4.6 Article

Stability of (N+1)-body fermion clusters in a multiband Hubbard model

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW A
Volume 106, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.106.033304

Keywords

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Funding

  1. TUBITAK
  2. Brain Circulation Scheme 2 (CoCirculation2) [120C066]
  3. [2236]

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In this paper, a variational approach is used to derive a set of coupled integral equations for the bound states in a multiband Hubbard Hamiltonian with attractive on-site interaction. The derived equations are applied to the one-dimensional sawtooth lattice, revealing the presence of tetramer states and their quasiflat dispersion in a flat band. Density-matrix renormalization-group simulations and exact diagonalization results suggest the presence of larger multimers with lower binding energies for N={4,5,...,10}, potentially without an upper bound on N. These findings have important implications for the understanding of many-body phenomena in flat-band systems.
We start with a variational approach and derive a set of coupled integral equations for the bound states of N identical spin-up arrow fermions and a single spin-down arrow fermion in a generic multiband Hubbard Hamiltonian with an attractive on-site interaction. As an illustration, we apply our integral equations to the one-dimensional sawtooth lattice up to N <= 3, i.e., to the (3 + 1)-body problem, and we reveal not only the presence of tetramer states in this two-band model but also their quasiflat dispersion when formed in a flat band. Furthermore, for N = {4, 5, ..., 10}, our density-matrix renormalization-group simulations and exact diagonalization suggest the presence of larger and larger multimers with lower and lower binding energies, conceivably without an upper bound on N. These peculiar (N + 1)-body clusters are in sharp contrast with the exact results on the single-band linear-chain model where none of the N >= 2 multimers appear. Hence their presence must be taken into account for a proper description of the many-body phenomena in flat-band systems, e.g., they may suppress superconductivity especially when there exists a large spin imbalance.

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