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Localization Properties of 2D Random-Mass Dirac Fermions M. E. Raikh Department of Physics University of Utah In collaboration with V. V. Mkhitaryan Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 256803 (2011). Supported by: BSF Grant No. 2006201 time reversal symmetry is sustained due to two species of Dirac fermions clean Dirac fermions of a given type are chiral for energies inside the gap they exhibit quantum Hall transition upon E E xy 0 xy from Kubo formula: for zero energy, e2 2h Contact of two Dirac systems with opposite signs of mass in-gap (zero energy) chiral edge states M ( x, y ) f ( y ) x e i [ E V ( x )] dx 0 H x p x y p y M ( x, y ) z x line f=0 supports an edge state e y 1 exp f ( y )dy 0 1 pseudospin structure: pseudospin is directed along x-axis sign of E V defines the direction of propagation (chirality) i [ E V ( x )] dx 0 y 1 exp f ( y)dy L 1 states with the same chirality bound to y=0, y=-L D-class: E V (x) 0 no phase accumulated in course of propagation along the edge Hamiltonian contains both Dirac species “vacuum” A A and B correspond to different pseudospin directions in-gap state sin( k0 x) left: Bloch functions cos(k x) 0 right: Bloch functions cos(k0 x) sin( k x ) 0 Closed contour M ( x, y ) 0 Example: azimuthal symmety: M ( x, y ) M (r ) Dirac Hamiltonian in polar coordinates M e i (i r 1 r ) H i M e (i r 1 r ) zero-mass contour with radius a M 0 M 0 a M (r ) r a 0, M (r ) r a 0, M (r ) r a 0 zero-energy solution r e i / 2 (r , ) exp d M ( ) i / 2 r a ie picks up a phase along a contour arround the origin a divergence at r 0 is multiplied by a small factor exp d M ( ) 0 pseudospin Chiral states of a Dirac fermion on the contours M(x,y)=0 constitute chiral network scalar amplitudes on the links 2D electron in a strong magnetic field: chiral drift trajectories along equipotential V(x,y)=0 also constitute a chiral network Chalker-Coddington network model J. Phys. C. 21, 2665 (1988) M ( x, y ) 0 no edge state xy 0 fluxes through the contours account for the vector structure of Dirac-fermion wave functions can Dirac fermions delocalize at M ( x, y) 0 ? J. H. Bardarson, M. V. Medvedyeva, J. Tworzydlo, A. R. Akhmerov, and C. W. J. Beenakker, Phys. Rev. B. 81, 121414(R) (2010). edge state xy 1 K. Ziegler, Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 126802 (2009); Phys. Rev. B. 79, 195424 (2009). in CC model delocalization occurs at a single point where V ( x, y) 0 the same as classical percolation in random potential V ( x, y ) The answer: It depends ... on details of coupling between two M ( x, y ) 0 contours M 0 t general form of the scattering matrix: S r M 0 small contour a 1/ M does not support an edge state t M 0 results in overall phase factor e i 2 1 elimination of two t t M 0 change of sign is equivalent to elimination of fluxes through contacting loops in the language of scattering matrix: t one small contour: r flux through small contour is zero the effect of small contours: change of singns of t and r without significantly affecting their absolute values ei t 2ei (t ) 2 t r t r t t r fluxes unlike the CC model which has random phases on the links, sign randomness in t and r is crucial for D-class N. Read and D. Green, Phys. Rev. B. 61, 10267 (2000). r t N. Read and A. W. W. Ludwig, Phys. Rev. B. 63, 024404 (2000). M. Bocquet, D. Serban, and M. R. Zirnbauer, Nucl. Phys. B. 578, 628 (2000). (2001) S t Cr arrangement insures a -flux through each plaquette “reversed” t scattering matrices r p - percentage of I r t t r r t From the point of view of level statistics RMT density of states in a sample with size , L Historically 1 t2 2 pairing bare Hamiltonian with SO H tij ci c j ij ci c j H.c. ij tricritical point From quasi-1D perspective Lately 1.4 0.2 T from M 64,128 1.7 1.6 1.2 1.1 from M 16, 32, 64,128 M cosh T sinh sinh cosh Transfer matrix of a slice of width, M, up to M=256 new attractive fixed point H Dirac v x px y p y v 2 M (r ) z M (r ) is randomly distributed in the interval M M , M M weak antilocalization random sign of mass: transition at M M Principal question: how is it possible that delocalization takes place when coupling between neighboring contours is weak? classically must be localized t 2 1 t2 has a classical analog microscopic mechanism of delocalization due to the disorder in signs of transmission coefficient? Nodes in the D-class network transmission S I II reflection t s c c s r S IV III 1. change of sign of c transforms -fluxes in plaquetts II and IV into 0 -fluxes 2. change of sign of s transforms -fluxes in plaquetts I and III into 0 -fluxes signs of the S- matrix elements ensure fluxes through plaquetts Cho-Fisher disorder in the signs of masses t , with probabilit y 1- w 2 ti t , with probabilit y w 2 A. Mildenberger, F. Evers, A. D. Mirlin, and J. T. Chalker, Phys. Rev. B 75, 245321 (2007). 1 t 2 , with probabilit y 1- w 2 ri 2 1 t , with probabilit y w 2 O(1) disorder: sign factor -1 on each link with probability w the limit of strong S 1 0 inhomogeneity: 0 0 1 with probability P t 2 ; S with probability (1-P) 1 1 0 bond between II and IV connects bond between II and IV is removed RG transformation for bond percolation on the square lattice I II IV III bonds RG equation superbond p p 5 5 p 4 1 p 8 p 3 1 p 2 p 2 1 p 2 p probability that a bond connects localization radius p one bond is removed probability that a superbond connects 1 ( p) p 2 scaling factor 1 2 p 2 three bonds are removed fixed point p p 3 1 2 ln 2 ln( dp / dp) 1.428 1 p 2 Quantum generalization Quantum generalization supernode for the red sublattice truncation green sublattice t r S r t second RG step tˆ r̂ r̂ tˆ red sublattice t r S r t tˆ rˆ reproduces the structure of S for ˆ S- matrix of the red supernode S the red node rˆ tˆ -1 emerges in course of truncationand accounts for the missing green node from five pairs of linear equations we find the RG transformations for the amplitudes S- matrix of supernode consisting of four green and one red nodes reproduces the structure t r S r t of the green node t t (r r r 1) t 2t 4 (r1r3r5 1) t3 (t1t 4 t 2t5 ) tˆ 1 5 2 3 4 (r3 r1r5 )( r3 r2 r4 ) (t3 t1t 2 )(t3 t 4t5 ) rˆ r1r2 (t3t 4t5 1) r4 r5 (t1t 2t3 1) r3 (r1r4 r2 r5 ) (r3 r1r5 )( r3 r2 r4 ) (t3 t1t 2 )(t3 t 4t5 ) Evolution with sample size, L five pairs ti , ri generate a pair introducing a vector of a unit length L2 n tˆ, rˆ ui ti , ri t t (r r r 1) t 2t 4 (r1r3r5 1) t3 (t1t 4 t 2t5 ) tˆ 1 5 2 3 4 (r3 r1r5 )( r3 r2 r4 ) (t3 t1t 2 )(t3 t 4t5 ) rˆ r1r2 (t3t 4t5 1) r4 r5 (t1t 2t3 1) r3 (r1r4 r2 r5 ) (r3 r1r5 )( r3 r2 r4 ) (t3 t1t 2 )(t3 t 4t5 ) ti , ri with “projections” 5 Pn 1 (u ) du j Pn (u j ) u uˆ{u1 ,..., u5 } j 1 RG transformation ti ri 1 Zero disorder tˆ rˆ 1 2 2 fixed point distribution remains symmetric and narrows 2 p1 (t ) p0 (t 2 ) expanding t2 fixed-point distribution : p (t 2 ) (t 2 1 2) 5 1 1 ˆt ci ti 2 i 1 2 c1 c2 c4 c5 2 1 c3 3 2 2 5 the rate of narrowing: tˆ ci2 ti 2 0.7 ti 2 2 no mesoscopic fluctuations at i 1 L Critical exponent t 1 2 If p0 (t 2 ) is centered around t02 1 2 , n 2 the center of pn (t ) moves to the left as 2 0 from p3 (t 2 ) p1 (t 2 ) where t n 2 0 1 2 1 critical exponent: t02 0.45 t2 no sign disorder & nonzero average mass c i 1 & p0 (t 2 ) exceeds exact 5 1 2 2 1 2 t n 2 0 ln 2 1.15 ln by 15 percent ( x) exp M x insulator i M 1 2 t02 1 2 Finite sign disorder t t (r r r 1) t 2t 4 (r1r3r5 1) t3 (t1t 4 t 2t5 ) tˆ 1 5 2 3 4 (r3 r1r5 )( r3 r2 r4 ) (t3 t1t 2 )(t3 t 4t5 ) if all ti are small and ri 1, we expect tˆ ti2 special realization of sign disorder: choosing ti t and r1 r2 r3 r4 1 t 2 , r5 1 t 2 2 3 2 3 3 t ( 1 r ) t ( 1 r ) 2 t tˆ 1 2 2 2 2 (r r )( r r ) (t t ) tˆ 1 identically resonant tunneling! we get t , with probabilit y 1- w 2 ti t , with probabilit y w 2 Disorder is quantified as w 0.2 1 t 2 , with probabilit y 1- w 2 ri 2 1 t , with probabilit y w 2 portion of resonances is 27% t 02 0.1, t 2 0.05 2. portion of resonances weakly depends t2 1. resonances survive a spread in the initial distributon of t i2 on the initial distribution w 0.2 w 0.2 portion of resonances is 26% portion of resonances is 24% t02 0.2, t 2 0.025 t02 0.35, t 2 0.15 t2 origin of delocalization: disorder prevents the flow towards insulator t2 t 2 0.2, w 0.15 Evolution with the sample size t 2 0.2, w 0.2 no difference after the first step distribution of reflection amplitudes difference between two distributions is small with t 2 0.025 removed more resonances for stronger disorder universal distribution of conductance, G t 2 t2 resonances are suppressed, system flows to insulator P(G ) 0.237 [G (1 G )]0.6 resonances drive the system to metallic phase Delocalization in terms of unit vector u t, r cos , sin 0.118 metallic phase corresponds to Q( ) [cos sin ]0.2 no disorder: initial distribution with 0 4 flows to insulator u 0,1 r Q r 1 u 4 1 1 0 1 t , with probabilit y 1- w 2 ti t , with probabilit y w 2 1 t 2 , with probabilit y 1- w 2 ri 1 t 2 , with probabilit y w 2 is almost homogeneously distributed over unit circle t t w wc r with disorder r resonances at intermediate sizes spread homogeneously over the circle upon increasing L 1 1 1 t w wc 1 t Delocalization as a sign percolation w 0.15 p (t 2 ) w 0.2 L 23 0.002 t 2 0.02 p (t 2 ) 0.002 t 2 0.02 0.02 t 2 1 0.02 t 2 1 t2 t2 at small L, the difference between w 0.2 and w 0.15 is minimal for p (r ) but is significant in distribution of amplitudes p (t 2 ), ratio of peaks is 1.8 p(r ) 1 r 1 p(r ) 1 r 1 1 r 0 1 r 0 r r evolution of the portion, , of negative values of reflection coefficient with the sample size Phase diagram wc (0) 0.21 xy 0 xy 1 wtr 0.06 Critical exponent of I-M transition as signs are “erased” with L, we have r 2 ( L) 1 t 2 0.2, wc 0.18 fully localize after fully localize after 7 6 steps steps 0.15 A( wc 0.15) 27 0.127 A( wc 0.127) 26 ln 2 ln 5.33 1.2 d r2 d ln L 0.11 : not a critical region p (t 2 ) w 0.05 Tricritical point p (t 2 ) w 0.07 wtr 0.06 t2 t2 all ti are small, and are ri “analytical” derivation of wc 0.2 close to 1 w t t (r r r 1) t 2t 4 (r1r3r5 1) t3 (t1t 4 t 2t5 ) tˆ 1 5 2 3 4 (r3 r1r5 )( r3 r2 r4 ) (t3 t1t 2 )(t3 t 4t5 ) resonance: only one of these brackets is small probability that only one of the above brackets is small: w 4w(1 w)3 4w3 (1 w) 12 1 [1 2w]4 w Conclusions P(G ) 0.237 [G (1 G )]0.6 RG numerics metallic phase emerges even for vanishing transmission of the nodes due to resonances delocalization occurs by proliferation of resonances to larger scales Bilayer graphene: gap of varying sign is generated spontaneously in-gap state M 0 chiral propagation within a given valley M 0 symmetry between the valleys is lifted at the edge Topological origin of subgap conductance in insulating bilayer graphene J. Li, I. Martin, M. Buttiker, A. F. Morpurgo, Nature Physics 7, 38 (2011) Quantum RG transformation super-saddle point t 1 r G 1 1 ez t Determination of the critical exponent n z0 1 Q ( z z0 ) Q ( z z ) 0 2n insulator z0 z ln 2 2.39 0.01 ln