Doping effects in high-harmonic generation from correlated systems
Thomas Hansen, Lars Bojer Madsen

TL;DR
This study investigates how doping affects high-harmonic generation in correlated materials modeled by the Hubbard model, revealing that doping influences the spectra significantly at high electron-electron interactions, explained via quasiparticle dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of doping effects on HHG in correlated systems using the Hubbard model, highlighting the role of quasiparticles and magnetic ordering.
Findings
Doping has little effect at small Hubbard U.
At high U, doping significantly alters HHG spectra.
Doping increases high-harmonic gain at low and medium orders.
Abstract
Using the one-dimensional Hubbard model, which is commonly used for describing, e.g., high- superconducting cuprates, we study high-harmonic generation (HHG) from doped, correlated materials. Doping is modeled by changing the number of electrons in the lattice from the conventional half-filling case. For relatively small Hubbard , i.e., small electron-electron correlation, we find little to no effect of doping on the dynamics and the HHG spectra. For increasing the degree of doping has a marked effect on the dynamics and spectra. We explain these findings through the quasiparticle-based doublon-holon picture. The dynamics are separated into two types, firstly doublon and holon movement, and, secondly, doublon-holon pair creation and annihilation. Doping results in all configurations containing doublons or holons. Those quasiparticles can move at no extra cost in energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics
