Many-body localization in disorder-free systems: the importance of finite-size constraints
Z. Papic, E. M. Stoudenmire, and Dmitry A. Abanin

TL;DR
This study investigates the feasibility of many-body localization in disorder-free, translation-invariant systems, revealing that finite-size effects and energy scale disparities hinder the emergence of MBL, leading to thermal behavior instead.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that finite-size constraints and energy scale disparities prevent MBL in translation-invariant systems, challenging previous perturbative predictions.
Findings
Finite-size effects cause artificial band splitting in models.
Proper parameter tuning reduces finite-size effects.
Models exhibit thermal, not localized, behavior in studied regimes.
Abstract
Recently it has been suggested that many-body localization (MBL) can occur in translation-invariant systems, and candidate 1D models have been proposed. We find that such models, in contrast to MBL systems with quenched disorder, typically exhibit much more severe finite-size effects due to the presence of two or more vastly different energy scales. In a finite system, this can easily create an artificial splitting of the density of states (DOS) into bands separated by large energy gaps. We argue that in order for such models to faithfully represent the physics of the thermodynamic limit, the ratio of the relevant coupling parameters must be larger than a certain cutoff that depends on system size, and should be chosen in such a way that various bands in the DOS of a given model overlap with one another. By setting the parameters in this way to minimize the finite-size effects, we then…
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