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Phys. Rev. B 80, 165113 (2009) [24 pages]

Quantum phase transitions in a charge-coupled Bose-Fermi Anderson model

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Mengxing Cheng1,*, Matthew T. Glossop2, and Kevin Ingersent1
1Department of Physics, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611-8440, USA
2Physics and Astronomy Department, Rice University, 6100 Main Street, Houston, Texas 77005, USA

Received 30 July 2009; published 9 October 2009

We study the competition between Kondo physics and dissipation within an Anderson model of a magnetic impurity level that hybridizes with a metallic host and is also coupled, via the impurity charge, to the displacement of a bosonic bath having a spectral density proportional to ωs. As the impurity-bath coupling increases from zero, the effective Coulomb interaction between two electrons in the impurity level is progressively renormalized from its repulsive bare value until it eventually becomes attractive. For weak hybridization, this renormalization in turn produces a crossover from a conventional spin-sector Kondo effect to a charge Kondo effect. At particle-hole symmetry, and for sub-Ohmic bath exponents 0<s<1, further increase in the impurity-bath coupling results in a continuous zero-temperature transition to a broken-symmetry phase in which the ground-state impurity occupancy n̂d acquires an expectation value n̂d0≠1. The response of the impurity occupancy to a locally applied electric potential features the hyperscaling of critical exponents and ωT scaling that are expected at an interacting critical point. The numerical values of the critical exponents suggest that the transition lies in the same universality class as that of the sub-Ohmic spin-boson model. For the Ohmic case s=1, the transition is instead of Kosterlitz-Thouless type. Away from particle-hole symmetry, the quantum phase transition is replaced by a smooth crossover but signatures of the symmetric quantum critical point remain in the physical properties at elevated temperatures and/or frequencies.

© 2009 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.80.165113
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.80.165113
PACS:
71.10.Hf, 75.20.Hr, 73.43.Nq, 05.10.Cc

*mxcheng@phys.ufl.edu