Abstract

We examine the interplay between disorder and fractionality in a one-dimensional tight-binding Anderson model. In the absence of disorder, we observe that the two lowest energy eigenvalues detach themselves from the bottom of the band, as fractionality s is decreased, becoming completely degenerate at s=0, with a common energy equal to a half bandwidth, V. The remaining N−2 states become completely degenerate forming a flat band with energy equal to a bandwidth, 2V. Thus, a gap is formed between the ground state and the band. In the presence of disorder and for a fixed disorder width, a decrease in s reduces the width of the point spectrum while for a fixed s, an increase in disorder increases the width of the spectrum. For all disorder widths, the average participation ratio decreases with s showing a tendency towards localization. However, the average mean square displacement (MSD) shows a hump at low s values, signaling the presence of a population of extended states, in agreement with what is found in long-range hopping models.

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