Metal-insulator transition from combined disorder and interaction effects in Hubbard-like electronic lattice models with random hopping
Matthew S. Foster, Andreas W. W. Ludwig

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a disorder-driven first-order metal-insulator transition in Hubbard-like models with random hopping, arising solely from the interplay of disorder and interactions, analyzed via a sigma model and RG methods.
Contribution
It introduces a low-energy effective field theory for disordered, interacting fermions and identifies a disorder-induced transition driven by interactions in three-dimensional systems.
Findings
Disorder destabilizes the diffusive Fermi liquid in 2D.
A perturbative metal-insulator transition occurs in d > 2.
Localized phases emerge only due to interactions.
Abstract
We uncover a disorder-driven instability in the diffusive Fermi liquid phase of a class of many-fermion systems, indicative of a metal-insulator transition of first order type, which arises solely from the competition between quenched disorder and interparticle interactions. Our result is expected to be relevant for sufficiently strong disorder in d = 3 spatial dimensions. Specifically, we study a class of half-filled, Hubbard-like models for spinless fermions with (complex) random hopping and short-ranged interactions on bipartite lattices, in d > 1. In a given realization, the hopping disorder breaks time reversal invariance, but preserves the special ``nesting'' symmetry responsible for the charge density wave instability of the ballistic Fermi liquid. This disorder may arise, e.g., from the application of a random magnetic field to the otherwise clean model. We derive a low energy…
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