Emergent topological properties in interacting one-dimensional systems with spin-orbit coupling (1504.05016v2)
Abstract: We present analysis of a single channel interacting quantum wire problem in the presence of spin-orbit interaction. The spin-orbit coupling breaks the spin-rotational symmetry from SU(2) to U(1) and breaks inversion symmetry. The low-energy theory is then a two band model with a difference of Fermi velocities $\delta v$. Using bosonization and a two-loop renormalization group procedure we show that electron-electron interactions can open a gap in the spin sector of the theory when the interaction strength $U$ is smaller than $\delta v$ in appropriate units. For repulsive interactions, the resulting strong coupling phase is of the spin-density-wave type. We show that this phase has peculiar emergent topological properties. The gapped spin sector behaves as a topological insulator, with zero-energy edge modes with fractional spin. On the other hand, the charge sector remains critical, meaning the entire system is metallic. However, this bulk electron liquid as a whole exhibits properties commonly associated with the one-dimensional edge states of two-dimensional spin-Hall insulators, in particular, the conduction of $2e2/h$ is robust against nonmagnetic impurities.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.