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

Simone Fratini, Sergio Ciuchi

2021SciPost Physics24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

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.

Topics & Concepts

Condensed matter physicsElectronDegrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)Drude modelPhysicsQuantumWeak localizationCharge (physics)Field (mathematics)ConductivityMetalOptical conductivityQuantum mechanicsRenormalizationThermal conductionElectrical resistivity and conductivityTransient (computer programming)Charge density waveQuantum dotAnderson localizationMagnetic fieldElectron localization functionElectric fieldQuantum electrodynamicsRenormalization groupQuantum and electron transport phenomenaAdvanced Physical and Chemical Molecular InteractionsSurface and Thin Film Phenomena
Displaced Drude peak and bad metal from the interaction with slow fluctuations. | Litcius