论文标题
相互作用的隔离窄带的磁反应和相位刚度
Diamagnetic response and phase stiffness for interacting isolated narrow bands
论文作者
论文摘要
一个可以作为实现``高''温度超导体的理想游乐场的平台,是电子动能完全消退的材料,并且交互作用为$ t_c $的问题提供了唯一的能量量表。但是,当与相互作用的规模相比,当一组孤立带的非相互作用带宽很小时,问题本质上是非扰动性的,并且需要超越传统的超导性均值理论。在两个空间维度中,$ t_c $由超导相位刚度控制。在这里,我们提出了一个通用的理论框架,用于计算通用模型汉密尔顿人的电磁响应,该框架控制最大可能的超导相位刚度,从而控制$ t_c $,而无需求助于任何均值场近似。重要的是,我们的显式计算表明,对相位刚度的贡献是由(i)``整合'''''''''''''''''''''''将远程带到显微镜电流运算符中,以及(ii)投影到孤立窄带上的密度密度相互作用。我们的框架可用于在相位刚度上获得上限,并与超导过渡温度相关,对于一系列具有物理启发的模型,涉及具有任意密度相互作用的拓扑狭窄带和非质学窄带。我们通过将其应用于相互作用的平面频段的特定模型,并将其与来自独立的数值精确计算的已知$ T_C $进行比较,讨论了这种形式主义的许多显着方面。
A platform that serves as an ideal playground for realizing ``high'' temperature superconductors are materials where the electrons' kinetic energy is completely quenched, and interactions provide the only energy scale in the problem for $T_c$. However, when the non-interacting bandwidth for a set of isolated bands is small compared to the scale of the interactions, the problem is inherently non-perturbative and requires going beyond the traditional mean-field theory of superconductivity. In two spatial dimensions, $T_c$ is controlled by the superconducting phase stiffness. Here we present a general theoretical framework for computing the electromagnetic response for generic model Hamiltonians, which controls the maximum possible superconducting phase stiffness and thereby $T_c$, without resorting to any mean-field approximation. Importantly, our explicit computations demonstrate that the contribution to the phase stiffness arises from (i) ``integrating out'' the remote bands that couple to the microscopic current operator, and (ii) the density-density interactions projected onto the isolated narrow bands. Our framework can be used to obtain an upper bound on the phase stiffness, and relatedly the superconducting transition temperature, for a range of physically inspired models involving both topological and non-topological narrow bands with arbitrary density-density interactions. We discuss a number of salient aspects of this formalism by applying it to a specific model of interacting flat bands and compare it against the known $T_c$ from independent numerically exact computations.