ECFL theory accounts for density-dependent quasilinear resistivity, small quasiparticle weight, and emergent low-T scales in single-layer high-Tc systems via the t-J model.
Extremely correlated Fermi liquid theory meets Dynamical mean-field theory: Analytical insights into the doping-driven Mott transition
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abstract
We consider a doped Mott insulator in the large dimensionality limit within both the recently developed Extremely Correlated Fermi Liquid (ECFL) theory and the Dynamical Mean-Field Theory (DMFT). We show that the general structure of the ECFL sheds light on the rich frequency-dependence of the DMFT self-energy. Using the leading Fermi-liquid form of the two key auxiliary functions introduced in the ECFL theory, we obtain an analytical ansatz which provides a good quantitative description of the DMFT self-energy down to hole doping level 0.2. In particular, the deviation from Fermi-liquid behavior and the corresponding particle-hole asymmetry developing at a low energy scale are well reproduced by this ansatz. The DMFT being exact at large dimensionality, our study also provides a benchmark of the ECFL in this limit. We find that the main features of the self-energy and spectral line-shape are well reproduced by the ECFL calculations in the O(\lambda^2) `minimal scheme', for not too low doping level >0.3. The DMFT calculations reported here are performed using a state-of-the-art numerical renormalization-group impurity solver, which yields accurate results down to an unprecedentedly small doping level 0.001.
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Overview of the Theory of Extremely Correlated Fermi Liquids
ECFL theory accounts for density-dependent quasilinear resistivity, small quasiparticle weight, and emergent low-T scales in single-layer high-Tc systems via the t-J model.