Transport properties of strongly correlated Fermi systems

In our short review, we consider the transport properties of strongly correlated Fermi systems like heavy fermion metals and high-$T_c$ superconductors. Their transport properties are defined by strong inter-particle interaction forming flat bands in these compounds. Indeed, in contrast to the behavior of the transport properties of conventional metals, the strongly correlated compounds exhibit the linear in temperature resistivity, $\rho(T)\propto T$. We analyze the magnetoresistance and show that it under the application of magnetic field becomes negative. It is shown that near a quantum phase transition, when the density of electronic states diverges, semiclassical physics remains applicable to describe the resistivity $\rho$ of strongly correlated metals due to the presence of a transverse zero-sound collective mode, representing the phonon mode in solids. We demonstrate that when $T$ exceeds the extremely low Debye temperature $T_D$, the resistivity $\rho(T)$ changes linearly with $T$, since the mechanism of formation of the $T$-dependence $\rho(T)$ is similar electron-phonon mechanism, which predominates at high temperatures in ordinary metals. Thus, in the region of $T$-linear resistance, electron-phonon scattering leads to a lifetime of $\tau$ quasiparticles practically independent of the material, which is expressed as the ratio of the Planck constant $\hbar$ to the Boltzmann constant constant $k_B$, $T\tau\sim \hbar/k_B$. We explain that due to the non-Fermi-liquid behavior the real part of the frequency-dependent optical conductivity $\sigma^R_{opt}(\omega)$ exhibits a scaling behavior, and demonstrates the unusual power law behavior $\sigma^R_{opt}(\omega)\propto\omega^{-1}$, rather than the well-known one shown by conventional metals, $\sigma^R_{opt}(\omega)\propto\omega^{-2}$.


INTRODUCTION
An explanation of the rich and striking behavior of strongly correlated electron liquid in heavy fermion (HF) metals, high-temperature superconductors, quasicrystals, and etc is among the main problems of condensed matter physics.Quantum phase transitions (QPT) define the non-Fermi liquid (NFL) low-temperature properties of strongly correlated Fermi systems.Their behavior in the NFL state is so radical that the traditional quasiparticle Landau paradigm cannot describe it.The underlying nature of QPT continues to challenge theoretical understanding.Attempts have been made to use concepts such as the Kondo lattice and quantum and thermal fluctuations in QPT [1][2][3][4][5].Alas, when these approaches are designed to describe one property considered central, they cannot explain others, even the simplest ones, such as the Kadowaki-Woods relation [6,8].This relationship, which naturally arises with the leading role of quasiparticles of the effective mass M * , can hardly be explained within * Electronic address: vrshag@thd.pnpi.spb.ru the framework of a theory that assumes the absence of quasiparticles, see e.g.[8][9][10][11].Arguments that quasiparticles in strongly correlated Fermi liquids get heavy and die during QPT are usually based on the assumption that the quasiparticle weight factor Z vanishes at the point of the corresponding second-order phase transition [12,13] .However, this scenario does not correspond to experimental facts [8,14,15].Numerous experimental facts have been discussed within the framework of such a concept, but how it can quantitatively explain the physics of HF metals remains an open question.The theory of fermion condensation was proposed and developed, preserving quasiparticles.The fermion condensation (FC) takes place at the topological fermion condensation quantum phase transition (FCQPT), and leads to both flat bands, that have been predicted in 1990 [16], and to the unlimited growth of the effective mass M * ; at the same time, the extensive research has shown that this theory provides an adequate theoretical explanation for the vast majority of experimental results with various HF metals [8][9][10][11][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23].Unlike the Landau paradigm, which is based on the assumption that M * is an approximately constant, in the FC theory, M * strongly depends on temperature T , applied magnetic field B and etc.It is im-portant to note that the extended quasiparticle paradigm has been introduced.The essential point is that, as before, well-defined quasiparticles determine the thermodynamic and transport properties of strongly correlated Fermi systems [8].Indeed, the width of quasiparticles tends to zero at T → 0, and they are well-defined excitations up to T ∼ 100 K [7,8].In fact, this observation is in accordance with numerous experimental observations; for example, the typical behavior of the heat capacity of HF metals defined by quasiparticles is observed in wide range of temperatures, see e.g.[8].The dependence of the effective mass M * on T and B leads to both the observed NFL behavior and the restoration of the Landau Fermi liquid behavior at low temperatures under the application of magnetic fields [8][9][10][11].The most fruitful strategy for studying and uncovering the nature of QPT is to focus on those properties that exhibit the most dramatic deviations from the Landau Fermi liquid (LFL) behavior of ordinary metals at low temperatures [24][25][26].
In our review we consider the transport properties that allow one to disclose the nature of QPT governing the behavior HF metals.In particular, measurements of the magnetoresistance clarifies the dependence of the effective mass M * on applied magnetic field B, since, in contrast to ordinary metals, the magnetoresistance becomes negative under the application of B, see e.g.[27][28][29].This point is considered in Sections 2 and 3. Relationships between the NFL resistivity ρ(T ) ∝ T and so called the Planckian limit open new possibilities to analyze the properties of QPT that governs the transport properties of HF metals [30,31], see Sections 4 and 5. Precise experimental measurements of the optical conductivity of HF metals YbRh 2 Si 2 and La 2−x Sr x CuO 4 have been carried out, see e.g.[32,33] which probe the nature of their QPT.It was discovered that at low temperatures the optical conductivity is very different from the well-known optical conductivity of ordinary metals [32,33] see Sections 4 and 6.Section 2 we consider general properties of the effective mass M * in magnetic fields.Section 7 is devoted to the main conclusion of our review.

THE BEHAVIOR OF THE EFFECTIVE MASS
We start with analyzing the scaling behavior of the effective mass M * and the schematic T − B phase diagram of HF metals based on the homogeneous HF liquid, thereby avoiding complications associated with the crystalline anisotropy of solids [8,10].Before the topological FCQPT, the temperature and magnetic field dependences of the effective mass M * (T, B) is governed by the Landau equation [24][25][26] 1 ( where F σ,σ1 (p F , p) is the Landau interaction, p F is the Fermi momentum, and σ is the spin label.We note that Eq. ( 1) is an exact one, as it can be shown within the framework of the Density Function Theory, see e.g.[8,10,34].To simplify matters, we ignore the spin dependence of the effective mass, noting that M * (T, B) is nearly independent of spin in weak fields.The quasiparticle distribution function n(p, T ) is given by where ε(p, T ) is the single-particle spectrum.In the case being considered, the spectrum depends on spin only weakly.However, the chemical potential µ σ depends non-trivially on spin due to the Zeeman splitting, µ ± = µ ± Bµ B , where ± corresponds to states with the spin "up" or "down."Numerical and analytical solutions of this equation show that the dependence of the effective mass M * (T, B) on the temperature T and magnetic field B leads to the appearance of three different regimes with increasing temperature.The Fermi-Dirac distribution function can presented as follows where µ is the chemical potential and n(p) is the quasiparticle occupation number.In the theory of fermion condensation, if the system is located near the topological FCQPT on its ordered side, the quasiparticle occupation number loses its temperature dependence at sufficiently low T [7,8,16].In the interval p i ≤ p ≤ p f the quasiparticle distribution function n(p) < 1, therefore the logarithm in Eq. ( 3) is finite and at T = 0 the product on the right hand side of Eq. ( 3) is zero.As a result, on the ordered side of the topological FCQPT the spectrum contains a flat band [7,8,16] The existence of the solution of Eq. ( 4) means that the single-particle spectrum ε(p, T ) has a flat band.Since ε(p) = µ in the range p i ≤ p ≤ p f , the Fermi surface spreads into a Fermi band, that is in the case of the three dimensional Fermi sphere the two dimensional Fermi surface transforms into three dimensional structure.Obviously, this transformation gives rise to a change in the topological structure of the single particle Green function, which makes us refer to the systems with FC as a new class of Fermi liquids being different from both the Landau Fermi liquid [24] and the marginal Fermi liquid, see e.g.[35], and with its specific topological charge [17,20].We note that Eqs. ( 3) and ( 4) are exact, see e.g.[8,10,34] It is seen from Eq. (3) that at any finite temperature the flat band given by Eq. ( 4) vanishes and the effective mass becomes finite [8,36].On the disordered side, at finite B and sufficiently low temperatures T we have the LFL state with M * (T ) ≃ M * +aT 2 , where a is a positive constant.Thus, the effective mass grows as a function of T , reaching a maximum M * M at a certain temperature T M and then decreasing, see, for example [8,36,37] M * (T ) ∝ T −2/3 . (5) The application of magnetic field restores the LFL be- as it is seen from Fig. 1.Note that in some cases the critical magnetic field B c0 that tunes HF metal to its FC-QPT can be zero, B c0 = 0.For instance, the HF metal CeRu 2 Si 2 is characterized by B c0 = 0 and shows no signs of magnetic ordering, superconductivity, or the LFL behavior down to the lowest temperatures [38].Moreover, the closer the control parameter B is to its critical value B c0 = 0, the higher the growth rate.In this case, the peak value of M * M also increases, but the temperature T M , at which M * reaches its maximum value, decreases, and At T > T M the LFL behavior disappears.When the system is near FCQPT, the approximate interpolation solution to the equation (1) has the form [8] Here, T N = T /T M is the normalized temperature, with c 0 = (1 + c 2 )/(1 + c 1 ) in terms of fitting parameters c 1 and c 2 .Since the magnetic field enters Eq. (2) in the form µ B B/T , we conclude that where µ B is the Bohr magneton.It follows from Eq. ( 8) that As a result, we conclude from Eqs. ( 8) and ( 9) that M N (y) exhibits the scaling behavior as a function of both the variables y = T /B and y = B/T .Equation (7) reveals the scaling behavior of the normalized effective mass M * N (T N = y): Values of the effective mass M * (T, B) at different magnetic fields B merge into a single mass value M * N in terms of the normalized variable T N ∝ T /B ∝ B/T [8,10].Figure 2 demonstrates the scaling behavior of the normalized effective mass M * N versus the normalized temperature T N .The LFL phase prevails at T ≪ T M , followed by the T −2/3 regime at T ≳ T M .The latter phase is designated as NFL due to the strong dependence of the effective mass on temperature.The temperature region T ≃ T M covers the transition between the LFL regime with almost constant effective mass and the LPL behavior described by the equation (5).Thus, T ∼ T M defines a transition region characterized by the intersection of the LFL and NFL regimes.The inflection point T inf of M * N versus T N is depicted by arrow in Fig. 2. The transition (crossover) temperature T M (B) is not actually the temperature of a phase transition.Its specification is necessarily ambiguous because it depends on the criteria used to determine the point the crossover.Typically, the temperature T * (B) is obtained from the field dependence of charge transfer, for example, from the resistivity ρ(T ), determined by the expression where ρ 0 is the residual resistivity and A is a Tindependent coefficient.The term ρ 0 is ordinarily at- tributed to impurity scattering.The LFL state is characterized by the T β dependence of the resistivity with index β = 2.The schematic phase diagram of a HF metal is depicted in Fig. 3, with the magnetic field B serving as the control parameter.The crossover (through the transition regime shown as the hatched area in Fig. 3) takes place at temperatures where the resistance starts to deviate from LFL behavior, with the exponent β shifting from 2 into the range 1 < β < 2. At B = 0, HF metal acquires a flat band corresponding to a strongly degenerate state.
The NFL mode reigns at elevated temperatures and a fixed magnetic field.As B increases, the system moves from the NFL region to the LFL domain.As shown in Fig. 3, the system moves from NFL mode to LFL mode by the horizontal arrow, and from LFL mode to NFL mode by the vertical arrow.The magnetic field tuned QCP is indicated by an arrow and is located at the beginning of the phase diagram, since the application of a magnetic field destroys the flat band and transfers the system to the LFL state [8][9][10][11].The shaded area, denoting the transition region, separates the NFL state from the weakly polarized LFL state and contains the dashed line displaying T M (B).Referring to equation (9), this line is defined by T = a 1 µ B B. It is worth noting that that the transition from the NFL behavior the LFL taking place under application of magnetic field, as it is seen from Figs. 2 and 3, is the special property of the topological FCQPT and described by Eq. ( 7) [8,39].This important property is in a good agreement with experimental facts and allows one to use it as the versatile tool to explore the physics of HF compounds, including the violation of both the particle-hole symmetry and the time invariance symmetry; this violation is directly related to the concept of flat bands [8,40], see Sections 5 and 6.In contrast, these properties are not considered in a number of theories, including the theory of marginal Fermi liquid, see e.g.[35].

LONGITUDINAL MAGNETORESISTANCE
Consider a longitudinal magnetoresistance (LMR) as a function of B at fixed T .In that case, the classical contribution to LMR formed by orbital motion of carriers induced by the Lorentz force is small.In the LFL state, the Kadowaki-Woods relation is given by [6, 8] allows us to employ M * to construct the coefficient A, since γ 0 ∝ χ ∝ M * .Here γ 0 is the Sommerfeld coefficient and χ is the magnetic susceptibility.Omitting the classical contribution to LMR, we obtain that ρ(B, T ) − ρ 0 ∝ (M * ) 2 [39].The magnetic field dependence of the muon spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T µ 1 is given by [39,41] 1 where η is a const.We note here that experimentally observed relation follows explicitly from Eqs. ( 12) and ( 13) [39].Figure 4 shows the normalized values of both the magnetoresistance of YbRh 2 Si 2 [28,29] ρ and the muon spin-lattice relaxation rate of YbCu versus normalized magnetic field B N = B/B inf at different temperatures, shown in the legend.It is seen from Eqs. ( 6), ( 15) and ( 16) that both LMR and the the muon spin-lattice relaxation rate are diminishing functions of magnetic field B. This result is the vivid feature of the fermion condensation theory that allows one to evaluate the behavior the effective mass under the application of magnetic fields, see e.g.[8,40].
The normalization procedure deserves a remark here.Namely, since the magnetic field dependence (both theoretical and experimental) of 1/T µ 1 and LMR do not have 1 T )N versus normalized magnetic field BN .ρN was extracted from LMR of YbRh2Si2 at different temperatures [28,29] listed in the legend.Magnetic field dependence of normalized muon spin−lattice relaxation rate 1/T µ 1 T in YbCu4.4Au0.6 is shown by diamonds and extracted from [41].The data are normalized in the inflection point and shown by the arrow.The solid line represents our calculations, see Eqs. ( 6), ( 15) and (16).
"peculiar points" like extrema, the normalization have been performed in the inflection point, corresponding to maximum of corresponding derivative.It is seen that such procedure immediately reveals the universal magnetic field behavior of both the reciprocal relaxation time and LMR, showing their proportionality to the effective mass square, see Eqs. ( 15) and ( 16).This behavior obtained directly from the experimental findings is a vivid evidence that the above quantities behavior is predominantly governed by field B and temperature T dependence of the effective mass M * (B, T ) given by Eq. (7).We note that the entire field (and temperature) dependence of both 1/T µ 1 T and LMR is completely determined by corresponding dependence of the effective mass M * N shown in Fig. 2. The fact that the effective mass becomes field B, temperature T and the other external parameters dependent is the key consequence of the FC theory.Both the theoretical curve and the experimental data have been normalized by their inflection points, which also reveal the universal scaling behavior: The curves at different temperatures merge into single one in terms of scaled variable B N .Figure 4 shows clearly that both the normalized magnetoresistance ρ N and the muon spinlattice relaxation rate time 1/T µ 1 T well obeys the scaling behavior given by Eqs. ( 7), ( 15) and ( 16) and shown in Fig. 2.

LINEAR IN TEMPERATURE RESISTIVITY
To analyze the resistivity given by Eq. ( 10) at elevated temperatures T and under the application of magnetic field B, we assume that the electron system of HF metal contains a flat band.The flattening of the single-particle spectrum ε(p) is directly related to the problem being solved, since as a result of Umklapp processes, quasiparticles of the flat band create a contribution to ρ 0 indistinguishable from the contribution due to the scattering of impurities [42].Furthermore, it is crucial that the flat band somehow becomes destroyed at T → 0 and under the application of magnetic field the HF metal transits to the LFL state, see Fig. 3.This destruction entails a strong suppression of the flat-band contribution to ρ 0 [42].Before proceeding to the analysis of this destruction, we pay attention to vivid consequences of the flattening of ε(p) in strongly correlated Fermi systems.The theoretical possibility of this phenomenon and its consequences, also called swelling of the Fermi surface or the fermion condensation, was discovered a few decades ago [16,17,43], for recent reviews, see e.g.[8][9][10][11].At T = 0 the ground state of the flat-band system is degenerate, and so the occupation number n 0 (p) of single-particle states belonging to the flat band forming the fermion condensate are continuous functions of momentum that interpolate between standard LFL values {0, 1} in the area occupied by FC, see Eq. ( 4).This leads to an entropy excess (17) which does not contribute to the specific heat C(T ).It is seen from Eq. ( 17) that in contrast to the corresponding LFL entropy vanishing linearly as T → 0 the entropy of the system with the fermion condensate S(T → 0) → S 0 .In the theory of fermion condensation, the aforementioned ground-state degeneracy is lifted at any finite temperature, where FC acquires a small dispersion proportional to T , see Eq. (3).However, the removal of degeneracy with increasing temperature does not change the occupation number n 0 (p), which means that the excess entropy S 0 will persist down to zero temperature.To avoid a subsequent violation of Nernst's theorem, it is necessary to completely eliminate FC at T → 0. In the most natural scenario, this occurs through a SC phase transition, in which FC is destroyed with the appearance of a ∆ pairing gap in the single-particle spectrum [7,8,16].We assume that this scenario is realized in CeCoIn 5 at sufficiently weak magnetic fields, ensuring the elimination of the flat portion in the spectrum ε(p) and the removal of excess entropy S 0 [42].In stronger external magnetic fields B sufficient to terminate superconductivity in CeCoIn 5 , this path becomes ineffective, giving way to an alternative scenario involving a transition from the FC state to the LFL state with a multiply connected Fermi surface [8].In the phase diagram depicted in Fig. 3, such a crossover is indicated by the hatched area between the domains of NFL and LFL behavior and also by the line T M (B).In case of the HF metal CeCoIn 5 the end point of the curve T M (B) nominally separating NFL and LFL phases is the magnetic field inducing the topological FCQPT hidden in the SC state [42,44,45].This is the most characteristic feature of the phase diagram of the behavior of resistivity ρ(T, B).Since the entropies of the two phases are different, near the topological FCQPT the SC transition should become of the first order [8], which is consistent with the experimental fact [46].Moreover, under the application of sufficiently high magnetic field B, the LFL behavior remains in effect even ta T → 0. Thus, the imposition of magnetic field B drives the system in question from its SC phase to the LFL phase.As a result, the FC state or equivalently the flat portion of the spectrum ε(p), is destroyed.Thus, application of a high magnetic field to CeCoIn 5 is to cause a step-like drop in its residual resistivity ρ 0 , as it is seen experimentally [27].In addition, it should be expected that the higher the quality of the CeCoIn 5 single crystal, the stronger the suppression of ρ 0 .Now we consider the low-temperature transport properties of the normal state of CeCoIn 5 .We use a two-band model, one of which is assumed to be flat with dispersion given by equation ( 3), and the second band is assumed to have a single-particle LFL spectrum with finite T -independent dispersion [42].
We begin our consideration with the case when a HF metal in its normal state, where the resistivity is a linear function of T .This behavior is inherent in electronic systems with flat bands.Now we deifine the conductivity σ(T ) in terms of the imaginary part of the polarization operator Π(j) [26], where dυ is an element of momentum space, T (j, ω) is the vertex part, j is the electric current, and G R (p, ϵ) is the retarded quasiparticle Green function.The imaginary part reads in terms of the spectrum ε(p) and the damping γ related to the band with a finite value v F of the Fermi velocity.Applying gauge invariance, we get T (j, ω = 0) = e∂ε(p)/∂p .Substituting this equation into Eq.( 18) and doing some algebra, we arrive at the standard result where n is the number density of electrons.In ordinary pure metals obeying the LFL theory, the damping γ(T ) is proportional to T 2 , which leads to the Eq. ( 10) with β = 2.The NFL behavior of σ(T ) is due to the NFL dependence of γ(T ) on temperature associated with the presence of FC [42].In a standard situation, when the volume η occupied by FC is quite small, the overwhelming contribution to the transport is made by inelastic scattering, schematically presented in Figs.5a and 5b, where FC quasiparticles (highlighted by a double line) turn into normal quasiparticles; or vice versa, normal quasiparticles rotate into FC quasiparticles.The contributions of these processes to damping γ are estimated based on the simplified Equation: [26] γ(p, ε) where now the volume element in momentum space includes summation over different bands.The straightforward calculations give: where η denotes the volume of momentum space occupied by the flat band, and ϵ c is the characteristic constant defining the logarithmic term in Σ. Taking vertex corrections into account [26] provides transparent changes to Eq. ( 21) and cannot be held responsible for the effects discussed here.Note that Eq. ( 33) gives the lifetime τ of quasiparticles, where ℏ is Planck's constant, a 0 and a 1 are parameters.Combining Eqs. ( 22) and ( 23), we obtain F W H M ( m e V ) C e C o I n 5

T ( K )
T h e o r y FIG.6: The temperature dependence of the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the single-particle scattering rate of the main Kondo resonance [48] is shown by solid squares.
Where a 0 ∝ ρ 0 , a 1 and a 2 are parameters.This result is in good agreement with experimental facts [47,48], as it is seen from Fig. 6.Considering Eq. ( 23), one immediately see that ρ(T ) = ρ 0 + AT , i.e., the resistivity ρ(T ) of systems containing FC, is indeed a linear function of T , which is consistent with experimental data collected on CeCoIn 5 , see Fig. 6.Moreover, the ρ 0 term appears even if the metal has an ideal lattice and no impurities at all.

T -LINEAR RESISTIVITY AND PLANCKIAN LIMIT
The exotic experimentally observed properties of various classes of HF compunds still remain largely unexplained due to the lack of a universal underlying physical mechanism.These properties are usually attributed to the so-called non-Fermi-liquid (NFL) behavior.The latter behavior is widely observed in heavy fermion (HF) metals, graphene, and high T c (HTSC) superconductors.Experimental data collected at many of these systems show that at T = 0 some of them the excitation spectrum becomes dispersionless, which leads to flat bands, see e.g.[16-18, 49, 50].The presence of flat band indicates that the system is close to the topological fermioncondensation quantum phase transition (FCQPT) [16][17][18]49], leading to a the formation of flat band given by Eq. ( 4).Vivid experimental data on the linear temperature T dependence of resistivity ρ(T ) ∝ T , collected on HTSC, graphene, HF and ordinary metals, showed that the charge carrier scattering rate 1/τ reaches the so-called universal Planck limit 1/(T τ ) = k B /ℏ (k B and ℏ = h/2π are the Boltzmann and Planck constants, respectively) [30,31,49].Note that this is above the Planck limit used to explain the universal scattering rate in so-called Planck metals [30,31,49] can happen by chance because experimental manifestations in metals other than Planck can be just as well explained by more traditional physical mechanisms, such as those associated with phonon contributions [50].For example, ordinary metals exhibit a universal linear scattering rate at room and higher temperatures generated by well-known phonons, which are classical lattice excitations [30].It is shown that, within the framework of the theory of fermion condensation, semiclassical physics is still applicable to describe the universal scattering rate 1/τ experimentally observed in strongly correlated metals in their quantum critical region.This is due to the fact that the flat zones responsible for quantum criticality generate a transverse zero-sound mode, reminiscent of phonon mode in solids with Debye temperature T D [50,51].At T ≥ T D , the mechanism of linear temperature dependence of resistivity is the same in both ordinary and strongly correlated metals, and is represented by electron-phonon scattering.Consequently, it is the scattering of electrons on phonons at T ≥ T D that gives almost material independence of the lifetime τ .It is expressed as 1/(τ T ) ∼ k B /ℏ. Thus, the exciting experimental observations of universal scattering rate related to linear-temperature resistivity of a large number of both strongly correlated Fermi systems and conventional metals can be explained [30,31,[49][50][51].The observed scattering rate is well explained by the appearance of flat bands formed by the topological FQCPT, rather than by the so-called Planck limit at which the supposed Planck scattering rate occurs.At low temperatures, the observed resistivity in their normal state both HTSC and HF metals obeys linear law given by Eq. ( 10) with β = 1.On the other hand, at room temperature the T -linear resistivity is exhibited by conventional metals such as Al, Ag or Cu.In the case of a simple metal with a single pocket on the Fermi surface, the resistivity has the form e 2 nρ = p F /(τ v F ), where τ is the lifetime, e is the electronic charge, n is carrier concentration.The lifetime τ (or inverse scattering rate) of quasiparticles can be presented as we obtain [50] a where a 1 and a 2 are T -independent parameters.There are two challenging points for a theory.The first point is that experimental data confirm Eq. ( 26) for both strongly correlated metals (HF metals and HTSC) and ordinary ones, provided that these demonstrate the linear T -dependence of their resistivity [30], see Fig. 7.The second point is, that under the application of magnetic field, HF metals exhibit the LFL behavior, see Fig. 3.For example, the HF metal CeRu 2 Si 2 exhibits the LFL behavior under the application of magnetic field as small as the magnetic field of the Earth [38].Obviously, both of these two facts cannot be explained with the standard theories, see e.g.[35,52,53], since the ordinary metals have nothing to do with the Planckian limit; moreover, such a small magnetic field cannot destroy the limit, since the LFL behavior does not related with the limit.The  26) and (27).The region occupied by the conventional metals is highlighted by two (blue) arrows.The single (green) arrow shows the region of strongly correlated metals, including organic ones.Note, that at low temperatures T ≪ TD, the scattering rate per kelvin of a conventional metal is orders of magnitude lower, and does not correspond to the Planckian limit.The area occupied by ordinary metals is highlighted by two (blue) arrows.The single (green) arrow shows the region of strongly correlated metals, including organic ones.We emphasize that at low temperatures T ≪ TD the scattering rate per kelvin of an ordinary metal is orders of magnitude lower and is not in accordance with the Planck limit.
coefficient a 2 is always close to unity, 0.7 ≤ a 2 ≤ 2.7, despite the huge difference in the absolute values of ρ, T and Fermi velocities v F , which differ by two orders of magnitude [30].As a result, it follows from Eq. ( 25) that the T -linear scattering rate is of universal form, 1/(τ T ) ∼ k B /ℏ.This takes place in different systems displaying the T -linear dependence with parameter entering Eq. ( 26), a 2 ≃ 1 [30,50].Indeed, such a dependence is demonstrated by ordinary metals at temperatures above the Debye one, T ≥ T D , with an electron-phonon mechanism, as well as strongly correlated metals, that are supposed to be fundamentally different from ordinary ones, in which the linear dependence at their quantum criticality and temperatures of a few Kelvin are assumed to be due to electronic excitations rather than phonons [30].
As can be seen from Fig. 7, this scaling relation spans two orders of magnitude in v F , indicating the stability of the observed empirical law [30].This behavior is explained within the framework of the PC theory, since for both ordinary and strongly correlated metals, the scattering rate is determined by phonons [50,51].In the case of ordinary metals at T > T D it is well known that the main contribution to the linear dependence of resistivity is made by phonons.On the other hand, it is shown that semiclassical physics describes the T -linear dependence of the electrical resistance of strongly correlated metals at T > T D , since the flat bands forming quantum criticality generate a transverse zero-sound mode with the Debye temperature T D located inside area of quantum criticality [50,51].Consequently, the T -linear dependence is formed due to electron-phonon scattering both in ordinary metals and in strongly correlated ones.Thus, it is electron-phonon scattering that leads to almost material independence of the lifetime τ , which is expressed as We emphasize that the Planck limit can arise by chance: it is extremely unlikely that it will occur in ordinary metals, which obviously cannot be recognized as Planck limit with quantum criticality at high or low temperatures.
The fact that we observe the same universal scattering rate behavior in microscopically different highly correlated compounds such as HTSC, HF and common metals suggests that some general theory is needed to provide a unified explanation for the above set of materials and their behavior.We confidently conclude that FC theory is a responsible approach to explaining the physics of strongly correlated Fermi systems.

THE OPTICAL CONDUCTIVITY OF HEAVY FERMION METALS
In this Section, we use the FC theory to explain the NFL behavior of the optical conductivity based on experimental facts [32,33,54,55].We show that ω/T -scaling behavior of optical conductivity σ opt (ω, T ) is exhibited by HF compounds, where ω and T are frequency and temperature, respectively.We show that because of the linear temperature dependence of the electrical resistivity, ρ(T ) ∝ T , and at ω/T ≥ 1, the real part σ R opt (ω, T ) of the optical conductivity σ opt (ω, T ) demonstrates the unusual power law behavior σ R opt ∝ ω −1 .Modern condensed matter physics is vividly represented by the experimental discovery of flat bands [21,22,49], as they were predicted many years ago [7,8,16,17,19].One can expect the existence of a general physical mechanism generated by the presence of flat bands and manifested in the universal scaling behavior of HF compounds.Indeed, HF compounds do exhibit universal scaling behavior and specific behavior caused by the presence of flat bands [8,10,11,23].Within the framework of the fermion condensation theory such a mechanism is represented by the topological FCQPT supporting quasiparticles, surviving the unlimited growth of the effective mass M * , forming the non-Fermi liquid (NFL) behavior and generating flat bands [7,8,10,16,17].The main goal of the quasiparticle interaction is to place the system at the topological FC-QPT.As a result, the universal scaling behavior of HF metals can be explained, for it becomes independent of the interactions near the formation of flat bands.Thus, the universal scaling becomes independent of interaction strength and its other properties for sufficiently large interactions [8,10].However, it is important to explore new properties of HF compounds that are not directly determined by the effective mass M * and cannot be explained within the framework of theories based on ordinary quantum phase transitions, the Kondo-breakdown scenario, etc., see, for example, [32,33,54,55].For example, within the framework of the FC theory, the linear temperature dependence of electrical resistance ρ(T ) ∝ T is explained, which is one of the main features of the behavior of the NFL [42,51], and can lead to a special behavior of optical conductivity exhibit HF metals.To analyze the optical conductivity σ opt (ω, T ) we use the Drude model , see e.g.[25], Here σ 0 reads where the lifetime τ is given by Eq. ( 24) [42,50,51] Here a 0 ∝ ρ 0 , where ρ 0 is the residual resistivity; m, 1 and a 2 are coefficients.The residual resistivity includes two contributions, ρ 0 = ρ imp + ρ F C , where ρ imp comes from the impurities that holds a HF metal and ρ F C is formed by the FC state [42], see Section 4. It is seen from Eqs. ( 29) and (30) that The NFL behavior of the lifetime τ is given by Eq. ( 30), while in the LFL theory τ is given by [24,25,56] where c 1 and c 2 are parameters and a 0 ∝ ρ imp , since FC is absent.As we will see, the NFL behavior of optical conductivity is determined by the NFL dependence of τ on both temperature T and frequency ω associated with the presence of FC, see Section 4. As a result, the scattering rate becomes 1/τ ≃ a 0 + a 1 T .This result is in good agreement with the experimental facts [47,48] presented in Fig. 6.Thus, the FC theory successfully explains the behavior of both the scattering rate and the resistivity, see Eqs. ( 30) and ( 31) [42,50,51].
It is worth noting that in the case of HF metals and high-T c superconductors the scattering rate is a linear function of ω.Thus, we have to take into account the general expression for the optical conductivity, since omitting the real part of the scattering rate leads to the Kramers-Kronig violation [57,58].To restore the Kramers-Kronig relation, we employ the complex presentation of the scattering rate with η denoting the volume in momentum space occupied by the flat band, and ε c being a characteristic constant [42,50].Upon inserting Eq. ( 33) into Eq.( 28), we get .
Taking into account that the logarithm η ln(ω/ω c ) on the right hand side of Eq. ( 34) is a "slow" function of its variable, we approximate 1 + η ln(ω/ω c ) by a constant c, as it is done in the next Subsection 6.1.Our calculations show that constant c is a good approximation for the logarithm.
6.1.Scaling behavior of the real part σ R opt of the optical conductivity Now we are in position to consider the scaling behavior of σ opt (ω, T ).In the present context, the HF compounds are taken to represent strongly correlated Fermi systems as realized in HF metals and high-T c superconductors.One can expect that HF compounds with their extremely diverse composition and microscopic structure would demonstrate very different thermodynamic, transport, and relaxation properties.Upon inserting Eq. ( 29) into Eq.( 28), we obtain FIG. 8: The ω/T scaling behavior of σ R opt T of the cuprate La2−xSrxCuO4 [33].At ω/T ≥ 1 σ R opt ∝ ω −1 , as it is shown by the arrow.The solid curve is our theory.Here and below theoretical real part σ R opt (ω, T ) is given by Eq. ( 37) with the parameters b and c chosen for the best description of the whole set of experimental data.
FIG. 9: The ω/T scaling behavior of the real part 1/σ R opt T of the HF metal YbRh2Si2 [33].At ω/T > 1 σ R opt ∝ ω −1 , as it is shown by the arrow.The solid curve is our theory.
To compare our theoretical results with experimental facts, we subtract the residual resistivity (or conductivity), as it is done to the experimental facts [32,33,54,55], and obtain where b and c are parameters.It is seen from Eq. ( 36) that σ opt (ω, T )T depends on the only variable ω/T .It directly follows from Eq. ( 36) that the real part σ R opt is given by σ Figures 8 and 9 display the scaling of the cuprate La 2−x Sr x CuO 4 and the HF metal YbRh 2 Si 2 in a wide range of the variable ω/T .At ω/T > 1 the real part is proportional ω −1 , σ R opt ∝ ω −1 , and demonstrates the NFL behavior defined by the NFL behavior of τ , see Eq. (30).Figures 10 and 11 show the optical resistivity 1/σ R opt of La 2−x Sr x CuO 4 and the HF metal YbRh 2 Si 2 .It is seen that the resistivity is a linear function of the variable, as it should be, and seen from Figs. 8 and 9.The uniform scaling behavior seen from Figs. 8 and  9 arises from the fact that HF compounds are located near a topological FCQPT that generates their uniform scaling behavior [8,10].The emergence of the universal behavior, exhibited by very distinctive HF metals, supports the conclusion that HF metals represent a new state of matter [10,59].Unlike the situation of a conventional quantum phase transition or the unconventional Kondo breakdown scenario, the scaling induced by topological FCQPT, as seen in Fig. 8 and 9, occurs up to high temperatures, since the behavior of the NPL is determined by quasiparticles, and not by fluctuations or Kondo lattice effects [8,10].

Violation of the scaling behavior
Now let us consider a possible violation of the observed scaling behavior of optical conductivity, see Fig. 8 and 9. To understand the reasons for the violation, consider the schematic phase diagram of HF compounds.At T = 0 there is no crossover region and the FC state is separated from the LFL region by the first−order phase transition [8], since the FC state is characterized by a special quantum topological number, being a new type of Fermi liquid [17,19].At T > 0, it is not a phase transition that occurs, but a crossover [8].At elevated magnetic fields reaching B ≥ T , the HF compound under consideration goes into the LFL state with ρ(T ) ∝ T 2 .As a result, we assume that both Eq. ( 32) and σ R opt ∝ ω −2 become valid, while the NFL behavior of σ R opt ∝ ω −1 vanishes.Such a behavior can be observed in measurements of the optical conductivity on the HF metal YbRh 2 Si 2 at low temperatures under the application of magnetic field B > B c0 .Here B c0 ≃ 0.07 T is the magnetic field that tunes YbRh 2 Si 2 to its antiferromagnetic quantum critical point [60,61].It is seen from Fig. 12 that at B > B co and µ B B ≥ k B T YbRh 2 Si 2 exhibits the LFL behavior, as it does at low temperatures in antiferromagnetic state [61].The HF metal YbRh 2 Si 2 is one of the purest HF metals.Therefore, the regime of electron motion is ballistic.As a result, under the application of weak magnetic field B one could observe a positive contribution δ ∝ B 2 to ρ 0 arising from orbital motion of electrons induced by the Lorentz force.As seen from Fig. 12, ρ 0 diminishes, since the FC state is destroyed by the application of magnetic field or by the antiferromagnetic state, and YbRh 2 Si 2 demonstrates the LFL behavior with diminishing the magnetoresistance, see Fig. 4, while the FC state itself creates the additional residual resistivity ρ F C [23,42].Thus, under the application of magnetic field the LFL behavior is restored and the NFL one exhibited by optical conductivity is violated, so that the scal- ing behavior following from Eqs. ( 30) and ( 35) vanishes.These measurement would confirm both our theoretical consideration of the optical conductivity and the role of magnetic field when studying the HF compounds [40].We note that this role of magnetic field is missed in the frameworks of marginal Fermi liquid, Kondo lattice, etc. [8,10].

CONCLUSION
In our short review, we have considered the transport properties of HF metals and high-T c superconductors, and shown that transport properties are defined by strong inter-particle interaction leading to the topological FCQPT that forms flat bands, and makes the linear in temperature resistivity, ρ(T ) ∝ T .We have analyzed the magnetoresistance and shown that it under the application of magnetic field becomes negative.We have shown that the quasi-classical physics remains applicable to the description of the resistivity ρ ∝ T of strongly correlated metals due to the presence of a transverse zero-sound collective mode.Thus, in the region of T -linear resistance, electron-phonon scattering provides the lifetime τ of quasiparticles close to material independence, which is expressed approximately through the ratio of Plancks constant ℏ to the Boltzmann constant k B , T τ ∼ ℏ/k B .We have shown that due to the NFL behavior of the resistivity ρ(T ) ∝ T , the real part σ R opt of the optical conductivity σ opt exhibits a similar NFL behavior σ R opt ∝ ω −1 rather than the well-known LFL relationship exhibited by ordinary metals, σ R opt ∝ ω −2 .We have predicted that under the application of magnetic field the real part of the optical conductivity behave like σ R opt ∝ ω −2 , since the corresponding HF metal transits from the NFL behavior to the LFL one.
In summary, we have shown that the fermion condensation theory provides a good description of the transport properties of various HF compounds, as our results are in good agreement with experimental observations.

FIG. 1 :
FIG.1: Electronic heat capacity YbRh2Si2, C el /T , as a function of temperature T and as a function of magnetic field B[37], shown in the legend.As an example, the maximum value MM taking place at TM and B = 8 T is shown by the arrow

I n f l e c t i o n p o i n t FIG. 2 :
FIG. 2: The schematic plot of the normalized effective mass versus the normalized temperature.The transition regime, where M * N reaches its maximum value at TN = T /TM = (T /B)N = (B/T )N = 1, is shown as the hatched area.Arrows indicate the LFL region, transition one, inflection point T inf and NFL behavior with M * N ∝ (T /B) −2/3 .

FIG. 3 :
FIG. 3: Schematic T − B phase diagram of a HF compound, with magnetic field B as control parameter.The hatched area corresponds to the crossover domain at TM (B).At fixed magnetic field and elevated temperature (vertical arrow) there is a LFL-NFL crossover.The horizontal arrow indicates a NFL-LFL transition at fixed temperature and elevated magnetic field.The topological FCQPT (shown by the arrow) occurs at T = 0 and B = 0.
FIG.4: Magnetic field dependence of both the normalized magnetoresistance ρN and the muon spin-lattice relaxation rate (1/T µ 1 T )N versus normalized magnetic field BN .ρN was extracted from LMR of YbRh2Si2 at different temperatures[28,29] listed in the legend.Magnetic field dependence of normalized muon spin−lattice relaxation rate 1/T µ 1 T in YbCu4.4Au0.6 is shown by diamonds and extracted from[41].The data are normalized in the inflection point and shown by the arrow.The solid line represents our calculations, see Eqs. (6), (15) and (16).

FIG. 5 :
FIG. 5: Scattering diagrams contributing to the imaginary part mass operator Σ(ϵ) related to the band with a finite value of the Fermi velocity pF .The single line corresponds to a quasiparticle of this band, the double line to the FC quasiparticle.

2 SFIG. 7 :
FIG.7: Scattering rates per kelvin vary greatly in correlated metals such as HF, HTSC, organic and common metals[30].All these metals have ρ(T ) ∝ T and exhibit a change in Fermi velocities vF by two orders of magnitude.The parameter a2 ≃ 1 delivers the best fit, displayed by the solid line, and corresponds to the scattering rate τ T = h/(2πkB) with h = 2πℏ, see Eqs.(26) and(27).The region occupied by the conventional metals is highlighted by two (blue) arrows.The single (green) arrow shows the region of strongly correlated metals, including organic ones.Note, that at low temperatures T ≪ TD, the scattering rate per kelvin of a conventional metal is orders of magnitude lower, and does not correspond to the Planckian limit.The area occupied by ordinary metals is highlighted by two (blue) arrows.The single (green) arrow shows the region of strongly correlated metals, including organic ones.We emphasize that at low temperatures T ≪ TD the scattering rate per kelvin of an ordinary metal is orders of magnitude lower and is not in accordance with the Planck limit.

FIG. 12 :
FIG. 12: Temperature dependency of the electrical resistivities of YbRh2Si2 single crystals at magnetic fields B = 0 T and B = 0.1 T shown by the arrows [60].The antiferromagnetic (AF) state at B = 0 T and the LFL state at B = 0.1 T are displayed by the arrows.