학술논문

Commensurate-incommensurate transition in frustrated Wigner crystals
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons
Language
Abstract
Geometric frustration in systems with long-range interactions is a largely unexplored phenomenon. In this work we analyse the ground state emerging from the competition between a periodic potential and a Wigner crystal in one dimension, consisting of a selforganized chain of particles with the same charge. This system is a paradigmatic realization of the Frenkel-Kontorova model with Coulomb interactions. We derive the action of a Coulomb soliton in the continuum limit and demonstrate the mapping to a massive (1+1) Thirring model with long-range interactions. Here, the solitons are charged fermionic excitations over an effective Dirac sea. The mismatch between the periodicities of potential and chain, giving rise to frustration, is a chemical potential whose amplitude is majorly determined by the Coulomb self-energy. The mean-field limit is a long-range antiferromagnetic spin chain with uniform magnetic field and predicts that the commensurate, periodic structures form a complete devil's staircase as a function of the charge density. Each step of the staircase correspond to the interval of stability of a stable commensurate phase and scales with the number $N$ of charges as $1/\ln N$. This implies that there is no commensurate-incommensurate phase transition in the thermodynamic limit. For finite systems, however, the ground state has a fractal structure that could be measured in experiments with laser-cooled ions in traps.