scholarly journals Displaced Drude peak and bad metal from the interaction with slow fluctuations.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Fratini ◽  
Sergio Ciuchi

Scattering by slowly fluctuating degrees of freedom can cause a transient localization of the current-carrying electrons in metals, driving the system away from normal metallic behavior. We illustrate and characterize this general phenomenon by studying how signatures of localization emerge in the optical conductivity of electrons interacting with slow bosonic fluctuations. The buildup of quantum localization corrections manifests itself in the emergence of a displaced Drude peak (DDP), whose existence strongly alters the low frequency optical response and suppresses the d.c. conductivity. We find that for sufficiently strong interactions, many-body renormalization of the fluctuating field induced at metallic densities enhances electron localization and the ensuing DDP phenomenon in comparison with the well-studied low concentration limit. Our results are compatible with the frequent observation of DDPs in electronic systems where slowly fluctuating degrees of freedom couple significantly to the charge carriers.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Micaela Matta ◽  
Alessandro Pezzella ◽  
Alessandro Troisi

<div><div><div><p>Eumelanins are a family of natural and synthetic pigments obtained by oxidative polymerization of their natural precursors: 5,6 dihydroxyindole and its 2-carboxy derivative (DHICA). The simultaneous presence of ionic and electronic charge carriers makes these pigments promising materials for applications in bioelectronics. In this computational study we build a structural model of DHICA melanin considering the interplay between its many degrees of freedom, then we examine the electronic structure of representative oligomers. We find that a non-vanishing dipole along the polymer chain sets this system apart from conventional polymer semiconductors, determining its electronic structure, reactivity toward oxidation and localization of the charge carriers. Our work sheds light on previously unnoticed features of DHICA melanin that not only fit well with its radical scavenging and photoprotective properties, but open new perspectives towards understanding and tuning charge transport in this class of materials.<br></p></div></div></div>


Nanophotonics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 1243-1269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chenglong You ◽  
Apurv Chaitanya Nellikka ◽  
Israel De Leon ◽  
Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza

AbstractA single photon can be coupled to collective charge oscillations at the interfaces between metals and dielectrics forming a single surface plasmon. The electromagnetic near-fields induced by single surface plasmons offer new degrees of freedom to perform an exquisite control of complex quantum dynamics. Remarkably, the control of quantum systems represents one of the most significant challenges in the field of quantum photonics. Recently, there has been an enormous interest in using plasmonic systems to control multiphoton dynamics in complex photonic circuits. In this review, we discuss recent advances that unveil novel routes to control multiparticle quantum systems composed of multiple photons and plasmons. We describe important properties that characterize optical multiparticle systems such as their statistical quantum fluctuations and correlations. In this regard, we discuss the role that photon-plasmon interactions play in the manipulation of these fundamental properties for multiparticle systems. We also review recent works that show novel platforms to manipulate many-body light-matter interactions. In this spirit, the foundations that will allow nonexperts to understand new perspectives in multiparticle quantum plasmonics are described. First, we discuss the quantum statistical fluctuations of the electromagnetic field as well as the fundamentals of plasmonics and its quantum properties. This discussion is followed by a brief treatment of the dynamics that characterize complex multiparticle interactions. We apply these ideas to describe quantum interactions in photonic-plasmonic multiparticle quantum systems. We summarize the state-of-the-art in quantum devices that rely on plasmonic interactions. The review is concluded with our perspective on the future applications and challenges in this burgeoning field.


Particles ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 194-204
Author(s):  
Omar Benhar

Experimental studies of hypernuclear dynamics, besides being essential for the understanding of strong interactions in the strange sector, have important astrophysical implications. The observation of neutron stars with masses exceeding two solar masses poses a serious challenge to the models of hyperon dynamics in dense nuclear matter, many of which predict a maximum mass incompatible with the data. In this paper, it is argued that valuable new insight can be gained from the forthcoming extension of the experimental studies of kaon electro production from nuclei to include the 208Pb(e,e′K+)Λ208Tl process. A comprehensive framework for the description of kaon electro production, based on factorization of the nuclear cross section and the formalism of the nuclear many-body theory, is outlined. This approach highlights the connection between the kaon production and proton knockout reactions, which will allow us to exploit the available 208Pb(e,e′p)207Tl data to achieve a largely model-independent analysis of the measured cross section.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (03) ◽  
pp. 2050003
Author(s):  
M. R. Hassan ◽  
M. T. Islam ◽  
M. N. I. Khan

In this research, influence of adding Li2CO3 (at 0%, 2%, 4%, 6%) on electrical and magnetic properties of [Formula: see text][Formula: see text]Fe2O4 (with 60% Ni and 40% Mg) ferrite has been studied. The samples are prepared by solid state reaction method and sintered at 1300∘C for 6[Formula: see text]h. X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns show the samples belong to single-phase cubic structure without any impurity phase. The magnetic properties (saturation magnetization and coercivity) of the samples have been investigated by VSM and found that the higher concentration of Li2CO3 reduces the hysteresis loss. DC resistivity increases with Li2CO3 contents whereas it decreases initially and then becomes constant at lower value with temperature which indicates that the studied samples are semiconductor. The dielectric dispersion occurs at a low-frequency regime and the loss peaks are formed in a higher frequency regime, which are due to the presence of resonance between applied frequency and hopping frequency of charge carriers. Notably, the loss peaks are shifted to the lower frequency with Li2CO3 additions.


2005 ◽  
Vol 886 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiri Hejtmánek ◽  
Miroslav Veverka ◽  
Karel Knižek ◽  
Hiroyuki Fujishiro ◽  
Sylvie Hebert ◽  
...  

AbstractThe recent material research of mixed cobalt oxides is strongly motivated by the potential of some of them to be used as chemically stable high temperature thermoelectric material. This fact together with both the theoretical and experimental ambitions to fulfill the severe criteria needed for efficient thermoelectric conversion intensified both their theoretical and experimental research. Nonetheless, despite the investigations of the prototype materials represented by 3D perovskites Ln1−xAxCoO3 (Ln = La, Y, rare-earth, A = alkaline-earth) and 2D cobaltites of NaxCoO2 type, the concise physical background of their transport and magnetic properties remain still a matter of debate. This is likely due to a fact that cobalt ions can be stabilized either in low-spin state (diamagnetic for “pure” Co3+), with filled t2g levels and empty eg states, or magnetic ones, with filled eg states. As the energy difference between respective states is due to comparable strength of crystal field and Hund's energies rather small, the thermodynamically most stable ground-state, with eventually different character of charge carriers, can be critically influenced by an interplay of additional degrees of freedom - orbital and charge. The challenge for unequivocal theoretical model represents the thermoelectric power of mixed cobaltites where, up to now, somewhat ambiguous models based either on “classical” approach, associated with diffusion of itinerant charge carriers, or more exotic - based on configurational entropy of quasi-itinerant carriers - are often used for similar materials. Simultaneously, the open question remains the assessment of the dominant mechanism of phonon scattering in 2D cobaltites.


2002 ◽  
Vol 11 (02) ◽  
pp. 83-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
GUILHERME F. MARRANGHELLO ◽  
CESAR A. Z. VASCONCELLOS ◽  
MANFRED DILLIG ◽  
J. A. DE FREITAS PACHECO

Thermodynamical properties of nuclear matter are studied in the framework of an effective many-body field theory at finite temperature, considering the Sommerfeld approximation. We perform the calculations by using the nonlinear Boguta and Bodmer model, extended by the inclusion of the fundamental baryon octet and leptonic degrees of freedom. Trapped neutrinos are also included in order to describe protoneutron star properties through the integration of the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff equations, from which we obtain, beyond the standard relations for the masses and radii of protoneutron stars as functions of the central density, new results of these quantities as functions of temperature. Our predictions include: the determination of an absolute value for the limiting mass of protoneutron stars; new structural aspects on the nuclear matter phase transition via the behavior of the specific heat and, through the inclusion of quark degrees of freedom, the properties of a hadron-quark phase transition and hybrid protoneutron stars


1978 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 2416-2429 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. Anastasio ◽  
Amand Faessler ◽  
H. Müther ◽  
K. Holinde ◽  
R. Machleidt

Science ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 363 (6425) ◽  
pp. 379-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter T. Brown ◽  
Debayan Mitra ◽  
Elmer Guardado-Sanchez ◽  
Reza Nourafkan ◽  
Alexis Reymbaut ◽  
...  

Strong interactions in many-body quantum systems complicate the interpretation of charge transport in such materials. To shed light on this problem, we study transport in a clean quantum system: ultracold lithium-6 in a two-dimensional optical lattice, a testing ground for strong interaction physics in the Fermi-Hubbard model. We determine the diffusion constant by measuring the relaxation of an imposed density modulation and modeling its decay hydrodynamically. The diffusion constant is converted to a resistivity by using the Nernst-Einstein relation. That resistivity exhibits a linear temperature dependence and shows no evidence of saturation, two characteristic signatures of a bad metal. The techniques we developed in this study may be applied to measurements of other transport quantities, including the optical conductivity and thermopower.


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