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Transport and Optical Conductivity in the Hubbard Model: A High-Temperature Expansion Perspective
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- We derive analytical expressions for the spectral moments of the dynamical response functions of the Hubbard model using the high-temperature series expansion. We consider generic dimension $d$ as well as the infinite-$d$ limit, arbitrary electron density $n$, and both finite and infinite repulsion $U$. We use moment-reconstruction methods to obtain the one-electron spectral function, the self-energy, and the optical conductivity. They are all smooth functions at high-temperature and, at large-$U$, they are featureless with characteristic widths of order the lattice hopping parameter $t$. In the infinite-$d$ limit we compare the series expansion results with accurate numerical renormalization group and interaction expansion quantum Monte-Carlo results. We find excellent agreement down to surprisingly low temperatures, throughout most of the bad-metal regime which applies for $T \gtrsim (1-n)D$, the Brinkman-Rice scale. The resistivity increases linearly in $T$ at high-temperature without saturation. This results from the $1/T$ behaviour of the compressibility or kinetic energy, which play the role of the effective carrier number. In contrast, the scattering time (or diffusion constant) saturate at high-$T$. We find that $\sigma(n,T) \approx (1-n)\sigma(n=0,T)$ to a very good approximation for all $n$, with $\sigma(n=0,T)\propto t/T$ at high temperatures. The saturation at small $n$ occurs due to a compensation between the density-dependence of the effective number of carriers and that of the scattering time. The $T$-dependence of the resistivity displays a knee-like feature which signals a cross-over to the intermediate-temperature regime where the diffusion constant (or scattering time) start increasing with decreasing $T$. At high-temperatures, the thermopower obeys the Heikes formula, while the Wiedemann-Franz law is violated with the Lorenz number vanishing as $1/T^2$.<br />Comment: 38 pages, 16 figures
- Subjects :
- Physics
Optical lattice
Strongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el)
Hubbard model
Condensed matter physics
Scattering
Quantum Monte Carlo
FOS: Physical sciences
02 engineering and technology
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
01 natural sciences
Fick's laws of diffusion
Optical conductivity
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons
Quantum mechanics
Lattice (order)
0103 physical sciences
010306 general physics
0210 nano-technology
Series expansion
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c21bcd51ab11f0cb6a0cddd3e7b054f7