We propose a solvable class of 1D quasiperiodic tight-binding models encompassing extended, localized, and critical phases, separated by nontrivial mobility edges. Limiting cases include the Aubry-André model and the models of Sriram Ganeshan, J. H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of short-range disorder in nodal line semimetals is studied by numerically exact means. For arbitrary small disorder, a novel semimetallic phase is unveiled for which the momentum-space amplitude of the ground-state wave function is concentrated around the nodal line and follows a multifractal distribution. At a critical disorder strength, a semimetal to compressible metal transition occurs, coinciding with a multi- to single-fractality transition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the phase diagram of the Haldane-Falicov-Kimball model-a model combining topology, interactions, and spontaneous disorder at finite temperatures. Using an unbiased numerical method, we map out the phase diagram on the interaction-temperature plane. Along with known phases, we unveil an insulating charge ordered state with gapless excitations and a temperature-driven gapless topological insulating phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe consider an interacting quantum field theory on a curved two-dimensional manifold that we construct by geometrically deforming a flat hexagonal lattice by the insertion of a defect. Depending on how the deformation is done, the resulting geometry acquires a locally nonvanishing curvature that can be either positive or negative. Fields propagating on this background are forced to satisfy boundary conditions modulated by the geometry and that can be assimilated by a nondynamical gauge field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of a magnetic field on a two-dimensional Chern band insulator is discussed. It is shown that, unlike the trivial insulator, an anomalous Hall insulator with Chern number C becomes a metal when a magnetic field is applied at constant particle density, for any C > 0. For a time-reversal invariant topological insulator with a spin Chern resolved number, C↑ = −C↓ = C, the magnetic field induces a spin polarized spin Hall insulator.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To analyze retrospectively a series of cases culminating in amputation for advanced squamous cell carcinoma.
Methods: We studied eight patients with histologically confirmed squamous cell carcinoma of the skin that had limbs amputated by tumor invasion at our institution between 2005 and 2008. We evaluated the histological factors and the institutional and psychosocial factors that contributed to this unfavorable outcome.
We propose a simple method for obtaining time reversal symmetry (T) broken phases in simple lattice models based on enlarging the unit cell. As an example we study the honeycomb lattice with nearest neighbor hopping and a local nearest neighbor Coulomb interaction V. We show that when the unit cell is enlarged to host six atoms that permits Kekulé distortions, self-consistent currents spontaneously form creating nontrivial magnetic configurations with total zero flux at high electron densities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe study, within the tight-binding approximation, the electronic properties of a graphene bilayer in the presence of an external electric field applied perpendicular to the system-a biased bilayer. The effect of the perpendicular electric field is included through a parallel plate capacitor model, with screening correction at the Hartree level. The full tight-binding description is compared with its four-band and two-band continuum approximations, and the four-band model is shown to always be a suitable approximation for the conditions realized in experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the manganites RE(1 - x)AE(x)MnO(3) (RE and AE being rare-earth and alkaline-earth elements, respectively) the random distribution of RE(3 + ) and AE(2 + ) induces random, but correlated, shifts of site energies of charge carriers in the Mn sites. We consider a realistic model of this diagonal disorder, in addition to the double-exchange hopping disorder, and investigate the metal-insulator transition as a function of temperature, across the paramagnetic-ferromagnetic line, and as a function of doping x. Contrary to previous results, we find that values of parameters, estimated from the electronic structure of the manganites, are not incompatible with the possibility of a disorder-induced metal to insulator transition accompanying the ferromagnetic to paramagnetic transition at intermediate doping (x ∼ 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe temperature dependence of the mobility in suspended graphene samples is investigated. In clean samples, flexural phonons become the leading scattering mechanism at temperature T≳10 K, and the resistivity increases quadratically with T. Flexural phonons limit the intrinsic mobility down to a few m(2)/V s at room T.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate the existence of a new type of zero energy state associated with vacancies in multilayer graphene that has a finite amplitude over the layer with a vacancy and adjacent layers, and the peculiarity of being quasilocalized in the former and totally delocalized in the adjacent ones. In a bilayer, when a gap is induced in the system by applying a perpendicular electric field, these states become truly localized with a normalizable wave function. A transition from a localized to an extended state can be tuned by the external gate for experimentally accessible values of parameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
December 2009
Physical properties reflecting the valley asymmetry of Landau levels in a biased bilayer graphene under a magnetic field are discussed. Within the 4-band continuum model with a Hartree-corrected self-consistent gap and finite damping factor we predict the appearance of anomalous steps in quantized Hall conductivity due to the degeneracy lifting of Landau levels. Moreover, the valley symmetry breaking effect appears as a nonsemiclassical de Haas-van Alphen effect where the reduction of the oscillation period to half cannot be accounted for through quasiclassical quantization of the orbits in reciprocal space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe compute the phase diagram of a biased graphene bilayer. The existence of a ferromagnetic phase is discussed with respect to both carrier density and temperature. We find that the ferromagnetic transition is first-order, lowering the value of U relatively to the usual Stoner criterion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate that the electronic gap of a graphene bilayer can be controlled externally by applying a gate bias. From the magnetotransport data (Shubnikov-de Haas measurements of the cyclotron mass), and using a tight-binding model, we extract the value of the gap as a function of the electronic density. We show that the gap can be changed from zero to midinfrared energies by using fields of less, approximately < 1 V/nm, below the electric breakdown of SiO2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the existence of zero-energy surface states localized at zigzag edges of bilayer graphene. Working within the tight-binding approximation we derive the analytic solution for the wave functions of these peculiar surface states. It is shown that zero-energy edge states in bilayer graphene can be divided into two families: (i) states living only on a single plane, equivalent to surface states in monolayer graphene and (ii) states with a finite amplitude over the two layers, with an enhanced penetration into the bulk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Condens Matter
October 2007
We present an exact algebraic solution of a single graphene plane in transverse electric and perpendicular magnetic fields. The method presented gives both the eigenvalues and the eigenfunctions of the graphene plane. It is shown that the eigenstates of the problem can be cast in terms of coherent states, which appears in a natural way from the formalism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA microscopic theory for rare-earth ferromagnetic hexaborides, such as Eu1-xCaxB6, is proposed on the basis of the double-exchange Hamiltonian. In these systems, the reduced carrier concentrations place the Fermi level near the mobility edge, introduced in the spectral density by the disordered spin background. We show that the transport properties such as the Hall effect, magnetoresistance, frequency dependent conductivity, and dc resistivity can be quantitatively described within the model.
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