A route towards engineering many-body localization in real materials
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2207.10696v1
- Date: Thu, 21 Jul 2022 18:12:27 GMT
- Title: A route towards engineering many-body localization in real materials
- Authors: A. Nietner, A. Kshetrimayum, J. Eisert, B. Lake
- Abstract summary: We present a path to synthesize real materials that show signatures of many body localization by mixing different species of materials in the laboratory.
We study the effect of the electron-phonon coupling, focusing on effectively one dimensional materials embedded in one, two and three dimensional lattices.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: The interplay of interactions and disorder in a quantum many body system may
lead to the elusive phenomenon of many body localization (MBL). It has been
observed under precisely controlled conditions in synthetic quantum many-body
systems, but to detect it in actual quantum materials seems challenging. In
this work, we present a path to synthesize real materials that show signatures
of many body localization by mixing different species of materials in the
laboratory. To provide evidence for the functioning of our approach, we perform
a detailed tensor-network based numerical analysis to study the effects of
various doping ratios of the constituting materials. Moreover, in order to
provide guidance to experiments, we investigate different choices of actual
candidate materials. To address the challenge of how to achieve stability under
heating, we study the effect of the electron-phonon coupling, focusing on
effectively one dimensional materials embedded in one, two and three
dimensional lattices. We analyze how this coupling affects the MBL and provide
an intuitive microscopic description of the interplay between the electronic
degrees of freedom and the lattice vibrations. Our work provides a guideline
for the necessary conditions on the properties of the ingredient materials and,
as such, serves as a road map to experimentally synthesizing real quantum
materials exhibiting signatures of MBL.
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