Spectral and transport properties of doped Mott-Hubbard systems with incommensurate magnetic order
Marcus Fleck, Alexander I. Lichtenstein, Andrzej M. Oles, L.Hedin

TL;DR
This paper investigates the spectral and transport properties of doped Mott-Hubbard systems with incommensurate magnetic order using advanced theoretical methods, revealing pseudogap formation, spectral weight transfer, and temperature effects relevant to high-temperature superconductors.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized dynamical mean-field theory approach to study magnetic states and incommensurate order in doped Mott insulators, providing new insights into their spectral and optical behaviors.
Findings
Incommensurate magnetic order causes a pseudogap at the Fermi energy.
Spectral weight shifts to lower energies with doping, increasing the Drude weight.
Temperature rise reduces magnetic order and pseudogap, leading to linear resistivity.
Abstract
We present spectral and optical properties of the Hubbard model on a two-dimensional square lattice using a generalization of dynamical mean-field theory to magnetic states in finite dimension. The self-energy includes the effect of spin fluctuations and screening of the Coulomb interaction due to particle-particle scattering. At half-filling the quasiparticles reduce the width of the Mott-Hubbard `gap' and have dispersions and spectral weights that agree remarkably well with quantum Monte Carlo and exact diagonalization calculations. Away from half-filling we consider incommensurate magnetic order with a varying local spin direction, and derive the photoemission and optical spectra. The incommensurate magnetic order leads to a pseudogap which opens at the Fermi energy and coexists with a large Mott-Hubbard gap. The quasiparticle states survive in the doped systems, but their dispersion…
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