Single-particle excitations under coexisting electron correlation and disorder: a numerical study of the Anderson-Hubbard model
Hiroshi Shinaoka, Masatoshi Imada

TL;DR
This paper investigates how electron correlation and disorder influence electronic phases in the Anderson-Hubbard model, revealing a novel soft Hubbard gap in insulating phases and proposing a new scaling theory beyond traditional Coulomb interaction models.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of soft Hubbard gaps in disordered correlated systems and develops a phenomenological scaling theory that aligns with numerical and exact-diagonalization results.
Findings
Discovery of soft Hubbard gaps with power-law scaling in DOS
Support for gap formation beyond mean-field via exact diagonalization
Proposed scaling theory explaining the DOS behavior
Abstract
Interplay of electron correlation and randomness is studied by using the Anderson-Hubbard model within the Hartree-Fock approximation. Under the coexistence of short-range interaction and diagonal disorder, we obtain the ground-state phase diagram in three dimensions, which includes an antiferromagnetic insulator, an antiferromagnetic metal, a paramagnetic insulator (Anderson-localized insulator) and a paramagnetic metal. Although only the short-range interaction is present in this model, we find unconventional soft gaps in the insulating phases irrespective of electron filling, spatial dimensions and long-range order, where the single-particle density of states (DOS) vanishes with a power-law scaling in one dimension (1D) or even faster in two dimensions (2D) and three dimensions (3D) toward the Fermi energy. We call it soft Hubbard gap. Moreover, exact-diagonalization results in 1D…
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