Abstract

The interplay of Coulomb repulsion and geometrical frustration on charge-driven quantum phase transitions is explored. The ground state phase diagram of an extended Hubbard model on an anisotropic triangular lattice relevant to quarter-filled layered organic materials contains homogeneous metal, 'pinball' and three-fold charge ordered metallic phases. The stability of the 'pinball' phase occurring for strong Coulomb repulsions is found to be strongly influenced by geometrical frustration. A comparison with a spinless model reproduces the transition from the homogeneous metallic phase to a pinball liquid, which indicates that the spin correlations should play a much smaller role than the charge correlations in the metallic phase close to the charge ordering transition. Spin degeneracy is, however, essential to describe the dependence of the system on geometrical frustration. Based on finite temperature Lanczos diagonalization we find that the effective Fermi temperature scale, T*, of the homogeneous metal vanishes at the quantum phase transition to the ordered metallic phase driven by the Coulomb repulsion. Above this temperature scale 'bad' metallic behavior is found which is robust against geometrical frustration in general. Quantum critical phenomena are not found whenever nesting of the Fermi surface is strong, possibly indicating a first order transition instead. 'Reentrant' behavior in the phase diagram is encountered whenever the 2kF-CDW instability competes with the Coulomb driven three-fold charge order transition. The relevance of our results to the family of quarter-filled materials: theta-(BEDT-TTF)2X is discussed.

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