Electric conductivity in graphene: Kubo model versus a nonlocal quantum field theory model
Pablo Rodriguez-Lopez, Jian-Sheng Wang, Mauro Antezza

TL;DR
This paper compares three models of graphene's electric conductivity, revealing inconsistencies in the non-local QFT model and demonstrating that proper regularization aligns it with the Kubo model, clarifying the correct theoretical approach.
Contribution
It identifies issues in the non-local QFT model of graphene conductivity and shows how proper regularization makes it consistent with the Kubo model, resolving existing discrepancies.
Findings
The local model is the $ extbf{q} o extbf{0}$ limit of the non-local models.
The non-local QFT model exhibits non-physical plasma-like behavior at low frequencies.
Regularizing the QFT model's conductivity aligns it with the Kubo model, removing anomalies.
Abstract
We compare three models of graphene electric conductivity: a non-local Kubo model, a local model derived by Falkovsky, and finally, a non-local quantum field theory (QFT) polarization-based model. These models are supposed to provide consistent results since they are derived from the same Hamiltonian. While we confirm that the local model is a proper limit of both the non-local Kubo and the non-local QFT model (once losses are added to this last model), we find hard inconsistencies in the non-local QFT model as derived and currently used in literature. In particular, in the genuine non-local region (), the available QFT model shows an intrinsic non-physical plasma-like behavior for the interband transversal electric conductivity at low frequencies (even after introducing the unavoidable losses). The Kubo model, instead, shows the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
