Attractive Effect of a Strong Electronic Repulsion: The Physics of Vertex Divergences

ORAL

Abstract

While the breakdown of the perturbation expansion for the many-electron problem has several formal consequences, here we unveil its physical effect: flipping the sign of the effective electronic interaction in specific scattering channels. By decomposing local and uniform susceptibilities of the Hubbard model via their spectral representations, we prove how entering the nonperturbative regime causes an enhancement of the charge response, ultimately responsible for the phase-separation instabilities close to the Mott metal-insulator transition. Our analysis opens a new route for understanding phase transitions in the nonperturbative regime and clarifies why attractive effects emerging from a strong repulsion can induce phase separations but not s-wave pairing or charge-density wave instabilities.

*The present work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering under Grant No. DE-SC0019469

Presenters

  • Lorenzo Del Re

    • Georgetown University

Authors

  • Lorenzo Del Re

    • Georgetown University
  • Matthias Reitner

    • Solid State Physics, Vienna Institute of Technology
  • Patrick Chalupa

    • Solid State Physics, Vienna Institute of Technology
  • Daniel Springer

    • Solid State Physics, Vienna Institute of Technology
  • Sergio Ciuchi

    • Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche e Chimiche, Università dell'Aquila
  • Giorgio Sangiovanni

    • Institut fuer Theoretische Physik und Astrophysik, Universitaet Wuerzburg
    • University of Würzburg
  • Alessandro Toschi

    • Solid State Physics, Vienna Institute of Technology