Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Fractional charge bound to a vortex in two dimensional topological crystalline insulators

Published 7 Mar 2019 in cond-mat.mes-hall | (1903.02737v3)

Abstract: We establish the correspondence between the fractional charge bound to a vortex in a textured lattice and the relevant bulk band topology in two-dimensional (2D) topological crystalline insulators. As a representative example, we consider the Kekule textured graphene whose bulk band topology is characterized by a 2D $\mathbb{Z}{2}$ topological invariant $\nu{\rm 2D}$ protected by inversion symmetry. The fractional charge localized at a vortex in the Kekule texture is shown to be related to the change in the bulk topological invariant $\nu_{\rm 2D}$ around the vortex, as in the case of the Su-Schriefer-Heeger model in which the fractional charge localized at a domain wall is related to the change in the bulk charge polarization between degenerate ground states. We show that the effective three-dimensional (3D) Hamiltonian, where the angle $\theta$ around a vortex in Kekule-textured graphene is a third coordinate, describes a 3D axion insulator with a quantized magnetoelectric polarization. The spectral flow during the adiabatic variation of $\theta$ corresponds to the chiral hinge modes of an axion insulator and determines the accumulated charge localized at the vortex, which is half-quantized when chiral symmetry exists. When chiral symmetry is absent, electric charge localized at the vortex is no longer quantized, but the vortex always carries a half-quantized Wannier charge as long as inversion symmetry exists. For the cases when magnetoelectric polarization is quantized due to the presence of symmetry that reverses the space-time orientation, we classify all possible topological crystalline insulators whose vortex defect carries a fractional charge.

Citations (13)

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.