Electrical Conductivity in Quantum Materials
Johannes Mitscherling

TL;DR
This paper develops a microscopic theory for electrical conductivity in multiband quantum materials, incorporating interband effects, Berry curvature, and quantum metric, and applies it to recent experimental phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive conductivity framework for two-band systems, including interband contributions and their relation to geometric properties like Berry curvature.
Findings
Interband contributions linked to quantum metric and Berry curvature.
Scaling behaviors of conductivities with relaxation rate Γ.
Explanation of high-field Hall effects in cuprates.
Abstract
In recent years, there is an increasing interest in transport phenomena that are fundamentally linked to the presence of multiple bands. In this thesis, we develop, discuss, and apply a theory of the electrical conductivity that includes interband contributions within a microscopic approach. We derive formulas of the conductivity tensor and the Hall conductivity tensor for a general two-band model. This minimal model of a multiband system captures a broad variety of very different physical phenomena ranging from spiral spin density waves to Chern insulators. We motivate and derive a unique and physically transparent decomposition of the conductivity tensors by identifying intra- and interband contributions as well as symmetric and antisymmetric contributions under the exchange of the current and the electric field directions.…
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