11 research outputs found
Lattice generalization of the Dirac equation to general spin and the role of the flat band
We provide a novel setup for generalizing the two-dimensional pseudospin
S=1/2 Dirac equation, arising in graphene's honeycomb lattice, to general
pseudospin-S. We engineer these band structures as a nearest-neighbor hopping
Hamiltonian involving stacked triangular lattices. We obtain multi-layered low
energy excitations around half-filling described by a two-dimensional Dirac
equation of the form H=v_F S\cdot p, where S represents an arbitrary spin-S
(integer or half-integer). For integer-S, a flat band appears, whose presence
modifies qualitatively the response of the system. Among physical observables,
the density of states, the optical conductivity and the peculiarities of Klein
tunneling are investigated. We also study Chern numbers as well as the
zero-energy Landau level degeneracy. By changing the stacking pattern, the
topological properties are altered significantly, with no obvious analogue in
multilayer graphene stacks.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, revised version with a new section on
experimental possibilitie
Charge transport in two dimensions limited by strong short-range scatterers: Going beyond parabolic dispersion and Born approximation
We investigate the conductivity of charge carriers confined to a
two-dimensional system with the non-parabolic dispersion with being
an arbitrary natural number. A delta-shaped scattering potential is assumed as
the major source of disorder. We employ the exact solution of the
Lippmann-Schwinger equation to derive an analytical Boltzmann conductivity
formula valid for an arbitrary scattering potential strength. The range of
applicability of our analytical results is assessed by a numerical study based
on the finite size Kubo formula. We find that for any , the conductivity
demonstrates a linear dependence on the carrier concentration in the limit of a
strong scattering potential strength. This finding agrees with the conductivity
measurements performed recently on chirally stacked multilayer graphene where
the lowest two bands are non-parabolic and the adsorbed hydrocarbons might act
as strong short-range scatterers.Comment: Substantially revised version, as accepted to PRB: 8 pages, 3 figure
Finite Conductivity Minimum in Bilayer Graphene without Charge Inhomogeneities
Boltzmann transport theory fails near the linear band-crossing of
single-layer graphene and near the quadratic band-crossing of bilayer graphene.
We report on a numerical study which assesses the role of inter-band coherence
in transport when the Fermi level lies near the band-crossing energy of bilayer
graphene. We find that interband coherence enhances conduction, and that it
plays an essential role in graphene's minimum conductivity phenomena. This
behavior is qualitatively captured by an approximate theory which treats
inter-band coherence in a relaxation-time approximation. On the basis of this
short-range-disorder model study, we conclude that electron-hole puddle
formation is not a necessary condition for finite conductivity in graphene at
zero average carrier density.Comment: revised version as published in Phys. Rev.
Relaxation mechanisms of the persistent spin helix
We study the lifetime of the persistent spin helix in semiconductor quantum
wells with equal Rashba- and linear Dresselhaus spin-orbit interactions. In
order to address the temperature dependence of the relevant spin relaxation
mechanisms we derive and solve semiclassical spin diffusion equations taking
into account spin-dependent impurity scattering, cubic Dresselhaus spin-orbit
interactions and the effect of electron-electron interactions. For the
experimentally relevant regime we find that the lifetime of the persistent spin
helix is mainly determined by the interplay of cubic Dresselhaus spin-orbit
interaction and electron-electron interactions. We propose that even longer
lifetimes can be achieved by generating a spatially damped spin profile instead
of the persistent spin helix state.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Quantum corrections in the Boltzmann conductivity of graphene and their sensitivity to the choice of formalism
Semiclassical spin-coherent kinetic equations can be derived from quantum
theory with many different approaches (Liouville equation based approaches,
nonequilibrium Green's functions techniques, etc.). The collision integrals
turn out to be formally different, but coincide in textbook examples as well as
for systems where the spin-orbit coupling is only a small part of the kinetic
energy like in related studies on the spin Hall effect. In Dirac cone physics
(graphene, surface states of topological insulators like Bi_{1-x}Sb_x, Bi_2Te_3
etc.), where this coupling constitutes the entire kinetic energy, the
difference manifests itself in the precise value of the electron-hole coherence
originated quantum correction to the Drude conductivity . The leading correction is derived analytically for single and multilayer
graphene with general scalar impurities. The often neglected principal value
terms in the collision integral are important. Neglecting them yields a leading
correction of order , whereas including them can give a
correction of order . The latter opens up a counterintuitive
scenario with finite electron-hole coherent effects at Fermi energies
arbitrarily far above the neutrality point regime, for example in the form of a
shift that only depends on the dielectric constant. This residual
conductivity, possibly related to the one observed in recent experiments,
depends crucially on the approach and could offer a setting for experimentally
singling out one of the candidates. Concerning the different formalisms we
notice that the discrepancy between a density matrix approach and a Green's
function approach is removed if the Generalized Kadanoff-Baym Ansatz in the
latter is replaced by an anti-ordered version.Comment: 31 pages, 1 figure. An important sign error has been rectified in the
principal value terms in equation (52) in the vN & NSO expression. It has no
implications for the results on the leading quantum correction studied in
this paper. However, for the higher quantum corrections studied in
arXiv:1304.3929 (see comment in the latter) the implications are crucia
Degeneracy of non-abelian quantum Hall states on the torus: domain walls and conformal field theory
We analyze the non-abelian Read-Rezayi quantum Hall states on the torus,
where it is natural to employ a mapping of the many-body problem onto a
one-dimensional lattice model. On the thin torus--the Tao-Thouless (TT)
limit--the interacting many-body problem is exactly solvable. The Read-Rezayi
states at filling are known to be exact ground states of a
local repulsive -body interaction, and in the TT limit this is manifested
in that all states in the ground state manifold have exactly particles on
any consecutive sites. For the two-body correlations of these
states also imply that there is no more than one particle on adjacent
sites. The fractionally charged quasiparticles and quasiholes appear as domain
walls between the ground states, and we show that the number of distinct domain
wall patterns gives rise to the nontrivial degeneracies, required by the
non-abelian statistics of these states. In the second part of the paper we
consider the quasihole degeneracies from a conformal field theory (CFT)
perspective, and show that the counting of the domain wall patterns maps one to
one on the CFT counting via the fusion rules. Moreover we extend the CFT
analysis to topologies of higher genus.Comment: 15 page
Quasiparticles in the Quantum Hall Effect
The fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE), discovered in 1982 in a two-dimensional electron system, has generated a wealth of successful theory and new concepts in condensed matter physics, but is still not fully understood. The possibility of having nonabelian quasiparticle statistics has recently attracted attention on purely theoretical grounds but also because of its potential applications in topologically protected quantum computing. This thesis focuses on the quasiparticles using three different approaches. The first is an effective Chern-Simons theory description, where the noncommutativity imposed on the classical space variables captures the incompressibility. We propose a construction of the quasielectron and illustrate how many-body quantum effects are emulated by a classical noncommutative theory. The second approach involves a study of quantum Hall states on a torus where one of the periods is taken to be almost zero. Characteristic quantum Hall properties survive in this limit in which they become very simple to understand. We illustrate this by giving a simple counting argument for degeneracy 2n-1, pertinent to nonabelian statistics, in the presence of 2n quasiholes in the Moore-Read state and generalise this result to 2n-k quasiholes and k quasielectrons. In the third approach, we study the topological nature of the degeneracy 2n-1 by using a recently proposed analogy between the Moore-Read state and the two-dimensional spin-polarized p-wave BCS state. We study a version of this problem where one can use techniques developed in the context of high-Tc superconductors to turn the vortex background into an effective gauge field in a Dirac equation. Topological arguments in the form of index theory gives the degeneracy 2n-1 for 2n vortices