Extended Drude model has been used to obtain information of correlations from measured optical spectra of strongly correlated electron systems. The optical self-energy can be defined by the extended Drude model formalism. One can extract the optical selfenergy and the electron-boson spectral density function from measured reflectance spectra using a well-developed usual process, which is consistent with several steps including the extended Drude model and generalized Allen's formulas. Here we used a reverse process of the usual process to investigate the extended Drude analysis when an additional low-energy interband transition is included. We considered two typical electron-boson spectral density model functions for two different (normal and d-wave superconducting) material states. Our results show that the low-energy interband transition might give significant effects on the electron-boson spectral density function obtained using the usual process. However, we expect that the low-energy interband transition can be removed from measured spectra in a proper way if the transition is well-defined or well-known.
목차
Abstract 1. INTRODUCTION 2. THEORETICAL FORMALISM 3. RESULTS OF MODEL CALCULATIONS AND DISCUSSIONS 4. LOW-ENERGY INTERBAND TRANSITION EFFECTS ON EXTENDED DRUDE MODEL ANALYSIS 5. CONCLUSIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENT REFERENCES
키워드
extended Drude modeloptical self-energyelectron-boson spectral density functionlow-energy interband transition
저자
Jungseek Hwang [ Department of Physics, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Gyeonggi-do, 61419, Republic of Korea ]
Corresponding Author