CPHT Condensed Matter seminar

 

Tuesday, September 19 at 14:00

at CPHT, Conference room Louis Michel

Hareram Swain (IIT Madras)

A semi-holographic approach to strange metallic behaviour

Abstract: "Strange metals" exhibit an anomalous temperature dependence of the low temperature resistivity. This suggests the absence of electron quasiparticles which are the elementary excitations of the Fermi sea. This property is at odds with conventional Fermi liquids, justifying the “strangeness” of this phase. The measurement of the spectral function via ARPES has given us key insights into the nature of elementary constituents in strongly correlated electronic systems that do not admit quasiparticle description, and also demonstrate a rich variety of novel superconducting, metal, and insulating phases. The holographic approach, though allows one to dispense with the notion of quasiparticles, at the same time, this makes it difficult to understand what are the effective microscopic degrees of freedom of the system. In my talk, I will explain how we construct a semi-holographic description for such behaviours. Based on the key insights provided by Faulkner and Polchinski, we propose an effective theory in which the electron of a two-dimensional band hybridizes with a fermionic operator of a critical holographic sector, while also interacting with other bands that preserve quasiparticle characteristics. Besides the scaling dimension $\nu$ of the fermionic operator in the holographic sector, the effective theory has two dimensionless couplings α and γ determining the holographic and Fermi-liquid-type contributions to the self-energy respectively. In the case of DC conductivity that irrespective of the choice of the holographic critical sector, there exists a ratio of the effective couplings for which we obtain linear-in-T resistivity for a wide range of temperatures. This scaling persists to arbitrarily low temperatures when $\nu$ approaches unity in which limit we obtain a marginal Fermi liquid with a specific temperature dependence of the self-energy. Interestingly, we explain the origin of the linear-in-T resistivity and strange metallic behavior as a consequence of the emergence of a universal form of the spectral function which is independent of the model parameters when the ratio of the two couplings takes optimal values determined only by the critical exponent. This universal form fits well with photoemission data of copper oxide samples for under/optimal/over-doping with a fixed exponent over a wide range of temperatures. We further obtain a refined Planckian dissipation scenario in which the scattering time τ=f*h_bar/(k_B*T), with f being O(1) at strong coupling, but O(10) at weak coupling.

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