Thermodynamic and information-theoretic description of the Mott transition in the two-dimensional Hubbard model
C. Walsh, P. S\'emon, D. Poulin, G. Sordi, A.-M. S. Tremblay

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive thermodynamic and information-theoretic analysis of the Mott transition in the two-dimensional Hubbard model, revealing detailed behaviors of entropy, free energy, and correlations across the transition.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed thermodynamic and information-theoretic characterization of the Mott transition in this model, including phase boundaries and correlation measures.
Findings
Discontinuous entropy jumps at the first-order transition
Singular behavior of entropy at the Mott endpoint
Correlation measures identify phase coexistence and crossovers
Abstract
At the Mott transition, electron-electron interaction changes a metal, in which electrons are itinerant, to an insulator, in which electrons are localized. This phenomenon is central to quantum materials. Here we contribute to its understanding by studying the two-dimensional Hubbard model at finite temperature with plaquette cellular dynamical mean-field theory. We provide an exhaustive thermodynamic description of the correlation-driven Mott transition of the half-filled model by calculating pressure, charge compressibility, entropy, kinetic energy, potential energy and free energy across the first-order Mott transition and its high-temperature crossover (Widom line). The entropy is extracted from the Gibbs-Duhem relation and shows complex behavior near the transition, marked by discontinuous jumps at the first-order boundary, singular behavior at the Mott endpoint and inflections…
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