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Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands

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Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands. / Nguyen, Dung X.; Arkinstall, Jake; Schomerus, Henning.
In: Physical review B, Vol. 108, No. 11, 115148, 25.09.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Nguyen, DX, Arkinstall, J & Schomerus, H 2023, 'Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands', Physical review B, vol. 108, no. 11, 115148. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.108.115148

APA

Nguyen, D. X., Arkinstall, J., & Schomerus, H. (2023). Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands. Physical review B, 108(11), Article 115148. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.108.115148

Vancouver

Nguyen DX, Arkinstall J, Schomerus H. Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands. Physical review B. 2023 Sept 25;108(11):115148. doi: 10.1103/physrevb.108.115148

Author

Nguyen, Dung X. ; Arkinstall, Jake ; Schomerus, Henning. / Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands. In: Physical review B. 2023 ; Vol. 108, No. 11.

Bibtex

@article{4e2cdacd4669464c841bdec345cf43ac,
title = "Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands",
abstract = "Half-integer quantized flux vortices appear in honeycomb lattices when the signs of an odd number of couplings around a plaquette are inverted. We show that states trapped at these vortices can be isolated by applying inhomogeneous strain to the system. A vortex then results in localized midgap states lying between the strain-induced pseudo-Landau levels, with 2n+1midgap states appearing between the nth and the (n+1)th level. These states are well-defined spectrally isolated and spatially localized excitations that could be realized in electronic and photonic systems based on graphenelike honeycomb lattices. In the context of Kitaev's honeycomb model of interacting spins, the mechanism improves the localization of non-Abelian anyons in the spin-liquid phase, and reduces their mutual interactions. The described states also serve as a testbed for fundamental physics in the emerging low-energy theory, as the correct energies and degeneracies of the excitations are only replicated if one accounts for the effective hyperbolic geometry induced by the strain. We further illuminate this by considering the effects of an additional external magnetic field, resulting in a characteristic spatial dependence that directly maps out the inhomogeneous metric of the emerging hyperbolic space.",
author = "Nguyen, {Dung X.} and Jake Arkinstall and Henning Schomerus",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "25",
doi = "10.1103/physrevb.108.115148",
language = "English",
volume = "108",
journal = "Physical review B",
issn = "2469-9950",
publisher = "AMER PHYSICAL SOC",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Flux-induced midgap states between strain-engineered flat bands

AU - Nguyen, Dung X.

AU - Arkinstall, Jake

AU - Schomerus, Henning

PY - 2023/9/25

Y1 - 2023/9/25

N2 - Half-integer quantized flux vortices appear in honeycomb lattices when the signs of an odd number of couplings around a plaquette are inverted. We show that states trapped at these vortices can be isolated by applying inhomogeneous strain to the system. A vortex then results in localized midgap states lying between the strain-induced pseudo-Landau levels, with 2n+1midgap states appearing between the nth and the (n+1)th level. These states are well-defined spectrally isolated and spatially localized excitations that could be realized in electronic and photonic systems based on graphenelike honeycomb lattices. In the context of Kitaev's honeycomb model of interacting spins, the mechanism improves the localization of non-Abelian anyons in the spin-liquid phase, and reduces their mutual interactions. The described states also serve as a testbed for fundamental physics in the emerging low-energy theory, as the correct energies and degeneracies of the excitations are only replicated if one accounts for the effective hyperbolic geometry induced by the strain. We further illuminate this by considering the effects of an additional external magnetic field, resulting in a characteristic spatial dependence that directly maps out the inhomogeneous metric of the emerging hyperbolic space.

AB - Half-integer quantized flux vortices appear in honeycomb lattices when the signs of an odd number of couplings around a plaquette are inverted. We show that states trapped at these vortices can be isolated by applying inhomogeneous strain to the system. A vortex then results in localized midgap states lying between the strain-induced pseudo-Landau levels, with 2n+1midgap states appearing between the nth and the (n+1)th level. These states are well-defined spectrally isolated and spatially localized excitations that could be realized in electronic and photonic systems based on graphenelike honeycomb lattices. In the context of Kitaev's honeycomb model of interacting spins, the mechanism improves the localization of non-Abelian anyons in the spin-liquid phase, and reduces their mutual interactions. The described states also serve as a testbed for fundamental physics in the emerging low-energy theory, as the correct energies and degeneracies of the excitations are only replicated if one accounts for the effective hyperbolic geometry induced by the strain. We further illuminate this by considering the effects of an additional external magnetic field, resulting in a characteristic spatial dependence that directly maps out the inhomogeneous metric of the emerging hyperbolic space.

U2 - 10.1103/physrevb.108.115148

DO - 10.1103/physrevb.108.115148

M3 - Journal article

VL - 108

JO - Physical review B

JF - Physical review B

SN - 2469-9950

IS - 11

M1 - 115148

ER -