4,110 research outputs found
Strong correlations at topological insulator surfaces and the breakdown of the bulk-boundary correspondence
The criteria for strong correlations on surfaces of three-dimensional
topological insulators are discussed. Usually, the Coulomb repulsion at such
surfaces is too weak for driving a phase transition to a strongly correlated
regime. I discuss a mechanism and possibilities of its experimental
implementation by which the strength of the Coulomb interaction can be tuned
over a wide range. In the strongly interacting regime, the surface states are
gapped, even though the topological classification of the bulk band structure
predicts gapless surface states
Bosonic field theory of tunable edge magnetism in graphene
A bosonic field theory is derived for the tunable edge magnetism at graphene
zigzag edges. The derivation starts from an effective fermionic theory for the
interacting graphene edge states, derived previously from a two-dimensional
interacting tight-binding model for graphene. The essential feature of this
effective model, which gives rise to the weak edge magnetism, is the
momentum-dependent non-local electron-electron interaction. It is shown that
this momentum-dependence may be treated by an extension of the bosonization
technique, and leads to interactions of the bosonic fields. These interactions
are reminiscent of a \phi^4 field theory. Focussing onto the regime close to
the quantum phase transition between the ferromagnetic and the paramagnetic
Luttinger liquid, a semiclassical interpretation of the interacting bosonic
theory is given. Furthermore, it is argued that the universal critical behavior
at the quantum phase transition between the paramagnetic and the ferromagnetic
Luttinger liquid is governed by a small number of terms in this theory, which
are accessible by quantum Monte-Carlo methods
Quantum Nature of Edge Magnetism in Graphene
It is argued that the subtle crossover from decoherence-dominated classical
magnetism to fluctuation-dominated quantum magnetism is experimentally
accessible in graphene nanoribbons. We show that the width of a nanoribbon
determines whether the edge magnetism is on the classical side, on the quantum
side, or in between. In the classical regime, decoherence is dominant and leads
to static spin polarizations at the ribbon edges, which are well described by
mean-field theories. The quantum Zeno effect is identified as the basic
mechanism which is responsible for the spin polarization and thereby enables
the application of graphene in spintronics. On the quantum side, however, the
spin polarization is destroyed by dynamical processes. The great tunability of
graphene magnetism thus offers a viable route for the study of the
quantum-classical crossover.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Decoherence of Majorana qubits by noisy gates
We propose and study a realistic model for the decoherence of topological
qubits, based on Majorana fermions in one-dimensional topological
superconductors. The source of decoherence is the fluctuating charge on a
capacitively coupled gate, modeled by non-interacting electrons. In this
context, we clarify the role of quantum fluctuations and thermal fluctuations
and find that quantum fluctuations do not lead to decoherence, while thermal
fluctuations do. We explicitly calculate decay times due to thermal noise and
give conditions for the gap size in the topological superconductor and the gate
temperature. Based on this result, we provide simple rules for gate geometries
and materials optimized for reducing the negative effect of thermal charge
fluctuations on the gate
New technique for replica symmetry breaking with application to the SK-model at and near T=0
We describe a novel method which allows the treatment of high orders of
replica-symmetry-breaking (RSB) at low temperatures as well as at T=0 directly,
without a need for approximations or scaling assumptions. It yields the low
temperature order function q(a,T) in the full range and is
complete in the sense that all observables can be calculated from it. The
behavior of some observables and the finite RSB theory itself is analyzed as
one approaches continuous RSB. The validity and applicability of the
traditional continuous formulation is then scrutinized and a new continuous RSB
formulation is proposed
Carbon nanotubes in electric and magnetic fields
We derive an effective low-energy theory for metallic (armchair and
non-armchair) single-wall nanotubes in the presence of an electric field
perpendicular to the nanotube axis, and in the presence of magnetic fields,
taking into account spin-orbit interactions and screening effects on the basis
of a microscopic tight binding model. The interplay between electric field and
spin-orbit interaction allows us to tune armchair nanotubes into a helical
conductor in both Dirac valleys. Metallic non-armchair nanotubes are gapped by
the surface curvature, yet helical conduction modes can be restored in one of
the valleys by a magnetic field along the nanotube axis. Furthermore, we
discuss electric dipole spin resonance in carbon nanotubes, and find that the
Rabi frequency shows a pronounced dependence on the momentum along the
nanotube
Effective models for strong electronic correlations at graphene edges
We describe a method for deriving effective low-energy theories of electronic
interactions at graphene edges. Our method is applicable to general edges of
honeycomb lattices (zigzag, chiral, and even disordered) as long as localized
low-energy states (edge states) are present. The central characteristic of the
effective theories is a dramatically reduced number of degrees of freedom. As a
consequence, the solution of the effective theory by exact diagonalization is
feasible for reasonably large ribbon sizes. The quality of the involved
approximations is critically assessed by comparing the correlation functions
obtained from the effective theory with numerically exact quantum Monte-Carlo
calculations. We discuss effective theories of two levels: a relatively
complicated fermionic edge state theory and a further reduced Heisenberg spin
model. The latter theory paves the way to an efficient description of the
magnetic features in long and structurally disordered graphene edges beyond the
mean-field approximation.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Helical modes in carbon nanotubes generated by strong electric fields
Helical modes, conducting opposite spins in opposite directions, are shown to
exist in metallic armchair nanotubes in an all-electric setup. This is a
consequence of the interplay between spin-orbit interaction and strong electric
fields. The helical regime can also be obtained in chiral metallic nanotubes by
applying an additional magnetic field. In particular, it is possible to obtain
helical modes at one of the two Dirac points only, while the other one remains
gapped. Starting from a tight-binding model we derive the effective low-energy
Hamiltonian and the resulting spectrum
Exact diagonalization study of the tunable edge magnetism in graphene
The tunable magnetism at graphene edges with lengths of up to 48 unit cells
is analyzed by an exact diagonalization technique. For this we use a
generalized interacting one-dimensional model which can be tuned continuously
from a limit describing graphene zigzag edge states with a ferromagnetic phase,
to a limit equivalent to a Hubbard chain, which does not allow ferromagnetism.
This analysis sheds light onto the question why the edge states have a
ferromagnetic ground state, while a usual one-dimensional metal does not.
Essentially we find that there are two important features of edge states: (a)
umklapp processes are completely forbidden for edge states; this allows a
spin-polarized ground state. (b) the strong momentum dependence of the
effective interaction vertex for edge states gives rise to a regime of partial
spin-polarization and a second order phase transition between a standard
paramagnetic Luttinger liquid and ferromagnetic Luttinger liquid.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
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