Abstract

We use the two-dimensional Fermion-Boson mapping to perform a field theory analysis of the effective Lagrangian model for incommensurate charge-density waves (ICDW) in one-dimensional systems. We consider an approach in which both the phase of the complex phonon field and the electron field are dynamical degrees of freedom contributing to the quantum dynamics and symmetry-related features of the ICDW phenomenon. We obtain the bosonized and fermionized versions of the effective electron–phonon Lagrangian. The phase of the phonon field and the phase of the bosonized chiral density of the electron field condense as a soliton order parameter, carrying neither the charge nor the chirality of the electron–phonon system, leading to a periodic sine-Gordon potential. The phonon field is fermionized in terms of a chiral fermionic condensate and the effective model is mapped into the chiral Gross–Neveu (GN) model with two Fermi field species. The linked electron–phonon symmetry of the ICDW system is mapped into the chiral symmetry of the GN model. Within the functional integral formulation, we obtain for the vacuum expectation value of the phonon field < ϕ > = 0 and < ϕ ϕ* > ≠ 0, due to the charge selection rule associated with the chiral electron–phonon symmetry. We show that the two-point correlation function of the phonon field satisfies the cluster decomposition property, as required by the chiral symmetry of the underlying GN model. The quantum description of the ICDW corresponds to charge transport through the lattice, due to the propagation of a "Goldstone mode" carrying the effective charge of the electron–phonon system, is accomplished by an electron–lattice energy redistribution. This accounts for a dynamical Peierls's energy gap generation.

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