Stripe melting and quantum criticality in correlated metals
David F. Mross, and T. Senthil

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for continuous quantum melting transitions of stripe order in metals, revealing a new class of critical points where the Fermi surface remains well-defined, with implications for cuprate superconductors.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of Stripe Loop Metals and provides a controlled critical theory for stripe melting transitions that decouple from the Fermi surface.
Findings
Stripe melting can be continuous via pair dislocation proliferation.
Fermi surface remains sharp at the quantum critical point.
Quantum stripe fluctuations influence superconducting tendencies.
Abstract
We study theoretically quantum melting transitions of stripe order in a metallic environment, and the associated reconstruction of the electronic Fermi surface. We show that such quantum phase transitions can be continuous in situations where the stripe melting occurs by proliferating pairs of dislocations in the stripe order parameter without proliferating single dislocations. We develop an intuitive picture of such phases as "Stripe Loop Metals" where the fluctuating stripes form closed loops of arbitrary size at long distances. We obtain a controlled critical theory of a few different continuous quantum melting transitions of stripes in metals . At such a (deconfined) critical point the fluctuations of the stripe order parameter are strongly coupled, yet tractable. They also decouple dynamically from the Fermi-surface. We calculate many universal properties of these quantum critical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface and Thin Film Phenomena
