Real space Mott-Anderson electron localization with long-range interactions: exact and approximate descriptions
Real materials always contain, to some extent, randomness in the form of defects or irregularities. It is known since the seminal work of Anderson that randomness can drive a metallic phase to an insulating one, and the mechanism responsible for this transition is intrinsically different from the on...
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Zusammenfassung: | Real materials always contain, to some extent, randomness in the form of
defects or irregularities. It is known since the seminal work of Anderson that
randomness can drive a metallic phase to an insulating one, and the mechanism
responsible for this transition is intrinsically different from the one of the
interaction-induced transitions discovered by Mott. Lattice Hamiltonians, with
their conceptual and computational advantages, permitted to investigate broadly
the interplay of both mechanisms. However, a clear understanding of the
differences (or not) with their real-space counterparts is lacking, especially
in the presence of long-range Coulomb interactions. This work aims at shedding
light on this challenging question by investigating a real-space
one-dimensional model of interacting electrons in the presence of a disordered
potential. The transition between delocalized and localized phases are
characterized using two different indicators, namely the single-particle
occupation entropy and the position-space information entropy. In addition, the
performance of density functional approximations to reproduce the exact
ground-state densities of this many-body localization model are gauged. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2208.14546 |