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Putting Competing Orders in their Place near the Mott Transition Leon Balents (UCSB) Lorenz Bartosch (Yale) Anton Burkov (UCSB) Predrag Nikolic (Yale)

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Presentation on theme: "Putting Competing Orders in their Place near the Mott Transition Leon Balents (UCSB) Lorenz Bartosch (Yale) Anton Burkov (UCSB) Predrag Nikolic (Yale)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Putting Competing Orders in their Place near the Mott Transition Leon Balents (UCSB) Lorenz Bartosch (Yale) Anton Burkov (UCSB) Predrag Nikolic (Yale) Subir Sachdev (Yale) Krishnendu Sengupta (Toronto) cond-mat/0408329, cond-mat/0409470, and to appear

2 Mott Transition Many interesting systems near Mott transition –Cuprates –Na x CoO 2 ¢ yH 2 O –Organics:  -(ET) 2 X –LiV 2 O 4 Unusual behaviors of such materials –Power laws (transport, optics, NMR…) suggest QCP? –Anomalies nearby Fluctuating/competing orders Pseudogap Heavy fermion behavior (LiV 2 O 4 ) localized,delocalized, insulating(super)conducting

3 Competing Orders Theory of Mott transition must incorporate this constraint (LSM/Oshikawa) Luttinger Theorem/Topological argument : some kind of order is necessary in a Mott insulator (gapped state) unless there is an even number of electrons per unit cell “Usually” Mott Insulator has spin and/or charge/orbital order - Charge/spin/orbital order - In principle, topological order (not subject of talk)

4 T. Hanaguri, C. Lupien, Y. Kohsaka, D.-H. Lee, M. Azuma, M. Takano, H. Takagi, and J. C. Davis, Nature 430, 1001 (2004). The cuprate superconductor Ca 2-x Na x CuO 2 Cl 2 Multiple order parameters: superfluidity and density wave. Phases: Superconductors, Mott insulators, and/or supersolids

5 “density” (scalar) modulations, ≈ 4 lattice spacing period LDOS of Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8+d at 100 K. M. Vershinin, S. Misra, S. Ono, Y. Abe, Y. Ando, and A. Yazdani, Science, 303, 1995 (2004). Fluctuating Order in the Pseudo-Gap

6 Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson (LGW) Theory Landau expansion of effective action in “order parameters” describing broken symmetries –Conceptual flaw: need a “disordered” state Mott state cannot be disordered Expansion around metal problematic since large DOS means bad expansion and Fermi liquid locally stable –Physical problem: Mott physics (e.g. large U) is central effect, order in insulator is a consequence, not the reverse. –Pragmatic difficulty: too many different orders “seen” or proposed How to choose? If energetics separating these orders is so delicate, perhaps this is an indication that some description that subsumes them is needed (put chicken before the eggs)

7 What is Needed? Approach should focus on Mott localization physics but still capture crucial order nearby –Challenge: Mott physics unrelated to symmetry –Not an LGW theory! Insist upon continuous (2 nd order) QCPs –Robustness: 1 st order transitions extraordinarily sensitive to disorder and demand fine-tuned energetics Continuous QCPs have emergent universality –Want (ultimately – not today ) to explain experimental power-laws

8 Bose Mott Transitions This talk: Superfluid-Insulator QCPs of bosons on (square) 2d lattice Filling f=1: Unique Mott state w/o order, and LGW works M. Greiner, O. Mandel, T. Esslinger, T. W. Hänsch, and I. Bloch, Nature 415, 39 (2002). f  1: localized bosons must order (connection to electronic systems later)

9 Is LGW all we know? Physics of LGW formalism is particle condensation –Order parameter  y creates particle (z=1) or particle/antiparticle superposition (z=2) with charge(s) that generate broken symmetry. –The  y particles are the natural excitations of the disordered state –Tuning s|  | 2 tunes the particle gap (» s 1/2 ) to zero Generally want critical Quantum Field Theory –Theory of “particles” (point excitations) with vanishing gap (at QCP) Any particles will do!

10 Excitations: Approach from the Insulator (f=1) The particle/hole theory is LGW theory! - But this is possible only for f=1

11 Approach from the Superfluid Focus on vortex excitations vortex anti-vortex Time-reversal exchanges vortices+antivortices - Expect relativistic field theory for Worry: vortex is a non-local object, carrying superflow

12 Duality Exact mapping from boson to vortex variables. Vortex carries dual U(1) gauge charge Dual magnetic field B = 2  n All non-locality is accounted for by dual U(1) gauge force C. Dasgupta and B.I. Halperin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 47, 1556 (1981); D.R. Nelson, Phys. Rev. Lett. 60, 1973 (1988); M.P.A. Fisher and D.-H. Lee, Phys. Rev. B 39, 2756 (1989);

13 Dual Theory of QCP for f=1 superfluidMott insulator particles= vortices particles= bosons C. Dasgupta and B.I. Halperin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 47, 1556 (1981); Two completely equivalent descriptions - really one critical theory (fixed point) with 2 descriptions N.B.: vortex field is not gauge invariant - not an order parameter in Landau sense Real significance: “Higgs” mass indicates Mott charge gap

14 Non-integer filling f  1 Vortex approach now superior to Landau one -need not postulate unphysical disordered phase Vortices experience average dual magnetic field - physics: phase winding Aharonov-Bohm phase 2  vortex winding

15 Vortex Degeneracy Non-interacting spectrum = Hofstadter problem Physics: magnetic space group and For f=p/q (relatively prime) all representations are at least q- dimensional This q-fold vortex degeneracy of vortex states is a robust property of a superfluid (a “quantum order”)

16 A simple example: f=1/2 A simple physical interpretation is possible for f=1/2 -Map bosons to spins: spin-1/2 XY-symmetry magnet = = Suppose  =N x +iN y N z =§ 1 Order in core: 2 “merons” much more interpretation of this case: T. Senthil et al, Science 303, 1490 (2004). C. Lannert, M.P.A. Fisher, and T. Senthil, Phys. Rev. B 63, 134510 (2001) ; S. Sachdev and K. Park, Annals of Physics, 298, 58 (2002)

17 Vortex PSG Representation of magnetic space group Vortices carry space group and U(1) gauge charges - PSG ties together Mott physics (gauge) and order (space group) - condensation implies both Mott SF-I transition and spatial order

18 Order in the Mott Phase Transform as Fourier components of density with Gauge-invariant bilinears: Vortex condensate always has some order - The order is a secondary consequence of Mott transition

19 Critical Theory and Order  mn and H.O.T.s constrained by PSG “Unified” competing orders determined by simple MFT -always integer number of bosons per enlarged unit cell f=1/4,3/4 Caveat: fluctuation effects mostly unknown

20 “Deconfined” Criticality Under some circumstances, these QCPs have emergent extra U(1) q-1 symmetry f=1/2, 1/4 f  1/3 In these cases, there is a local, direct, formulation of the QCP in terms of fractional bosons interacting with q-1 U(1) gauge fields charge 1/q bosons Can be constructed in detail directly, generalizing f=1/2 T. Senthil et al, Science 303, 1490 (2004). (with conserved gauge flux)

21 Electronic Models Need to model spins and electrons - Expect: bosonic results hold if electrons are strongly paired (BEC limit of SC) General strategy: - Start with a formulation whose kinematical variables have “spin-charge separation”, i.e. bosonic holons and fermionic spinons N.B. This does not mean we need presume any exotic phases where these are deconfined, since gauge fluctuations are included. - Apply dual analysis to holons Cuprates: model singlet formation -Doped dimer model -Doped staggered flux states (generally SU(2) MF states)

22 Singlet formation La 2 CuO 4 spin liquid x g Valence bond solid (VBS) Staggered flux spin liquid Model for doped VBS -doped quantum dimer model

23 Doped dimer model E. Fradkin and S. A. Kivelson, Mod. Phys. Lett. B 4, 225 (1990). ij Dimer model = U(1) gauge theory Holes carry staggered U(1) charge: hop only on same sublattice Dual analysis allows Mott states with x>0 x=0: 2 vortices = vortex in A/B sublattice holons

24 Doped dimer model: results x g dSC for x>x c with vortex PSG identical to boson model with pair density d-wave SC 1/161/32 1/8 xcxc

25 Each pinned vortex in the superconductor has a halo of density wave order over a length scale ≈ the zero-point quantum motion of the vortex. This scale diverges upon approaching the insulator Application: Field-Induced Vortex in Superconductor In low-field limit, can study quantum mechanics of a single vortex localized in lattice or by disorder - Pinning potential selects some preferred superposition of q vortex states locally near vortex

26 100Å b 7 pA 0 pA Vortex-induced LDOS of Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8+  integrated from 1meV to 12meV at 4K J. Hoffman E. W. Hudson, K. M. Lang, V. Madhavan, S. H. Pan, H. Eisaki, S. Uchida, and J. C. Davis, Science 295, 466 (2002). Vortices have halos with LDOS modulations at a period ≈ 4 lattice spacings

27 Doping Other Spin Liquids Very general construction of spin liquid states at x=0 from SU(2) MFT X.-G. Wen and P. A. Lee (1996) X.-G. Wen (2002) Spinons f i  described by mean-field hamiltonian + gauge fluctuations, dope b 1,b 2 bosons via duality - Doped dimer model equivalent to Wen’s “U1Cn00x” state with gapped spinons - Can similarly consider staggered flux spin liquid with critical magnetism preliminary results suggest continuous Mott transition into hole-ordered structure unlikely

28 Conclusions Vortex field theory provides –formulation of Mott-driven superfluid-insulator QCP –consequent charge order in the Mott state Vortex degeneracy (PSG) –a fundamental (?) property of SF/SC states –natural explanation for charge order near a pinned vortex Extension to gapless states (superconductors, metals) to be determined

29 pictures (leftover)


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