Friday, May 25, 2012

1205.5277 (Zheng Zhu et al.)

Self-localization of a single hole in Mott antiferromagnets    [PDF]

Zheng Zhu, Hong-Chen Jiang, Yang Qi, Chu-Shun Tian, Zheng-Yu Weng
A long-standing issue in the physics of strongly correlated electronic systems is whether the motion of a single hole in quantum antiferromagnets can be understood in terms of the quasiparticle picture. Very recently, investigations of this issue have been within the experimental reach. Here we perform a large-scale density matrix renormalization group study, and provide the first unambiguous numerical evidence showing that in ladder systems, a single hole doped in the Mott antiferromagnet does not behave as a quasiparticle. Specifically, the injected hole is found to be always localized as long as the leg number is larger than one, with a vanishing quasiparticle weight and a localization length monotonically decreasing with the leg number. In addition, the single hole self-localization is insensitive to the parity (even-odd) of the leg number. Our findings may advance conceptual developments in different fields of condensed matter physics. First of all, the intriguing self-localization phenomenon is of pure strong correlation origin free of extrinsic disorders. Therefore, it is in sharp contrast to the well-known Anderson localization and recently found many-body localization, where extrinsic disordered potentials play crucial roles. Second, they confirm the analytical predictions of the so-called phase string theory, suggesting that the phase string effect lies in the core of the physics of doped Mott antiferromagnets.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1205.5277

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