Generalized Hydrodynamic approach to charge and energy currents in the one-dimensional Hubbard model
Yuji Nozawa, Hirokazu Tsunetsugu

TL;DR
This paper uses generalized hydrodynamics to analyze nonequilibrium charge and energy transport in the 1D Hubbard model, revealing a clogged region with zero charge current but finite energy current, and exploring the effects of interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first analytical proof of clogged regions in the Hubbard model and examines the proportionality of charge and spin currents under various initial conditions.
Findings
Existence of clogged regions with zero charge current but finite energy current.
Analytical proof of clogged regions at infinite temperature and numerical confirmation at finite temperatures.
Suppressed and reversed temperature dependence of stationary current ratios due to electron correlations.
Abstract
We have studied nonequilibrium dynamics of the one-dimensional Hubbard model using the generalized hydrodynamic theory. We mainly investigated the spatio-temporal profile of charge density, energy density and their currents using the partitioning protocol; the initial state consists of two semi-infinite different thermal equilibrium states joined at the origin. In this protocol, there appears around the origin a transient region where currents flow. We examined how density and current profiles depend on initial conditions and have found a clogged region where charge current is zero but nonvanishing energy current flows. This region appears when one of the initial states has half-filled electron density. We have proved analytically the existence of the clogged region in the infinite temperature case of the half-filled initial state. The existence is confirmed also for finite temperatures…
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