A Criterion for Strange Metallicity in the Lorenz Ratio

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A Criterion for Strange Metallicity in the Lorenz Ratio

Authors

Evyatar Tulipman, Erez Berg

Abstract

The Wiedemann-Franz (WF) law, stating that the Lorenz ratio L=κ/(Tσ)L = \kappa/(T\sigma) between the thermal and electrical conductivities in a metal approaches a universal constant L0=π2kB2/(3e2)L_0=\pi^2 k_B^2/ (3 e^2) at low temperatures, is often interpreted as a signature of fermionic Landau quasi-particles. In contrast, we show that various models of weakly disordered non-Fermi liquids also obey the WF law at T0T \to 0. Instead, we propose using the leading low-temperature correction to the WF law, L(T)L0L(T)-L_0 (proportional to the inelastic scattering rate), to distinguish different types of strange metals. As an example, we demonstrate that in a solvable model of a marginal Fermi liquid, L(T)L0TL(T)-L_0\propto -T. Using the quantum Boltzmann equation (QBE) approach, we find analogous behavior in a class of marginal- and non-Fermi liquids with a weakly momentum-dependent inelastic scattering. In contrast, in a Fermi liquid, L(T)L0L(T)-L_0 is proportional to T2-T^2. This holds even when the resistivity grows linearly with TT, due to TT-linear quasi-elastic scattering (as in the case of electron-phonon scattering at temperatures above the Debye frequency). Finally, by exploiting the QBE approach, we demonstrate that the transverse Lorenz ratio, Lxy=κxy/(Tσxy)L_{xy} = \kappa_{xy}/(T\sigma_{xy}), exhibits the same behavior.

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