6533b862fe1ef96bd12c6de3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Renormalization group analysis of thermal transport in the disordered Fermi liquid

Alexander M. Finkel'steinAlexander M. Finkel'steinAlexander M. Finkel'steinGeorg SchwieteGeorg Schwiete

subject

PhysicsStrongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el)Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsSigma modelFOS: Physical sciencesPartition function (mathematics)Renormalization groupCondensed Matter Physics5307. Clean energy3. Good healthElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsGravitationCondensed Matter - Strongly Correlated ElectronsThermal conductivityCorrelation functionQuantum mechanicsQuantum electrodynamicsMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)Fermi liquid theoryQuantum

description

We present a detailed study of thermal transport in the disordered Fermi liquid with short-range interactions. At temperatures smaller than the impurity scattering rate, i.e., in the diffusive regime, thermal conductivity acquires non-analytic quantum corrections. When these quantum corrections become large at low temperatures, the calculation of thermal conductivity demands a theoretical approach that treats disorder and interactions on an equal footing. In this paper, we develop such an approach by merging Luttinger's idea of using gravitational potentials for the analysis of thermal phenomena with a renormalization group calculation based on the Keldysh nonlinear sigma model. The gravitational potentials are introduced in the action as auxiliary sources that couple to the heat density. These sources are a convenient tool for generating expressions for the heat density and its correlation function from the partition function. Already in the absence of the gravitational potentials, the nonlinear sigma model contains several temperature-dependent renormalization group charges. When the gravitational potentials are introduced into the model, they acquire an independent renormalization group flow. We show that this flow preserves the phenomenological form of the correlation function, reflecting its relation to the specific heat and the constraints imposed by energy conservation. The main result of our analysis is that the Wiedemann-Franz law holds down to the lowest temperatures even in the presence of disorder and interactions and despite the quantum corrections that arise for both the electric and thermal conductivities.

https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.90.155441