The metal insulator transition in cluster dynamical mean field theory: intersite correlation, cluster size, interaction strength, and the location of the transition line
Chungwei Lin, Andrew J. Millis

TL;DR
This study investigates the metal insulator transition using cluster dynamical mean field theory, revealing how cluster size, interaction strength, and spectral features influence the transition and differ across models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of cluster size effects and spectral properties in cluster DMFT applied to a polaron model, highlighting differences from single-site approximations.
Findings
Cluster size significantly affects the phase boundary in intermediate coupling.
Spectral functions show pronounced differences with cluster size and coupling strength.
Self energy resonances are linked to insulating states and distinguish transition mechanisms.
Abstract
To gain insight into the physics of the metal insulator transition and the effectiveness of cluster dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) we have used one, two and four site dynamical mean field theory to solve a polaron model of electrons coupled to a classical phonon field. The cluster size dependence of the metal to polaronic insulator phase boundary is determined along with electron spectral functions and cluster correlation functions. Pronounced cluster size effects start to occur in the intermediate coupling region in which the cluster calculation leads to a gap and the single-site approximation does not. Differences (in particular a sharper band edge) persist in the strong coupling regime. A partial density of states is defined encoding a generalized nesting property of the band structure; variations in this density of states account for differences between the dynamical cluster…
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