Anderson-Mott transition in a disordered Hubbard model with correlated hopping
Abstract
We study the ground state phase diagram of the Anderson-Hubbard model with correlated hopping at half filling in one-dimension. The Hamiltonian has a local Coulomb repulsion U and a disorder potential with local energies randomly distributed in the interval (-W,+W) with equal probability, acting on the singly occupied sites. The hopping process which modifies the number of doubly occupied sites is forbidden. The hopping between nearest-neighbor singly occupied and empty sites or between singly occupied and doubly occupied sites have the same amplitude t. We identify three different phases as functions of the disorder amplitude W and Coulomb interaction strength U>0. When U<4t the system shows a metallic phase (i) only when no disorder is present W=0 or an Anderson-localized phase (ii) when disorder is introduced W≠ 0. When U>4t the Anderson-localized phase survives as long as disorder effects dominates on the interaction effects, otherwise a Mott insulator phase (iii) arises. The phases (i) and (ii) are characterized by a finite density of doublons and a vanishing charge gap between the ground state and the excited states. The phase (iii) is characterized by vanishing density of doublons and a finite gap for the charge excitations.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.