Scaling Behavior of Heavy Fermion Metals
V.R. Shaginyan, M.Ya. Amusia, A.Z. Msezane, K.G. Popov

TL;DR
This review explains the universal scaling behavior of heavy fermion metals and 2D Fermi systems using fermion condensation quantum phase transition, providing a unified theoretical framework for their non-Fermi liquid properties.
Contribution
It introduces the fermion condensation quantum phase transition as a new framework to describe non-Fermi liquid behavior in strongly correlated Fermi systems.
Findings
Effective mass depends on temperature, magnetic field, and pressure.
Universal scaling behavior observed across different strongly correlated systems.
Good agreement between theoretical calculations and experimental data.
Abstract
Strongly correlated Fermi systems are fundamental systems in physics that are best studied experimentally, which until very recently have lacked theoretical explanations. This review discusses the construction of a theory and the analysis of phenomena occurring in strongly correlated Fermi systems such as heavy-fermion (HF) metals and two-dimensional (2D) Fermi systems. It is shown that the basic properties and the scaling behavior of HF metals can be described within the framework of a fermion condensation quantum phase transition (FCQPT) and extended quasiparticle paradigm that allow us to explain the non-Fermi liquid behavior observed in strongly correlated Fermi systems. In contrast to the Landau paradigm stating that the quasiparticle effective mass is a constant, the effective mass of new quasiparticles strongly depends on temperature, magnetic field, pressure, and other…
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