4.6 Article

Diffusive transport in Weyl semimetals

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 89, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.89.014205

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institute of Condensed Matter Theory at UIUC

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Diffusion, a ubiquitous phenomenon in nature, is a consequence of particle number conservation and locality in systems with sufficient damping. In this paper, we consider diffusive processes in the bulk of Weyl semimetals, which are exotic quantum materials, recently of considerable interest. In order to do this, we first explicitly implement the analytical scheme by which disorder with anisotropic scattering amplitude is incorporated into the diagrammatic response-function formalism for calculating the diffuson. The result, thus, obtained is consistent with transport coefficients evaluated from the Boltzmann transport equation or the renormalized uniform current vertex calculation as it should be. We, thus, demonstrate that the computation of the diffusion coefficient should involve the transport lifetime and not the quasiparticle lifetime. Using this method, we then calculate the density response function in Weyl semimetals and discover an unconventional diffusion process that is significantly slower than conventional diffusion. This gives rise to relaxation processes that exhibit stretched exponential decay instead of the usual exponential diffusive relaxation. This result is then explained using a model of thermally excited quasiparticles diffusing with diffusion coefficients which are strongly dependent on their energies. We elucidate the roles of the various energy and time scales involved in this novel process and propose an experiment by which this process may be observed.

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