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Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University Enrique Anda and Maria Davidovich (Puc – Ri Guillermo Chiappe (Alicante) Elbio Dagotto (Oak Ridge) Adrian Feiguin (Project Q – Microsoft) Fabian Heidrich-Meisner (Aachen) Materials World Network Colaboracion Interamericana de Materiais A method to study highly correlated nanostructures Workshop on Decoherence, Correlations and Spin Effects on Nanostructured Materials – Vina del Mar – Chile 2009

Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

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Page 1: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities

George MartinsCarlos Busser

Physics DepartmentOakland University

Enrique Anda and Maria Davidovich (Puc – Rio)Guillermo Chiappe (Alicante)Elbio Dagotto (Oak Ridge)Adrian Feiguin (Project Q – Microsoft)Fabian Heidrich-Meisner (Aachen)

Materials World

Network

ColaboracionInteramericana

de Materiais

A method to study highly correlated nanostructures

Workshop on Decoherence, Correlations and Spin Effects on Nanostructured Materials – Vina del Mar – Chile 2009

Page 2: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Triangular geometry: interference and amplitude leakage

Enrique Anda (PUC – Rio)Carlos Busser (Oakland)Nancy Sandler and Sergio Ulloa (Ohio)Edson Vernek (Uberlandia)

3 4 1 2, ,t t U t t

Treat the 3 dots as a molecule

Page 3: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Bonding, non-bonding and anti-bonding orbitals

1 2 2A B C

2 2A C

3 2 2A B C

1 2 6A B C

3 3A B C

2 2A C

4 0t 3 QDs in series

4 3t tequilateral

A B C 1 2 3

Page 4: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

gV

Just two leads (t2 = 0): t4 t3

2e4e

6e

gV

1

2

3

1

3

1.0

0.45

0.5

U

t

t

Conductance: LDECA (blue) and Finite U Slave bosons (red)

interference

Page 5: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

The ‘partial’ conductances

1

2

3

3Lt

2

223 3 3L L R F

eG t G

h

3RGL

int 1 2 1 2 122 cosG G G GG

2112

2 1

ln rr

r r

GGi

G G

Page 6: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Three leads (finite t and new parameter values)

A

BC

2A B C 2A B C

A C

1

3

1.0

0.45

0.5

U

t

t

Page 7: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Three leads (t2 = t1): t4 t3

1G

3G2G

12

Page 8: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Amplitude ‘leakage’

Page 9: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

‘Orbital’ Degeneracy: Orbital Kondo Effect

SU(4) Kondo

SU(4)

Simultaneous screening of charge and spin

Degenerate

Page 10: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Model and Hamiltonian

, ; 2d g

UH n n V n U n n

int 0, ; ;

h. c.ll L R

H t d c

t t t

t t t

0t

0t0t

0t

U

U

SU(4)

Page 11: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Spin-charge ‘entanglement’

Schematics of a co-tunneling process for the usual spin SU(2) Kondo screening.

Same as above, but now for an orbital degree of freedom(orbital SU(2) Kondo).

Simultaneous screening of orbital and spin degrees of freedom, leading to SU(4) Kondo.

P. J. – Herrero et al., Nature 434, 484 (2005)

Page 12: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

SU(4) at Half-filling and NFL Behavior ECA Results

U U SU(4)

Galpin, Logan, and KrishnamurthyPRL 94, 186406 (2005)

-0.04 -0.02 0.00 0.02 0.04

LD

OS

U'=0.0 U'=0.2 U'=0.3 U'=0.4 U'=0.5

-0.04 -0.02 0.00 0.02 0.04

LD

OS

()

U'=0.5 U'=0.6 U'=0.7 U'=0.8

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8

2.05

2.10

2.15

2.20

2.25

2.30

2.35

2.40

2.45

(10

-2)

U'

U U SU(4)

-1.6 -1.2 -0.8 -0.4 0.00.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.41.61.82.0

U'=0.0U=0.5t'=0.2t"=0.0B=0.0

G(2

e2 /h) a

nd

<n

>

Vg

U'=0.5 U U

SU(2)

CO

Page 13: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Conductance Results

-2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.00.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2.0

-1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.0 0.5

G(2

e2 /h

)

Vg

U=U'=0.5E=0.035t'=0.2

t'=0.1

Vg

E

2n3n

Page 14: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Magnetic Field Dependence

-2.5

-2.0

-1.5

-1.0

-0.5

0.0

0.5

1.00.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0

U=U'=0.5t'=0.2t"=0.0

Esp

Esp

B

Vg E

orb

orb

=0.2

sp

=0.04

a

-2.5

-2.0

-1.5

-1.0

-0.5 0.0

0.5

1.0 0.

00.

51.

01.

52.

02.

53.

0

U=U

'=0.

5t'=

0.2

t"=0

.0

E

sp

Esp

B

Vg

E

orb

orb=0

.2

sp=0

.04

a

-1.75 -1.50 -1.25 -1.00 -0.75 -0.50 -0.25 0.00 0.250.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2.0 t"=0.0 t"=0.05 t"=0.1 t"=0.15 t"=0.175 t"=0.2

G(2

e2 /h)

Vg

U=U'=0.5t'=0.2B=0.0

SU(4) to 2LSU(2)

Page 15: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

New results using LDECA (comparing with NRG)

Page 16: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

1.0

' 1.0

0.125

0.0

U

U

t

t

Density of states

Page 17: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Results with field (12 sites)

How does the Kondo peak behave?

1.0

' 1.0

0.125

0.0

U

U

t

t

Page 18: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

LDOS with field (half-filling)

The peak seems to split at any finite field.

Page 19: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Closer view

Page 20: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Conclusions

New numerical results for conductance in Carbon Nanotubes were presented

ECA method seems capable of capturing glimpses of NFL behavior suggested by previous NRG results

SU(4) regime at half-filling (HF) is confirmed: conductance results for third shell may then be reinterpreted as signature of SU(4) at HF

Calculations at finite magnetic field agree quite well with experimental results

Results indicating how conductance changes from SU(4) to 2LSU(2) regime were presented

More detailed results with field seem to indicate that Kondo peak splits for any finite field.

Page 21: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

DMRG: the future of LDECA?

Currently, the method is based on using Lanczos to solve for the Green’s functions of the cluster.• Advantage: Lanczos is fast and easy to program• Disadvantage: Maximum cluster size is still

small. Finite size effects may occur.

Solution? Use DMRG instead of Lanczos• Advantage: REALLY Larger clusters• Disadvantage: CPU time.

Accuracy of Green’s functions?

Page 22: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Size (only) doesn’t matter…

No discretization

(ECA)

EXACT

Page 23: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

The importance of being discrete…

LDECA

Page 24: Application of the Cluster Embedding Method to Transport Through Anderson Impurities George Martins Carlos Busser Physics Department Oakland University

Conclusions

An improvement of embedding method was presented Results for single quantum dot agree perfectly with

Bethe ansatz Results for density of states agree with NRG Two stage Kondo system (two hanging quantum dots)

was discussed and compared with NRG Triangular configuration analyzed (interference) SU(4) in carbon nanotubes was analyzed Preliminary results using DMRG instead of Exact

Diagonalization (very encouraging!) For the future:

• Use two-particle Green’s function to calculate embedded spin correlations

• Add temperature and bias (ambitious…)