Abstract

It is known that off-diagonal disorder results in anomalous localization at the band center, whereas diagonal disorder does not. We show that the important distinction is not between diagonal and off-diagonal disorder, but between bipartite and nonbipartite lattices. We prove that bipartite lattices in any dimension (and some generalizations that are not bipartite) have zero energy (i.e., band-center) eigenfunctions that vanish on one sublattice. We show that ln[vert bar][psi][sub [ital j]][vert bar] has random-walk behavior for one-dimensional systems with first-, or first- and third-neighbor random hopping, leading to exp([minus][lambda] [radical][ital r]) localization of the zero-energy eigenfunction. Addition of diagonal disorder leads to a [ital biased] random walk. First- and second-neighbor random hopping with no diagonal disorder leads to ordinary exponential [exp([minus][lambda][ital r])] localization. Numerical simulations show anomalous localization in dimensions 1 and 2, with additional periodic structure in some cases.

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