Theory of Strange Metals from Hot Fermions

ORAL

Abstract

We study a metal where a large Fermi surface coexists with a set of `hot spots' with a high density of states. The hot electrons occupy a small fraction of the Brillouin zone, yet qualitatively modify the properties of the entire system. We emphasize the importance of scattering processes in which two electrons from the large, `cold' Fermi surface scatter into one hot and one cold electron. These lead to
a `strange metallic' state with anomalous, non-Fermi liquid thermodynamic and transport properties. Scattering into hot electrons that are effectively classical (non-degenerate) in a finite portion of the Brillouin zone leads to a marginal Fermi liquid. This explains, in detail, the phenomenology of Sr3Ru2O7 in field, including T-linear resistivity and a T log(1/T) electronic specific heat.
Hot electrons that are instead localized near a point in the Brillouin zone, such as a two-dimensional van Hove singularity, lead to different power laws. We show that the transport behavior of strained Sr2RuO4 is recovered from this picture.

*CHM is supported by an NSF graduate fellowship.

Presenters

  • Connie Mousatov

    • Department of Physics, Stanford University

Authors

  • Connie Mousatov

    • Department of Physics, Stanford University
  • Erez Berg

    • Weizmann Institute of Science
    • Physics, Weizmann Institute of Science
    • Chicago University
    • Condensed Matter Physics, Weizmann Institute
    • Department of Physics, University of Chicago
    • Physics, University of Chicago
    • Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Weizmann Institute of Science
  • Sean Hartnoll

    • Physics, Stanford University
    • Department of Physics, Stanford University