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Some beautiful theories can be carried over

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Title: Some beautiful theories can be carried over


1
Studying Nanophysics UsingMethods from High
Energy Theory
  • Some beautiful theories can be carried over
  • from one field of physics to another
  • -eg. High Energy to Condensed Matter
  • The unreasonable effectiveness of
  • Mathematics in the Natural Sciences

2
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3
Renormalization Group
  • Low energy effective Hamiltonians sometimes
  • have elegant, symmetric and universal form
  • despite forbidding looking form of microscopic
  • models
  • These effective Hamiltonians sometimes
  • contain running coupling constants that
  • depend on characteristic energy/length scale

4
Bosonization Conformal Field Theory
  • Interactions between nano-structures and
  • macroscopic non-interacting electron gas can
  • often be reduced to effective models in
  • (11) dimensions
  • -eg. by projecting into s-wave channel
  • This can allow application of these powerful
  • methods of quantum field theory in (11) D

5
  • Another way of seeing the influence of
  • High Energy Physics on Condensed Matter
  • Physics is to look at some academic
  • family trees
  • -eg. Condensed Matter Theory group
  • At Boston University

6
Ed Witten
Lenny Susskind
Eduardo Fradkin
Xiaogang Wen
Claudio Chamon
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8
D-branes in string theory
Boundary conformal field theory
Quantum dots interacting with leads in
nanostructures
9
The Kondo Problem
  • A famous model on which many ideas of RG
  • were first developed, including perhaps
  • asymptotic freedom
  • Describes a single quantum spin interacting
  • with conduction electrons in a metal
  • Since all interactions are at r0 only we can
  • normally reformulate model in (11) D

10
Continuum formulation
  • 2 flavors of Dirac fermions on ½-line
  • interacting with impurity spin (S1/2) at origin
  • (implicit sum over spin index)
  • ?eff is small at high energies but gets large
  • at low energies
  • The Kondo Problem was how to understand
  • low energy behaviour (like quark confinement?)

11
  • A lattice version of model is useful for
  • understanding strong coupling (as in Q.C.D.)

12
  • at J?? fixed point, 1 electron is
  • confined at site 1 and forms a spin
  • singlet with the impurity spin
  • electrons on sites 2, 3, are free
  • except they cannot enter or leave site 1
  • In continuum model this corresponds
  • to a simple change in boundary condition
  • ?L(0)?R(0)
  • (- sign at ?0, sign at ???)

13
  • at J?? fixed point, 1 electron is
  • confined at site 1 and forms a spin
  • singlet with the impurity spin
  • electrons on sites 2, 3, are free
  • except they cannot enter or leave site 1
  • In continuum model this corresponds
  • to a simple change in boundary condition
  • ?L(0)?R(0)
  • (- sign at ?0, sign at ???)

14
  • A description of low energy behavior
  • actually focuses on the other, approximately
  • free, electrons, not involved in the singlet
  • formation
  • These electrons have induced self-interactions,
  • localized near r0, resulting from screening
  • of impurity spin
  • These interactions are irrelevant and
  • corresponding corrections to free electron
  • behavior vanish as energy ?0

15
  • a deep understanding of how this works
  • can be obtained using bosonization
  • i.e. replace free fermions by free bosons
  • this allows representation of the spin
  • and charge degrees of freedom of electrons
  • by independent boson fields
  • it can then be seen that the Kondo interaction
  • only involves the spin boson field
  • an especially elegant version is Wittens
  • non-abelian bosonization which involves
  • non-trivial conformal field theories

16
Boundary Critical Phenomena Boundary CFT
  • Very generally, 1D Hamiltonians which
  • are massless/critical in the bulk with
  • interactions at the boundary renormalize
  • to conformally invariant boundary
  • conditions at low energies
  • Basic Kondo model is a trivial example
  • where low energy boundary condition
  • leaves fermions non-interacting
  • A local Fermi liquid fixed point

17
bulk exponent ?
r
exponent, ? depends on universality class of
boundary
Boundary layer non-universal
Boundary - dynamics
18
  • for non-Fermi liquid boundary conditions,
  • boundary exponents ?bulk exponents
  • trivial free fermion bulk exponents
  • turn into non-trivial boundary exponents
  • due to impurity interactions

19
simplest example of a non-Fermi liquid
model -fermions have a channel index as well
as the spin index
(assume 2 channels a is summed from 1 to
2) -again J(T) gets larger as we lower T -but now
J?? is not a stable fixed point
20
-if J?? 2 electrons get trapped at site 1 and
overscreen S1/2 impurity -this implies that
stable low energy fixed point of renormalization
group is at intermediate coupling and is not a
Fermi liquid
J
x
?
0
Jc
21
using field theory methods, this low energy
behavior is described by a Wess-Zumino-Witten
conformal field theory (with Kac-Moody central
charge k2) -this field theory approach predicts
exact critical behavior -various other
nanostructures with several quantum dots and
several channels also exhibit non-Fermi liquid
behavior and can be solved by Conformal Field
Theory/ Renormalization Group methods
22
the recent advent of precision experimental techni
ques have lead to a quest for experimental
realizations of this novel physics in nanoscale
systems
23
Cr Trimers on Au (111) Surfacea non-Fermi
liquid fixed point
Au
Cr (S5/2)
  • Cr atoms can be manipulated
  • and tunnelling current measured using
  • a Scanning Tunnelling Microscope
  • (M. Crommie)

24
STM tip
25
Semi-conductor Quantum Dots
gates
AlGaAs
2DEG
GaAs
26
controllable gates
dot
lead
.1 microns
dots have S1/2 for some gate voltages dot ?
impurity spin in Kondo model
27
These field theory techniques, predict, for
example, that the conductance through a
2-channel Kondo system scales with bias voltage
as
non-Fermi liquid exponent -many other low energy
properties predicted
28
-the highly controllable interactions between
semi-conductor quantum dots makes them an
attractive candidate for qubits in a future
quantum computer
29
the Boston University condensed matter group,
which Larry Sulak played a vital role in
assembling, is well-positioned to make important
contributions to future developments in
nano-science using methods from high energy
theory (among other methods)
30
Semi-conductor Quantum Dots
gates
AlGaAs
2DEG
lead
GaAs
dot
dots have s1/2 for some gate voltages
31
  • 2 doublet (s1/2) groundstates
  • with opposite helicity
  • ?gt?exp?i2?/3?gt under Si?Si1
  • represent by s1/2 spin operators Saimp
  • and p1/2 pseudospin operators ?aimp
  • 3 channels of conduction electrons
  • couple to the trimer
  • these can be written in a basis of
  • pseudo-spin eigenstates, p-1,0,1

32
only essential relevant Kondo interaction
(pseudo-spin label)
  • we have found exact conformally
  • invariant boundary condition by
  • 1. conformal embedding
  • 2. fusion

33
We first represent the c6 free fermion bulk
theory in terms of Wess-Zumino-Witten non-linear
? models And a parafermion CFT O(12)1 ? SU(2)3
x SU(2)3 x SU(2)8 (spin)
(isospin) (pseudospin) C3k/(2k) for WZW
NL?M C9/59/512/56 SU(2)8 Z8 x U(1) C7/5
1 12/5
34
  • We go from the free fermion boundary
  • condition to the fixed point b.c. by
  • a sequence of fusion operations
  • Fuse with
  • s3/2 operator in SU(2)3 (spin) sector
  • s1/2 operator in SU(2)8 (pseudospin)
  • ?02 parafermion operator

35
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