lay felt deposition techniques to fabricate strain isolation pad (SIP) materials for the Space Shuttle Orbiter was demonstrated. These materials were developed as candidate replacements for the present needled felt SIP used between the ceramic tiles and the aluminum skin on the undersurface of the Orbiter. The SIP materials that were developed consisted of high temperature aramid fibers deposited by controlled fluid (air or liquid) carriers to form low density unbonded felts. The deposited felts were then bonded at the fiber intersections with a small amount of high temperature polyimide resin. This type of bonded felt construction can potentially eliminate two of the problems associated with the present SIP, viz., transmittal of localized stresses into the tiles and load history dependent mechanical response. However, further work is needed to achieve adequate through thickness tensile strength in the bonded felts
Charge inhomogeneity coexisting with large Fermi surfaces
We discuss how stripes in cuprates can be compatible with a Fermi-liquid-like
Fermi surface and, at the same time, they give rise to a one-dimensional-like
pseudo Fermi surface in the momentum distribution function.Comment: Proceedings of the M2S conference, July 2006, Dresden; 2 pages, 1
figure to appear on Phisica
Phonon renormalization from local and transitive electron-lattice couplings in strongly correlated systems
Within the time-dependent Gutzwiller approximation (TDGA) applied to
Holstein- and SSH-Hubbard models we study the influence of electron
correlations on the phonon self-energy. For the local Holstein coupling we find
that the phonon frequency renormalization gets weakened upon increasing the
onsite interaction for all momenta. In contrast, correlations can enhance
the phonon frequency shift for small wave-vectors in the SSH-Hubbard model.
Moreover the TDGA applied to the latter model provides a mechanism which leads
to phonon frequency corrections at intermediate momenta due to the coupling
with double occupancy fluctuations. Both models display a shift of the
nesting-induced to a instability when the onsite interaction becomes
sufficiently strong and thus establishing phase separation as a generic
phenomenon of strongly correlated electron-phonon coupled systems.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure
Stripe ordering and two-gap model for underdoped cuprates
The evidence of edge-gaps around the M-points in the metallic state of
underdoped cuprates has triggered a very active debate on their origin. We
first consider the possibility that this spectroscopic feature results from a
quasi-static charge ordering taking place in the underdoped regime. It comes
out that to explain the coexistence of gaps and arcs on the Fermi surface the
charge modulation should be in an eggbox form. In the lack of evidences for
that, we then investigate the local pairing induced by charge-stripe
fluctuations. A proper description of the strong anisotropy of both the
interactions and the Fermi velocities requires a two-gap model for pairing. We
find that a gap due to incoherent pairing forms near the M-points, while
coherence is established by the stiffness of the pairing near the nodal points.
The model allows for a continuos evolution from a pure BCS pairing (over- and
optimally doped regime) to a mixed boson-fermion model (heavily underdoped
regime).Comment: 4 pages, Proceedings of M2S-HTS
Time-dependent Gutzwiller approximation for the Hubbard model
We develop a time-dependent Gutzwiller approximation (GA) for the Hubbard
model analogous to the time-dependent Hartree-Fock (HF) method. The formalism
incorporates ground state correlations of the random phase approximation (RPA)
type beyond the GA. Static quantities like ground state energy and double
occupancy are in excellent agreement with exact results in one dimension up to
moderate coupling and in two dimensions for all couplings. We find a
substantial improvement over traditional GA and HF+RPA treatments. Dynamical
correlation functions can be easily computed and are also substantially better
than HF+RPA ones and obey well behaved sum rules.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Temperature dependence of the collective mode and its influence on the band splitting in bilayer cuprates
The recently observed bilayer splitting in high-T cuprates is analyzed
within a model where the charge carriers are coupled to a phenomenological
bosonic spectrum which interpolates between the marginal Fermi liquid structure
and collective mode type behavior as a function of temperature. We argue that
the origin of the collective mode is probably associated with dynamic
incommensurate charge density waves. Moreover it is shown that the resulting
temperature dependence of the self-energy is in good agreement with
as extracted from angle-resolved photoemission data.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for PR
Vortex, skyrmion and elliptical domain wall textures in the two-dimensional Hubbard model
The spin and charge texture around doped holes in the two-dimensional Hubbard
model is calculated within an unrestricted spin rotational invariant
slave-boson approach. In the first part we examine in detail the spin structure
around two holes doped in the half-filled system where we have studied cluster
sizes up to 10 x 10. It turns out that the most stable configuration
corresponds to a vortex-antivortex pair which has lower energy than the
Neel-type bipolaron even when one takes the far field contribution into
account. We also obtain skyrmions as local minima of the energy functional but
with higher total energy than the vortex solutions. Additionally we have
investigated the stability of elliptical domain walls for commensurate hole
concentrations. We find that (i) these phases correspond to local minima of the
energy functional only in case of partially filled walls, (ii) elliptical
domain walls are only stable in the low doping regime.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for Phys. Rev.
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