Slave boson

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The slave boson method is a technique for dealing with models of strongly correlated systems, providing a method to second-quantize valence fluctuations within a restrictive manifold of states. In the 1960s the physicist John Hubbard introduced an operator, now named the "Hubbard operator"[1] to describe the creation of an electron within a restrictive manifold of valence configurations. Consider for example, a rare earth or actinide ion in which strong Coulomb interactions restrict the charge fluctuations to two valence states, such as the Ce4+(4f0) and Ce3+ (4f1) configurations of a mixed-valence cerium compound. The corresponding quantum states of these two states are the singlet |f0 state and the magnetic |f1:σ state, where σ=, is the spin. The fermionic Hubbard operators that link these states are then

Xσ0=|f1:σf0|,X0σ=|f0f1:σ| (1)

The algebra of operators is closed by introducing the two bosonic operators

X00=|f0f0|,Xαβ=|f1:αf1:β|. (2)

Together, these operators satisfy the graded Lie algebra

[Xab,Xcd]±=Xadδbc±Xcbδad (3)

where the [A,B]±=AB±BA and the sign is chosen to be negative, unless both A and B are fermions, in which case it is positive. The Hubbard operators are the generators of the super group SU(2|1). This non-canonical algebra means that these operators do not satisfy a Wick's theorem, which prevents a conventional diagrammatic or field theoretic treatment. In 1983 Piers Coleman introduced the slave boson formulation of the Hubbard operators,[2] which enabled valence fluctuations to be treated within a field-theoretic approach.[3] In this approach, the spinless configuration of the ion is represented by a spinless "slave boson" |f0=b|0, whereas the magnetic configuration |f1:σ=fσ|0 is represented by an Abrikosov slave fermion. From these considerations, it is seen that the Hubbard operators can be written as

Xσ0=fσb,X0σ=bfσ (4)

and

X00=bb,Xαβ=fαfβ. (5)

This factorization of the Hubbard operators faithfully preserves the graded Lie algebra. Moreover, the Hubbard operators so written commute with the conserved quantity

Q=bb+α=,fαfα. (5)

In Hubbard's original approach, Q=1, but by generalizing this quantity to larger values, higher irreducible representations of SU(2|1) are generated. The slave boson representation can be extended from two component to N component fermions, where the spin index α[1,N] runs over N values. By allowing N to become large, while maintaining the ratio Q/N, it is possible to develop a controlled large-N expansion. The slave boson approach has since been widely applied to strongly correlated electron systems, and has proven useful in developing the resonating valence bond theory (RVB) of high temperature superconductivity[4][5] and the understanding of heavy fermion compounds.[6]

Bibliography

  1. Hubbard, John (1964). "Electron correlations in narrow energy bands. II. The degenerate band case". Proc. R. Soc. Lond. A. 277 (1369). The Royal Society: 237–259. Bibcode:1964RSPSA.277..237H. doi:10.1098/rspa.1964.0019. S2CID 122573530.
  2. Piers Coleman (1984). "A New Approach to the Mixed Valence Problem". Phys. Rev. B. 29 (6). The American Physical Society: 3035–3044. Bibcode:1984PhRvB..29.3035C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.29.3035.
  3. N. Read and D. M. Newns (1983). "A new functional integral formalism for the degenerate Anderson model". Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics. 16 (29): L1055–L1060. doi:10.1088/0022-3719/16/29/007.
  4. P. W. Anderson; G. Baskaran; Z. Zhou; T. Hsu (1987). "Resonating–valence-bond theory of phase transitions and superconductivity in La2CuO4-based compounds". Physical Review Letters. 58 (26). The American Physical Society: 2790–2793. Bibcode:1987PhRvL..58.2790A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.58.2790. PMID 10034850.
  5. G. Kotliar and J. Liu (1988). "Superexchange mechanism and d-wave superconductivity". Physical Review B. 38 (7). The American Physical Society: 5142–5145. Bibcode:1988PhRvB..38.5142K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.38.5142. PMID 9946940.
  6. A. J. Millis; P.A. Lee (1986). "Large-orbital-degeneracy expansion for the lattice Anderson model". Physical Review B. 35 (7). The American Physical Society: 3394–3414. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.35.3394. PMID 9941843.