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Keywords = bosonic topological insulators

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13 pages, 356 KB  
Review
Bose Metals, from Prediction to Realization
by M. C. Diamantini and C. A. Trugenberger
Materials 2024, 17(19), 4924; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17194924 - 9 Oct 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1648
Abstract
Bose metals are metals made of Cooper pairs, which form at very low temperatures in superconducting films and Josephson junction arrays as an intermediate phase between superconductivity and superinsulation. We predicted the existence of this 2D metallic phase of bosons in the mid [...] Read more.
Bose metals are metals made of Cooper pairs, which form at very low temperatures in superconducting films and Josephson junction arrays as an intermediate phase between superconductivity and superinsulation. We predicted the existence of this 2D metallic phase of bosons in the mid 1990s, showing that they arise due to topological quantum effects. The observation of Bose metals in perfectly regular Josephson junction arrays fully confirms our prediction and rules out alternative models based on disorder. Here, we review the basic mechanism leading to Bose metals. The key points are that the relevant vortices in granular superconductors are core-less, mobile XY vortices which can tunnel through the system due to quantum phase slips, that there is no charge-phase commutation relation preventing such vortices from being simultaneously out of condensate with charges, and that out-of-condensate charges and vortices are subject to topological mutual statistics interactions, a quantum effect that dominates at low temperatures. These repulsive mutual statistics interactions are sufficient to increase the energy of the Cooper pairs and lift them out of condensate. The result is a topological ground state in which charge conduction along edges and vortex movement across them organize themselves so as to generate the observed metallic saturation at low temperatures. This state is known today as a bosonic topological insulator. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Materials with Strong Electron Correlations)
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11 pages, 669 KB  
Article
Gauge Theories of Josephson Junction Arrays: Why Disorder Is Irrelevant for the Electric Response of Disordered Superconducting Films
by Carlo A. Trugenberger
Condens. Matter 2023, 8(3), 85; https://doi.org/10.3390/condmat8030085 - 19 Sep 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2855
Abstract
We review the topological gauge theory of Josephson junction arrays and thin film superconductors, stressing the role of the usually forgotten quantum phase slips, and we derive their quantum phase structure. A quantum phase transition from a superconducting to the dual, superinsulating phase [...] Read more.
We review the topological gauge theory of Josephson junction arrays and thin film superconductors, stressing the role of the usually forgotten quantum phase slips, and we derive their quantum phase structure. A quantum phase transition from a superconducting to the dual, superinsulating phase with infinite resistance (even at finite temperatures) is either direct or goes through an intermediate bosonic topological insulator phase, which is typically also called Bose metal. We show how, contrary to a widely held opinion, disorder is not relevant for the electric response in these quantum phases because excitations in the spectrum are either symmetry-protected or neutral due to confinement. The quantum phase transitions are driven only by the electric interaction growing ever stronger. First, this prevents Bose condensation, upon which out-of-condensate charges and vortices form a topological quantum state owing to mutual statistics interactions. Then, at even stronger couplings, an electric flux tube dual to Abrikosov vortices induces a linearly confining potential between charges, giving rise to superinsulation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Superstripes Physics, 2nd Edition)
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13 pages, 9234 KB  
Article
Effect of Impurity Scattering on Percolation of Bosonic Islands and Superconductivity in Fe Implanted NbN Thin Films
by Rajdeep Adhikari, Bogdan Faina, Verena Ney, Julia Vorhauer, Antonia Sterrer, Andreas Ney and Alberta Bonanni
Nanomaterials 2022, 12(18), 3105; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12183105 - 7 Sep 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2691
Abstract
A reentrant temperature dependence of the thermoresistivity ρxx(T) between an onset local superconducting ordering temperature Tloconset and a global superconducting transition at T=Tglooffset has been reported in disordered conventional 3-dimensional (3D) superconductors. The [...] Read more.
A reentrant temperature dependence of the thermoresistivity ρxx(T) between an onset local superconducting ordering temperature Tloconset and a global superconducting transition at T=Tglooffset has been reported in disordered conventional 3-dimensional (3D) superconductors. The disorder of these superconductors is a result of either an extrinsic granularity due to grain boundaries, or of an intrinsic granularity ascribable to the electronic disorder originating from impurity dopants. Here, the effects of Fe doping on the electronic properties of sputtered NbN layers with a nominal thickness of 100 nm are studied by means of low-T/high-μ0H magnetotransport measurements. The doping of NbN is achieved via implantation of 35 keV Fe ions. In the as-grown NbN films, a local onset of superconductivity at Tloconset=15.72K is found, while the global superconducting ordering is achieved at Tglooffset=15.05K, with a normal state resistivity ρxx=22μΩ·cm. Moreover, upon Fe doping of NbN, ρxx=40μΩ·cm is estimated, while Tloconset and Tglooffset are measured to be 15.1 K and 13.5 K, respectively. In Fe:NbN, the intrinsic granularity leads to the emergence of a bosonic insulator state and the normal-metal-to-superconductor transition is accompanied by six different electronic phases characterized by a N-shaped T dependence of ρxx(T). The bosonic insulator state in a s-wave conventional superconductor doped with dilute magnetic impurities is predicted to represent a workbench for emergent phenomena, such as gapless superconductivity, triplet Cooper pairings and topological odd frequency superconductivity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Superconductivity in Nanosystems)
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51 pages, 1322 KB  
Review
Symmetric Mass Generation
by Juven Wang and Yi-Zhuang You
Symmetry 2022, 14(7), 1475; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym14071475 - 19 Jul 2022
Cited by 77 | Viewed by 7547
Abstract
The most well-known mechanism for fermions to acquire a mass is the Nambu–Goldstone–Anderson–Higgs mechanism, i.e., after a spontaneous symmetry breaking, a bosonic field that couples to the fermion mass term condenses, which grants a mass gap for the fermionic excitation. In the last [...] Read more.
The most well-known mechanism for fermions to acquire a mass is the Nambu–Goldstone–Anderson–Higgs mechanism, i.e., after a spontaneous symmetry breaking, a bosonic field that couples to the fermion mass term condenses, which grants a mass gap for the fermionic excitation. In the last few years, it was gradually understood that there is a new mechanism of mass generation for fermions without involving any symmetry breaking within an anomaly-free symmetry group, also applicable to chiral fermions with anomaly-free chiral symmetries. This new mechanism is generally referred to as the symmetric mass generation (SMG). It is realized that the SMG has deep connections with interacting topological insulator/superconductors, symmetry-protected topological states, perturbative local and non-perturbative global anomaly cancellations, and deconfined quantum criticality. It has strong implications for the lattice regularization of chiral gauge theories. This article defines the SMG, summarizes the current numerical results, introduces an unifying theoretical framework (including the parton-Higgs and the s-confinement mechanisms, as well as the symmetry-extension construction), and presents an overview of various features and applications of SMG. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Applications of Symmetry in Lattice Field Theory)
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23 pages, 3377 KB  
Article
On Strong f-Electron Localization Effect in a Topological Kondo Insulator
by Udai Prakash Tyagi, Kakoli Bera and Partha Goswami
Symmetry 2021, 13(12), 2245; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym13122245 - 24 Nov 2021
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2196
Abstract
We study a strong f-electron localization effect on the surface state of a generic topological Kondo insulator (TKI) system by performing a mean-field theoretic (MFT) calculation within the framework of the periodic Anderson model (PAM) using the slave boson technique. The surface [...] Read more.
We study a strong f-electron localization effect on the surface state of a generic topological Kondo insulator (TKI) system by performing a mean-field theoretic (MFT) calculation within the framework of the periodic Anderson model (PAM) using the slave boson technique. The surface metallicity, together with bulk insulation, requires this type of localization. A key distinction between surface states in a conventional insulator and a topological insulator is that, along a course joining two time-reversal invariant momenta (TRIM) in the same BZ, there will be an intersection of these surface states, an even/odd number of times, with the Fermi energy inside the spectral gap. For an even (odd) number of surface state crossings, the surface states are topologically trivial (non-trivial). The symmetry consideration and the pictorial representation of the surface band structure obtained here show an odd number of crossings, leading to the conclusion that, at least within the PAM framework, the generic system is a strong topological insulator. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Magnetism, Skyrmions and Chirality)
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20 pages, 2133 KB  
Article
Effect of Rashba Impurities on Surface State of a Topological Kondo Insulator
by Partha Goswami
Surfaces 2020, 3(3), 484-504; https://doi.org/10.3390/surfaces3030035 - 10 Sep 2020
Viewed by 2807
Abstract
In this communication, we report surface state, with Rashba impurities, of a generic topological Kondo insulator (TKI) system by performing a mean-field theoretic (MFT) calculation within the framework of slave-boson protocol. The surface metallicity together with bulk insulation is found to require very [...] Read more.
In this communication, we report surface state, with Rashba impurities, of a generic topological Kondo insulator (TKI) system by performing a mean-field theoretic (MFT) calculation within the framework of slave-boson protocol. The surface metallicity together with bulk insulation is found to require very strong f-electron localization. The possibility of intra-band as well as inter-band unconventional plasmons exists for the surface state spectrum. The paramountcy of the bulk metallicity, and, in the presence of the Rashba impurities, the TKI surface comprising of ‘helical liquids’ are the important outcomes of the present communication. The access to the gapless Dirac spectrum leads to spin-plasmons with the usual wave vector dependence q1/2. The Rashba coupling does not impair the Kondo screening and does not affect the quantum critical point (QCP) for the bulk. Full article
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13 pages, 383 KB  
Review
Hidden Charge Orders in Low-Dimensional Mott Insulators
by Serena Fazzini and Arianna Montorsi
Appl. Sci. 2019, 9(4), 784; https://doi.org/10.3390/app9040784 - 22 Feb 2019
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 4340
Abstract
The opening of a charge gap driven by interaction is a fingerprint of the transition to a Mott insulating phase. In strongly correlated low-dimensional quantum systems, it can be associated to the ordering of hidden non-local operators. For Fermionic 1D models, in the [...] Read more.
The opening of a charge gap driven by interaction is a fingerprint of the transition to a Mott insulating phase. In strongly correlated low-dimensional quantum systems, it can be associated to the ordering of hidden non-local operators. For Fermionic 1D models, in the presence of spin–charge separation and short-ranged interaction, a bosonization analysis proves that such operators are the parity and/or string charge operators. In fact, a finite fractional non-local parity charge order is also capable of characterizing some two-dimensional Mott insulators, in both the Fermionic and the bosonic cases. When string charge order takes place in 1D, degenerate edge modes with fractional charge appear, peculiar of a topological insulator. In this article, we review the above framework, and we test it to investigate through density-matrix-renormalization-group (DMRG) numerical analysis the robustness of both hidden orders at half-filling in the 1D Fermionic Hubbard model extended with long range density-density interaction. The preliminary results obtained at finite size including several neighbors in the case of dipolar, screened and unscreened repulsive Coulomb interactions, confirm the phase diagram of the standard extended Hubbard model. Besides the trivial Mott phase, the bond ordered and charge density wave insulating phases are also not destroyed by longer ranged interaction, and still manifest hidden non-local orders. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Metal-Insulator Transitions)
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