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Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR...

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Thermoelectric Thermoelectric Effects Effects in in Correlated Matter Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry Sriram Shastry UCSC UCSC Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319 Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Aspen Center for Physics: 14 August, 2008
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Page 1: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Thermoelectric Effects Thermoelectric Effects inin

Correlated MatterCorrelated MatterSriram ShastrySriram Shastry

UCSCUCSC

Santa CruzSanta Cruz

Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02-

06ER46319

Work supported by

NSF DMR 0408247

Aspen Center for Physics:

14 August, 2008

Page 2: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

IntroIntro

High Thermoelectric power is very desirable High Thermoelectric power is very desirable for applications.for applications.

Usually the domain of semiconductor industry, Usually the domain of semiconductor industry, e.g. Bi2Te3. However, recently correlated e.g. Bi2Te3. However, recently correlated matter has found its way into this domain. matter has found its way into this domain.

Heavy Fermi systems (low T), Mott Insulator Heavy Fermi systems (low T), Mott Insulator Junction sandwiches (Harold Hwang 2004)Junction sandwiches (Harold Hwang 2004)

Sodium Cobaltate NaxCoO2 at x ~ .7 Sodium Cobaltate NaxCoO2 at x ~ .7 Terasaki, Ong, …..Terasaki, Ong, …..

Page 3: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

1­hJ x i = L11Ex +L12(¡ r xT=T)

1­hJ Qx i = L21Ex +L22(¡ r xT=T);

where (¡ r xT=T) is regarded as the external driving thermal force, and J Qx istheheat current operator.

What is the Seebeck Coefficient S?

Thermopower S(! ) =L12(! )TL11(! )

Lorentz Number L(! ) =· zc(! )T¾(! )

Figureof Merit Z(! )T =S2(! )L(! )

: (1)

Page 4: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

SK ubo =

" R10

dtR¯0d¿ hJ Ex (t ¡ i¿)J x(0)i

R10

dtR¯0d¿ hJ x(t ¡ i¿)J x(0)i

¡¹ (0)qe

#

+¹ (0) ¡ ¹ (T)

qe:

S= Transport part + Thermodynamic part Write

SK ubo =ST r +SH eikes¡ M ott;

Where the¯rst term is thedi±cult Transport part of S.

Similarly thermal conductivity and resitivity are defined with appropriate current operators. The computation of these transport quantities is brutally difficult for correlated systems.

Hence seek an escape route……….That is the rest of the story!

Page 5: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Triangular lattice Hall and Seebeck coeffs: (High frequency objects)

Notice that these variables change sign thrice as a

band fills from 0->2. Sign of Mott Hubbard correlations.

Page 6: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Considerable similarity between Hall constant and Seebeck coefficients.

Both gives signs of carriers---(Do they actually ???)

Zero crossings tell a tale. These objects are sensitive to half filling and hence measure Mott Hubbard hole densities.

Brief story of Hall constant to motivate the rest.

The Hall constant at finite frequencies: S Shraiman Singh- 1993

High T_c and triangular lattices---

Page 7: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

<eRH (0) = R¤H (­ ) +

Z ­

0

=mRH (º)º

dº :

Consider a novel dispersion relation

(Shastry ArXiv.org 0806.4629)

•Here is a cutoff frequency that determines the RH*. LHS is measurable, and the second term on RHS is beginning to be measured (recent data exists).

• The smaller the , closer is our RH* to the transport value.

•We can calculate RH* much more easily than the transport value.

•For the tJ model, it would be much closer to the DC than for Hubbard type models. This is obvious since cut off is max{t,J} rather than U!!

~! À f jtj;Ugmax

~! À f jtj; J gmax:

Page 8: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

New Formalism SS (2006) is based on a finite frequency calculation of thermoelectric coefficients. Motivation comes from Hall constant computation (Shastry Shraiman Singh 1993- Kumar Shastry 2003)

Perhaps dependence of R_H is weak compared to that of Hall conductivity.

* 22 v [ , ] /x yiH xxhBR N J J

•Very useful formula since

•Captures Lower Hubbard Band physics. This is achieved by using the Gutzwiller projected fermi operators in defining J’s

•Exact in the limit of simple dynamics ( e.g few frequencies involved), as in the Boltzmann eqn approach.

•Can compute in various ways for all temperatures ( exact diagonalization, high T expansion etc…..)

•We have successfully removed the dissipational aspect of Hall constant from this object, and retained the correlations aspect.

•Very good description of t-J model.

•This asymptotic formula usually requires to be larger than J

½xy(! ) =¾x y (! )¾x x (! )2

! BR¤H for ! ! 1

R¤H =RH (0) in Drude theory

ANALOGY between Hall Constant and Seebeck Coefficients

Page 9: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Need similar high frequency formulas for S and thermal conductivity.

Requirement::: Lij()

Did not exist, so had lots of fun with Luttinger’s formalism of a gravitational field, now made time dependent.

K tot =X

K (r)(1+Ã(r;t))

r (Ã(r;T)) » r T(r;t)=T

Page 10: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

i=1 i=2

Charge Energy

I i J x(qx) J Qx (qx)

Ui ½(¡ qx) K (¡ qx)

Y i E xq = iqxÁq iqxÃq: (1)

L i j (! ) =i

­ ! c

"

hTi j i ¡X

n;m

pm ¡ pn"n ¡ "m +! c

(I i )nm(I j )mn

#

; (1)

hTi j i = ¡ limqx ! 0

h[I i ;Uj ]i1qx: (2)

Stress tensor Thermal operator Thermoelectric operatorT11 T22 T12=T21¿xx £xx ©xx

¡ ddqx

hJ x(qx);½(¡ qx)

i

qx ! 0¡ ddqx

hJ Qx (qx);K (¡ qx)

i

qx ! 0¡ ddqx

hJ x(qx);K (¡ qx)

i

qx ! 0(1)

Page 11: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

We thus see that a knowledge of the three operators gives us a interesting starting point for correlated matter:

High Freq Thermopower S¤ =h©xx iTh¿xx i

High Freq Lorentz Number L ¤ =h£ xx iT2h¿xx i

¡ (S¤)2

High Freq Figureof Merit Z¤T =h©xx i2

h£ xx ih¿xx i ¡ h©xx i2: (1)

· zc(! ) =1T

·L22(! ) ¡

L12(! )2

L11(! )

¸;

This leads to interesting sum rules a lµa the f-sum rule for conductivity.Z 1

¡ 1

dº¼<e · zc(º) =

1T­

·h£ xx i ¡

h©xx i2

h¿xx i

¸:

Page 12: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Thermo power operator for Hubbard model

©xx = ¡qe2

X

~; ~0;~r

(´x +´0x)2t(~)t(~0)cy

~r+~+ ~0;¾c~r ;¾¡ qe¹

X

~

´2xt(~)cy~r+~;¾c~r ;¾+

qeU4

X

~r ;~

t(~)(´x)2(n~r ;¹¾+n~r+~;¹¾)(cy~r+~;¾c~r;¾+cy~r ;¾c~r+~;¾):

This object can beexpressed completely in Fourier spaceas

©xx = qeX

~p

@@px

©vxp("~p ¡ ¹ )

ªcy~p;¾c~p;¾

+qeU2L

X

~l;~p;~q;¾;¾0

@2

@l2x

n"~l +"~l+~q

ocy~l+~q;¾c~l;¾c

y~p¡ ~q; ¹¾0

c~p; ¹¾0:

¿xx =q2e~

X´2x t(~) c

y~r+~;¾c~r;¾ or

=q2e~

X

~k

d2"~kdk2x

cy~k;¾c~k;¾

Page 13: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

£ xx =X

p;¾

@@px

©vx~p("~p ¡ ¹ )2

ªcy~p;¾c~p;¾+

U2

4

X

´;¾

t(~)´2x(n~r;¹¾+n~r+~;¹¾)2cy~r+~;¾c~r;¾

¡ ¹ UX

~;¾

t(~)´2x(n~r ;¹¾+n~r+~;¹¾)cy~r+~;¾c~r;¾

¡U8

X

~;~0;¾

t(~)t(~0)(´x +´0x)2 f3n~r ;¹¾+n~r+~;¹¾+n~r+~0;¹¾+3n~r+~+~0;¹¾gc

y~r+~+~0;¾c~r;¾

+U4

X

~;~0;¾

t(~)t(~0)(´x +´0x)´0xc

y~r+~;¾c~r ;¾

ncy~r+~;¹¾c~r+~+~0;¹¾+cy~r ¡ ~0;¹¾c~r ;¹¾¡ h:c:

o: (1)

h©xx i = qec kB T

Pm;¾;~k G¾(k; i! m)

hd

dkx(vxk ("k ¡ ¹ )) + d2"k

dk2x§ ¾(k; i! m)

i

Unpublished- For Hubbard model using “Ward type identity” can show a simpler result for \Phi.

Page 14: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Hydrodynamics of energy and charge transport in a band model:

This involves the fundamental operators in a crucial way:

½@@t+1¿c

¾±J (r) =

1­h¿xxi

·1q2e@¹@n(¡ r ½) ¡ r Á(r)

¸+1­h©xxi

·1

C(T)(¡ r K (r)) ¡ r ª

¸

½@@t

+1¿E

¾±J Q (r) =

1­h©xx i

·1q2e

@¹@n

(¡ r ½) ¡ r Á(r)¸+1­h£ xx i

·1

C(T)(¡ r K (r)) ¡ r ª

¸

Einstein diffusion term of charge

Energy diffusion term

Continuity

@½@t

+r J (r) = 0

@K (r)@t

+r J Q (r) = pext(r)

Input power density

These eqns contain energy and charge diffusion, as well as thermoelectric effects. Potentially correct starting point for many new nano heating expts with lasers.

Page 15: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

And now for some results:

Triangular lattice t-J exact diagonalization (full spectrum)

Collaboration and hard work by:-

J Haerter, M. Peterson, S. Mukerjee (UC Berkeley)

Page 16: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

How good is the S* formula compared to exact Kubo formula?

A numerical benchmark: Max deviation 3% anywhere !!

As good as exact!

Page 17: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Results from this formalism:

Prediction for t>0 material

Comparision with data on absolute scale!

T linear Hall constant for triangular lattice predicted in 1993 by Shastry Shraiman Singh! Quantitative agreement hard to get with scale of “t”

Page 18: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

S* and the Heikes Mott formula (red) for Na_xCo O2.

Close to each other for t>o i.e. electron doped cases

Page 19: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Predicted result for t<0 i.e. fiducary hole doped CoO_2 planes. Notice much larger scale of S* arising from transport part (not Mott Heikes

part!!).

Enhancement due to triangular lattice structure of closed loops!! Similar to Hall constant linear T origin.

Page 20: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Predicted result for t<0 i.e. fiducary hole doped CoO_2 planes.

Different J higher S.

Page 21: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Predictions of S* and the Heikes Mott formula (red) for fiducary hole doped CoO2.

Notice that S* predicts an important enhancement unlike Heikes Mott formula

Heikes Mott misses the lattice topology effects.

Page 22: Thermoelectric Effects in Correlated Matter Sriram Shastry UCSC Santa Cruz Work supported by NSF DMR 0408247 Work supported by DOE, BES DE-FG02- 06ER46319.

Z*T computed from S* and Lorentz number. Electronic contribution only, no phonons. Clearly large x is better!!

Quite encouraging.


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