342 research outputs found
Dirty Weyl semimetals: Stability, phase transition and quantum criticality
We study the stability of three-dimensional incompressible Weyl semimetals in
the presence of random quenched charge impurities. Combining numerical analysis
and scaling theory we show that in the presence of sufficiently weak randomness
(i) Weyl semimetal remains stable, while (ii) double-Weyl semimetal gives rise
to compressible diffusive metal where the mean density of states at zero energy
is finite. At stronger disorder, Weyl semimetal undergoes a quantum phase
transition and enter into a metallic phase. Mean density of states at zero
energy serves as the order parameter and displays single-parameter scaling
across such disorder driven quantum phase transition. We numerically determine
various exponents at the critical point, which appear to be insensitive to the
number of Weyl pairs. We also extract the extent of the quantum critical regime
in disordered Weyl semimetal and the phase diagram of dirty double Weyl
semimetal at finite energies.Comment: 5 pages and 5 figures (Supplementary: 6 pages and 5 figure):
Published version, added discussion, new results and reference
Magnetic Field Response and Chiral Symmetry of Time Reversal Invariant Topological Superconductors
We study the magnetic field response of the Majorana Kramers pairs of a
one-dimensional time-reversal invariant (TRI) superconductors (class DIII) with
or without a coexisting chirality symmetry. For unbroken TR and chirality
invariance the parameter regimes for nontrivial values of the (Z_2)
DIII-invariant and the (Z) chiral invariant coincide. However, broken TR may or
may not be accompanied by broken chirality, and if chiral symmetry is unbroken,
the pair of Majorana fermions (MFs) at a given end survives the loss of TR
symmetry in an entire plane perpendicular to the spin-orbit coupling field.
Conversely, we show that broken chirality may or may not be accompanied by
broken TR, and if TR is unbroken, the pair of MFs survives the loss of broken
chirality. In addition to explaining the anomalous magnetic field response of
all the DIII class TS systems proposed in the literature, we provide a
realistic route to engineer a "true" TR-invariant TS, whose pair of MFs at each
end is split by an applied Zeeman field in arbitrary direction. We also prove
that, quite generally, the splitting of the MFs by TR-breaking fields in TRI
superconductors is highly anisotropic in spin space, even in the absence of the
topological chiral symmetry.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figures, slightly re-written, citations adde
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