Fermi surface symmetric mass generation: a quantum Monte-Carlo study (2311.09970v1)
Abstract: The symmetric mass generation (SMG) phase is an insulator in which a single-particle gap is intrinsically opened by the interaction, without involving symmetry spontaneously breaking or topological order. Here, we perform unbiased quantum Monte-Carlo simulation and systematically investigate a bilayer fermionic model hosting Fermi surface SMG in the strongly interacting regime. With increasing interaction strength, the model undergoes a quantum phase transition from an exciton insulator to an SMG phase, belonging to the (2+1)-dimensional O(4) universality class. We access the spectral properties of the SMG phase, resembling a Mott insulating phase with relatively flat dispersion and pronounced spectral broadening. The dispersion of Green's function zeros is extracted from spectral function, featuring a surface at zero frequency precisely located at the original non-interacting Fermi surface, which constitutes a haLLMark of the Fermi surface SMG phase. The bilayer model we study is potentially relevant to the newly discovered high-$T_c$ superconductor $\rm{La}_3 \rm{Ni}_2 \rm{O}_7$. Our results in SMG phase qualitatively capture the salient features of spectral function unveiled in recent ARPES experiments, shedding new insight on the underlying physics of $\rm{La}_3 \rm{Ni}_2 \rm{O}_7$.
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