FIELD THEORETICAL RG FOR A 2D FERMI SURFACE

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
An insulating sphere of radius b has a spherical cavity of radius a located within its volume and centered a distance R from the center of the sphere.
Advertisements

Quasiparticle Scattering in 2-D Helical Liquid arXiv: X. Zhou, C. Fang, W.-F. Tsai, J. P. Hu.
Theory of the pairbreaking superconductor-metal transition in nanowires Talk online: sachdev.physics.harvard.edu Talk online: sachdev.physics.harvard.edu.
From weak to strong correlation: A new renormalization group approach to strongly correlated Fermi liquids Alex Hewson, Khan Edwards, Daniel Crow, Imperial.
High T c Superconductors & QED 3 theory of the cuprates Tami Pereg-Barnea
D-wave superconductivity induced by short-range antiferromagnetic correlations in the Kondo lattice systems Guang-Ming Zhang Dept. of Physics, Tsinghua.
Solving non-perturbative renormalization group equation without field operator expansion and its application to the dynamical chiral symmetry breaking.
Chanyong Park 35 th Johns Hopkins Workshop ( Budapest, June 2011 ) Based on Phys. Rev. D 83, (2011) arXiv : arXiv :
Derivation of Electro-Weak Unification and Final Form of Standard Model with QCD and Gluons  1 W 1 +  2 W 2 +  3 W 3.
Chiral freedom and the scale of weak interactions.
January 16, 2001Physics 8411 Introduction to Feynman Diagrams and Dynamics of Interactions All known interactions can be described in terms of forces forces:
Phase Diagram of One-Dimensional Bosons in Disordered Potential Anatoli Polkovnikov, Boston University Collaboration: Ehud Altman-Weizmann Yariv Kafri.
Spiky strings, light-like Wilson loops and a pp-wave anomaly M. Kruczenski Purdue University Based on: arXiv: arXiv: A. Tseytlin, M.K.
Gerard ’t Hooft Spinoza Institute Yukawa – Tomonaga Workshop, Kyoto, December 11, 2006 Utrecht University.
Chiral freedom and the scale of weak interactions.
Quasiparticle anomalies near ferromagnetic instability A. A. Katanin A. P. Kampf V. Yu. Irkhin Stuttgart-Augsburg-Ekaterinburg 2004.
Renormalised Perturbation Theory ● Motivation ● Illustration with the Anderson impurity model ● Ways of calculating the renormalised parameters ● Range.
Universality in ultra-cold fermionic atom gases. with S. Diehl, H.Gies, J.Pawlowski S. Diehl, H.Gies, J.Pawlowski.
A new scenario for the metal- Mott insulator transition in 2D Why 2D is so special ? S. Sorella Coll. F. Becca, M. Capello, S. Yunoki Sherbrook 8 July.
Antonio RagoUniversità di Milano Techniques for automated lattice Feynman diagram calculations 1 Antonio RagoUniversità di Milano Techniques for automated.
A1- What is the pairing mechanism leading to / responsible for high T c superconductivity ? A2- What is the pairing mechanism in the cuprates ? What would.
Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 13.1 Capacitance and Electric Fields  Introduction  Capacitors and Capacitance.
Many-body Green’s Functions
Fluctuation conductivity of thin films and nanowires near a parallel-
CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM notes.
1 A. A. Katanin a,b,c and A. P. Kampf c 2004 a Max-Planck Institut für Festkörperforschung, Stuttgart b Institute of Metal Physics, Ekaterinburg, Russia.
Microscopic nematicity in iron superconductors Belén Valenzuela Instituto de Ciencias Materiales de Madrid (ICMM-CSIC) In collaboration with: Laura Fanfarillo.
What do we know about the Standard Model? Sally Dawson Lecture 2 SLAC Summer Institute.
Constraints on renormalization group flows Based on published and unpublished work with A.Dymarsky,Z.Komargodski,S.Theisen.
B. Valenzuela Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid (ICMM-CSIC)
Electron coherence in the presence of magnetic impurities
MgB2 Since 1973 the limiting transition temperature in conventional alloys and metals was 23K, first set by Nb3Ge, and then equaled by an Y-Pd-B-C compound.
A nonequilibrium renormalization group approach to turbulent reheating A case study in nonlinear nonequilibrium quantum field theory J. Zanella, EC Part.
Sypersymmetries and Quantum Symmetries Dubna 2007 K.Stepanyantz Moscow State University Department of Theoretical Physics New identity for Green function.
General Relativity and the Cuprates Gary Horowitz UC Santa Barbara GH, J. Santos, D. Tong, , GH and J. Santos, Gary Horowitz.
Non-Fermi liquid vs (topological) Mott insulator in electronic systems with quadratic band touching in three dimensions Igor Herbut (Simon Fraser University,
Lecture 16: Beta Decay Spectrum 29/10/2003 (and related processes...) Goals: understand the shape of the energy spectrum total decay rate sheds.
Unconventional superconductivity Author: Jure Kokalj Mentor: prof. dr. Peter Prelovšek.
Phase transitions in Hubbard Model. Anti-ferromagnetic and superconducting order in the Hubbard model A functional renormalization group study T.Baier,
Self-generated instability of a ferromagnetic quantum-critical point
Nonlinear Optics in Plasmas. What is relativistic self-guiding? Ponderomotive self-channeling resulting from expulsion of electrons on axis Relativistic.
Disordered Electron Systems II Roberto Raimondi Perturbative thermodynamics Renormalized Fermi liquid RG equation at one-loop Beyond one-loop Workshop.
General Relativity Physics Honours 2008 A/Prof. Geraint F. Lewis Rm 560, A29 Lecture Notes 10.
Generalized Dynamical Mean - Field Theory for Strongly Correlated Systems E.Z.Kuchinskii 1, I.A. Nekrasov 1, M.V.Sadovskii 1,2 1 Institute for Electrophysics.
Insulating Spin Liquid in the 2D Lightly Doped Hubbard Model
Unitarity potentials and neutron matter at unitary limit T.T.S. Kuo (Stony Brook) H. Dong (Stony Brook), R. Machleidt (Idaho) Collaborators:
The Stimulated Breit-Wheeler Process as a source of Background e + e - Pairs at the ILC Dr Anthony Hartin JAI, Oxford University Physics, Denys Wilkinson.
The Helical Luttinger Liquid and the Edge of Quantum Spin Hall Systems
The Nature of the Pseudogap in Ultracold Fermi Gases Univ. of Washington May 2011.
1 Renormalization Group Treatment of Non-renormalizable Interactions Dmitri Kazakov JINR / ITEP Questions: Can one treat non-renormalizable interactions.
Collaborators: Bugra Borasoy – Bonn Univ. Thomas Schaefer – North Carolina State U. University of Kentucky CCS Seminar, March 2005 Neutron Matter on the.
The Importance of the TeV Scale Sally Dawson Lecture 3 FNAL LHC Workshop, 2006.
高密度クォーク物質における カイラル凝縮とカラー超伝導の競 合 M. Kitazawa,T. Koide,Y. Nemoto and T.K. Prog. of Theor. Phys., 108, 929(2002) 国広 悌二 ( 京大基研) 東大特別講義 2005 年 12 月 5-7 日 Ref.
NTNU 2011 Dimer-superfluid phase in the attractive Extended Bose-Hubbard model with three-body constraint Kwai-Kong Ng Department of Physics Tunghai University,
Lecture 4 – Quantum Electrodynamics (QED)
Kondo Effect Ljubljana, Author: Lara Ulčakar
From Lagrangian Density to Observable
Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris
Toward a Holographic Model of d-wave Superconductors
NGB and their parameters
Derivation of Electro-Weak Unification and Final Form of Standard Model with QCD and Gluons  1W1+  2W2 +  3W3.
Announcements Read 8E-8F, 7.10, 7.12 (me = 0), 7.13
Giant Superconducting Proximity Effect in Composite Systems Chun Chen and Yan Chen Dept. of Physics and Lab of Advanced Materials, Fudan University,
Bumsoo Kyung, Vasyl Hankevych, and André-Marie Tremblay
Mixed order phase transitions
Adaptive Perturbation Theory: QM and Field Theory
Adnan Bashir, UMSNH, Mexico
It means anything not quadratic in fields and derivatives.
QCD at very high density
Cooper Pairs In the 1950s it was becoming clear that the superelectrons were paired ie there must be a positive interaction that holds a pair of electrons.
Presentation transcript:

FIELD THEORETICAL RG FOR A 2D FERMI SURFACE Alvaro Ferraz Internacional Centre for Condensed Matter Physics University of Brasilia Brasilia-Brazil

General Scope 1-Introduction 2-Lagrangian Model & its 2D Fermi Surface 3-Coupling Function Renormalization at One-Loop Order 4-Self-Energy Corrections 5-RG at Higher Orders 6-Renormalized Coupling Flows 7- Density Wave & Pairing Susceptibilities 8-Conclusion

1-Introduction RG proved to be very useful in probing strongly interacting systems. This is even more so in 2D. We will describe a field theoretical RG calculation of a 2D electron gas in a presence of nearly flat Fermi surface (FS). Our results can be related to the cuprate high-Tc superconductors.

A FS identical to ours was observed recently in La2-xSrxCuO4 thin epitaxial film under strain (Abrecht et al, PRL 91,57002( 2003)). Cuprates are Mott insulators at ½-filling which turn into a spin liquid at very low dopings ( x~0.02! ).

At higher temperatures and concentrations there appears an exotic pseudogap phase and finally at even higher concentration a D-wave high-Tc superconductor.

2-Lagrangian Model and its 2D Fermi Surface To describe 2D electrons consider the renormalized lagrangian (A.F.,EPL 61,228(2003)). Here a= refers to the upper (lower) or right (left) flat patch of our FS.

Thanks to the flat FS the single-particle dispersion is simply with and In general The bare couplings represent backward and forward scatterings

Since the non-interacting propagators are both part-part and part-hole diagrams are IR log divergent with being a fixed upper energy cut-off

3 – Coupling Function Renormalization at One-Loop Order We will now proceed with the calculations of the one-particle irreducible functions within the framework of the FTRG.

Up to one-loop order the calculation is simple. We set Using appropriate Feynman rules, we find

This gives Similarly, using a similar prescription we define

Using, again, appropriate Feynman rules it turns out that Or, equivalently

The counterterms are in this way continuous functions of the external momenta and the RG scale parameter Since the bare parameters don’t depend on the RG scale we are naturally led to the RG equations

It follows immediately that the one-loop renormalized coupling flows are then

4 – Self-Energy Correction To calculate self-energy corrections we need to estimate at least two-loop contributions

The first four diagrams produce constant shifts in and renormalize . Since in our calculation both and SF are kept fixed we may ignore those contributions altogether. In contrast, the remaining diagrams give us

Defining the renormalized one-particle irreducible function such that where Z is the quasiparticle weight which relates the bare and renormalized fields: Defining the renormalized one-particle irreducible function such that

it follows immediately that where the anomalous dimension is given by

It is now straightforward to estabilish the RG equation for the quasiparticle weight Z: We point out that our renormalized Lagrangian can now be put in a more convenient form:

where

5 – RG at Higher Orders To calculate corrections for and we need to take into account the higher order diagrams which are also These non-parquet diagrams in two-loop order for both backscattering and forward scattering channels are

Taking again into account the RG condition the RG flow equations for the renormalized coupling functions in two-loops become

6 – Renormalized Coupling Flows It is impossible to solve our RG equations analytically. We need therefore numerical methods to estabilish the flow of the renormalized coupling functions (H. Freire, E. Corrêa, A. F., PRB 71,165113 (2005)). To do this we discretize the FS replacing by a finite set of points. For convenience we take where is our fixed upper energy cutoff and l our RG step. Notice that max l is limited by the fact that cannot be shorter than the distance between neighboring points in our discretization procedure.

Initially we depict the one-loop results for different choices of external momenta. They reproduce previous one-loop results.

We show next the quasiparticle weight Z

If we take initially , Z is mildly reduced from unity.

We show next the RG flows for and in two-loop order In contrast with one-loop results the renormalized couplings approach plateau values in a fixed point like regime.

Many renormalized couplings now approach zero continuously as a result of the suppression of Z. This is a strong indicative that there is no symmetry breaking and no onset of long range order in the physical system. To test the leading instabilities in this new regime we need to calculate the charge and spin susceptibilities.

7 – Density Wave and Pairing Susceptibilities Since the susceptibilities are essentially mean values of composite operators we add to our original Lagrangian the contributions (E. Corrêa, H. Freire and A. Ferraz (2005)). and

The addition of composite operators generate new divergencies which must be regularized in their own right. As a result we must have and

The density wave renormalized vertex should be symmetrized with respect to the spin to give and Similarly, associated with the ’s we define the singlet and triplet pairing vertices and

Diagrammatically the ’s and ’s are directly related with the one-particle irreducible vertex function In one-loop order we get

For the DW channel we use the prescription We use a similar condition for the SC channels

Taking into account the RG condition for the bare vertices we arrive at the RG equations with or .

Due to the particular shape of our flat FS the renormalized couplings must be symmetrical with respect to the exchange of + and – particles and change of sign of the external ’s :

In view of that it turns out that the RG equations for the renormalized vertices are symmetrical with respect to the sign reversal of in for a fixed (A. Zheleznyak et al PRB 55, 3200 (1997)). We therefore define two irreducible representations of this symmetry which never mix with a = S,T. is associated with s-wave symmetry whereas shows d-wave character.

With b = S,C. Instead, for density wave symmetries Here, the antisymmetrical ones are associated with the so-called flux phases. Once the are found the related susceptibilities , associated with the related , follow immediately.

or, equivalently and

Following the same numerical procedure as before we can estimate if there is any symmetry breaking and of what kind. Here we take a Hubbard like initial condition together with

We show the corresponding one-loop and two-loops contributions for the various symm and antisymm renormalized

8 - Conclusions Although the one-loop c’s seem to announce symmetry breaking and, in particular, the predominance of the SDW+ instability the two-loop c’s seem to approach plateau values characteristic of short-range ordered states only. Among them the SSC- (d-wave like) & SDW- (spin flux phase) appear closely together and slightly above the remaining susceptibilities. The exception to that is the SDW+ which appears to grow indefinitely. However as opposed to the one-loop result, this growth seems spurious since it is slowered down considerably when we consider high-order effects.

To check this conclusion we calculated the associated spin and charge uniform susceptibilities (H. Freire, E. Corrêa and A. Ferraz, cond-mat/0506682) and we find indeed no sign of long-range order since both and