4.6 Article

One- and two-particle properties of the weakly interacting two-dimensional Hubbard model in proximity to the van Hove singularity

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 106, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.106.035145

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2022-03882, RGPIN-2015-04306]

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In this study, we investigate the properties of the t-t'-U Hubbard model on a two-dimensional square lattice in the weak-coupling limit using a direct perturbative approach. We find that for nonzero t', the resonance excitations exhibit different behaviors at different densities, which are related to the van Hove singularity of the noninteracting dispersion. We also observe a significant reduction in compressibility and a behavioral change in double occupancy near the van Hove singularity.
We study the weak-coupling limit of the t - t ' - U Hubbard model on a two-dimensional square lattice using a direct perturbative approach. Aided by symbolic computational tools, we compute the longitudinal density-density correlation functions in the chi(up down arrow) and chi(up down arrow) basis from which we can obtain the dynamical spin and charge susceptibilities at arbitrary doping and temperature. We find that for nonzero t ', the zero-frequency commensurate q = (pi, pi) spin and charge excitations are each strongest at different densities and we observe a clear behavioral change that appears tied to the van Hove singularity of the noninteracting dispersion upon which the perturbative expansion is built. We find a strongly reduced compressibility in the vicinity of the van Hove singularity as well as a behavioral change in the double occupancy. For finite t ', the observed van Hove singularity occurs away from half filling, leading us to conclude that this reduction in compressibility is distinct from the Mott insulating physics that one expects in the strong-coupling regime. We compute the full dynamical spin and charge excitations and observe distinct structure for electron- and hole-doped scenarios, in agreement with experiments on cuprate materials. Finally, we observe a peculiar splitting in spin and charge excitations in the vicinity of the van Hove singularity, the origin of which is traced to a splitting near the bottom of the band.

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