2,066 research outputs found

    Comment on "Anomalous Thermal Conductivity of Frustrated Heisenberg Spin Chains and Ladders"

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    In a recent letter [Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 156603 (2002); cond-mat/0201300], Alvarez and Gros have numerically analyzed the Drude weight for thermal transport in spin ladders and frustrated chains of up to 14 sites and have proposed that it remains finite in the thermodynamic limit. In this comment, we argue that this conclusion cannot be sustained if the finite-size analysis is taken to larger system sizes.Comment: One page REVTeX4, 1 figure. Published version (minor changes

    Thermal conductivity of the one-dimensional Fermi-Hubbard model

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    We study the thermal conductivity of the one-dimensional Fermi-Hubbard model at finite temperature using a density matrix renormalization group approach. The integrability of this model gives rise to ballistic thermal transport. We calculate the temperature dependence of the thermal Drude weight at half filling for various interactions and moreover, we compute its filling dependence at infinite temperature. The finite-frequency contributions originating from the fact that the energy current is not a conserved quantity are investigated as well. We report evidence that breaking the integrability through a nearest-neighbor interaction leads to vanishing Drude weights and diffusive energy transport. Moreover, we demonstrate that energy spreads ballistically in local quenches with initially inhomogeneous energy density profiles in the integrable case. We discuss the relevance of our results for thermalization in ultra-cold quantum gas experiments and for transport measurements with quasi-one dimensional materials

    Quantum phases and topological properties of interacting fermions in one-dimensional superlattices

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    The realization of artificial gauge fields in ultracold atomic gases has opened up a path towards experimental studies of topological insulators and, as an ultimate goal, topological quantum matter in many-body systems. As an alternative to the direct implementation of two-dimensional lattice Hamiltonians that host the quantum Hall effect and its variants, topological charge-pumping experiments provide an additional avenue towards studying many-body systems. Here, we consider an interacting two-component gas of fermions realizing a family of one-dimensional superlattice Hamiltonians with onsite interactions and a unit cell of three sites, whose groundstates would be visited in an appropriately defined charge pump. First, we investigate the grandcanonical quantum phase diagram of individual Hamiltonians, focusing on insulating phases. For a certain commensurate filling, there is a sequence of phase transitions from a band insulator to other insulating phases (related to the physics of ionic Hubbard models) for some members of the manifold of Hamiltonians. Second, we compute the Chern numbers for the whole manifold in a many-body formulation and show that, related to the aforementioned quantum phase transitions, a topological transition results in a change of the value and sign of the Chern number. We provide both an intuitive and conceptual explanation and argue that these properties could be observed in quantum-gas experiments

    Decoherence of an entangled state of a strongly-correlated double quantum dot structure through tunneling processes

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    We consider two quantum dots described by the Anderson-impurity model with one electron per dot. The goal of our work is to study the decay of a maximally entangled state between the two electrons localized in the dots. We prepare the system in a perfect singlet and then tunnel-couple one of the dots to leads, which induces the non-equilibrium dynamics. We identify two cases: if the leads are subject to a sufficiently large voltage and thus a finite current, then direct tunneling processes cause decoherence and the entanglement as well as spin correlations decay exponentially fast. At zero voltage or small voltages and beyond the mixed-valence regime, virtual tunneling processes dominate and lead to a slower loss of coherence. We analyze this problem by studying the real-time dynamics of the spin correlations and the concurrence using two techniques, namely the time-dependent density matrix renormalization group method and a master-equation method. The results from these two approaches are in excellent agreement in the direct-tunneling regime for the case in which the dot is weakly tunnel-coupled to the leads. We present a quantitative analysis of the decay rates of the spin correlations and the concurrence as a function of tunneling rate, interaction strength, and voltage.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, revised version as publishe

    Magnetic heat conductivity in CaCu2O3\rm\bf CaCu_2O_3: linear temperature dependence

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    We present experimental results for the thermal conductivity κ\kappa of the pseudo 2-leg ladder material CaCu2O3\rm CaCu_2O_3. The strong buckling of the ladder rungs renders this material a good approximation to a S=1/2S=1/2 Heisenberg-chain. Despite a strong suppression of the thermal conductivity of this material in all crystal directions due to inherent disorder, we find a dominant magnetic contribution κmag\kappa_\mathrm{mag} along the chain direction. κmag\kappa_\mathrm{mag} is \textit{linear} in temperature, resembling the low-temperature limit of the thermal Drude weight DthD_\mathrm{th} of the S=1/2S=1/2 Heisenberg chain. The comparison of κmag\kappa_\mathrm{mag} and DthD_\mathrm{th} yields a magnetic mean free path of lmag22±5l_\mathrm{mag}\approx 22 \pm 5 \AA, in good agreement with magnetic measurements.Comment: appears in PR
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