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Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order
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Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley

Quantum state that never condenses

Condense = develop some kind of order

Page 2: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

As a solid develops order, some symmetry is broken.

Spin rotational symmetry is broken !

Page 4: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Examples of order

Page 5: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Metals are characterized by the Fermi surface

Metals do break any symmetry, but they are not stable at zero temperature. Metals always turn into some ordered states with symmetry breaking as T 0.

Page 6: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Different types of Fermi surface instability lead to different order.

Cooper instability superconductivity

Fermi surface nesting instability spin density wave, or charge density wave

Page 7: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Metal

Superconductivity

Charge density wave

Spin density wave

Landau’s paradigm

• Ordered state is characterized by the symmetry that is broken.• All ordered states originate from the metallic state due to Fermi surface instability.

Page 8: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Is it possible for a solid not to develop any order at zero

temperature ?

Page 9: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Insulators with integer filling factor are good candidates

Fermion band insulator Boson Mott insulator

Page 10: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Fermion Mott insulator

Mott insulator

Boson Mott insulator

Insulating due to repulsion between particles.

Page 11: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Examples of electron band insulator

C, Si, Ge, GaAs, …

Page 12: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

YBa2Cu3O6 – the parent compound of high temperature superconductor

CuO2 sheet

An example of electron Mott insulator

Page 13: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

An example of boson Mott insulator: optical lattice of neutral atoms

Greiner et al, Nature 02

Page 14: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Why are we interested in insulators ?Doping make them very useful !

Most of the time, doping make the particle mobile, hence can conduct.

Page 15: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Doped band insulator

A Silicon chip

Page 16: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Doping Mott insulators has produced many materials with interesting properties.

High Tc superconductors Colossal magneto-resistive materials

Doped YBa2Cu3O6 Doped LaMnO3

Doped Mott insulators

Page 17: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Is it possible that a solid remains insulating after

doping ?

Yes

Page 18: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

An interesting fact: all insulators with fractional filling factor break some kind of symmetry hence exhibit some kind of order.

Antiferromagnet Dimmerization

fermion boson

Page 19: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Oshikawa’s theorem

If the system is insulating, and if the filling factor = p/q, the ground state is q-fold

degenerate.

Usually the required degeneracy is achieved by long range order.

Why is uncondensed insulator so rare at fractional filling ?

Can a fractional filled insulator exist without symmetry breaking ?

Oshikawa PRL 2000

Page 20: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

It is generally believed that featureless insulators will have very unusual

properties.

Such as fractional-charge excitations …

Page 21: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Anderson’s spin liquid idea

Spin liquid is a featureless insulator (at half filling) with no long range order ! It has S=1/2 excitations (spinons).

+ + . . .

It exists in the parent state of high-temperature superconductors.

Resonating singlet patterns

Anderson, Science 1987

Page 22: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Condensed matter physicists have searched for such insulators for 20

years.

The usual search guide line is “frustration”.

?

Page 23: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Melts crystal order but never changes the C-M position preserve 3-fold degeneracy.

A new idea: symmetry protected uncondensed quantum state

Filling factor =1/3

Page 24: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

The Quantum Hall effect

Rxx = VL /I; Rxy = VH /I

The fractional quantum Hall effect

Page 25: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Lee & Leinaas, PRL 2004

One example of this type of state is the fractional quantum Hall liquid

Page 26: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

Another example is the quantum dimer liquid

Moessner & Sondhi, PRL, 2001

Page 27: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.

All existing models in the literature that exhibit uncondensed quantum state conserve the center-of-mass position and momentum.

Page 28: Dung-Hai Lee U.C. Berkeley Quantum state that never condenses Condense = develop some kind of order.