Strong electronic correlations in superconducting organic charge transfer salts
B. J. Powell, Ross H. McKenzie

TL;DR
This review discusses the impact of strong electronic correlations on the phases of quasi-two-dimensional organic charge transfer salts, emphasizing models, phase diagrams, and the nature of superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of minimal models, phase behavior, and experimental insights into superconductivity in these correlated organic materials.
Findings
DMFT describes metallic and bad metal regimes well
Experimental results challenge some theories of superconductivity
Resonating valence bond theory offers a possible explanation for superconductivity
Abstract
We review the role of strong electronic correlations in quasi--two-dimensional organic charge transfer salts such as (BEDT-TTF), (BETS) and -[Pd(dmit)]. We begin by defining minimal models for these materials. It is necessary to identify two classes of material: the first class is strongly dimerised and is described by a half-filled Hubbard model; the second class is not strongly dimerised and is described by a quarter filled extended Hubbard model. We argue that these models capture the essential physics of these materials. We explore the phase diagram of the half-filled quasi--two-dimensional organic charge transfer salts, focusing on the metallic and superconducting phases. We review work showing that the metallic phase, which has both Fermi liquid and `bad metal' regimes, is described both quantitatively and qualitatively by dynamical mean field theory…
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