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  • Rapid Communication

Flux-stabilized Majorana zero modes in coupled one-dimensional Fermi wires

Chun Chen, Wei Yan, C. S. Ting, Yan Chen, and F. J. Burnell
Phys. Rev. B 98, 161106(R) – Published 8 October 2018
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Abstract

One promising avenue to study one-dimensional (1D) topological phases is to realize them in synthetic materials such as cold atomic gases. Intriguingly, it is possible to realize Majorana boundary modes in a 1D number-conserving system consisting of two fermionic chains coupled only by pair-hopping processes [C. V. Kraus et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 173004 (2013)]. It is commonly believed that significant interchain single-particle tunneling necessarily destroys these Majorana modes, as it spoils the Z2 fermion-parity symmetry that protects them. In this Rapid Communication, we present a mechanism to overcome this obstacle, by piercing a (synthetic) magnetic π flux through each plaquette of the Fermi ladder. Using bosonization, we show that in this case there exists an exact leg-interchange symmetry that is robust to interchain hopping, and acts as fermion parity at long wavelengths. We utilize density matrix renormalization group and exact diagonalization to verify that the resulting model exhibits Majorana boundary modes up to large single-particle tunnelings, comparable to the intrachain hopping strength. Our work highlights the unusual impacts of different topologically trivial band structures on these interaction-driven topological phases, and identifies a distinct route to stabilizing Majorana boundary modes in 1D fermionic ladders.

  • Figure
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  • Received 31 January 2017
  • Revised 16 August 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.98.161106

©2018 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Chun Chen1,*, Wei Yan2,3, C. S. Ting4, Yan Chen2,3, and F. J. Burnell1

  • 1School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA
  • 2Department of Physics and State Key Laboratory of Surface Physics, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China
  • 3Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures, Nanjing 210093, China
  • 4Texas Center for Superconductivity and Department of Physics, University of Houston, Houston, Texas 77204, USA

  • *Corresponding author: chen2698@umn.edu

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Issue

Vol. 98, Iss. 16 — 15 October 2018

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Images

  • Figure 1
    Figure 1

    Linearization of the lower band (blue solid line) at ϕ=π. The obtained four chiral-fermion branches can be separated into valley I (light magenta) and valley II (light orange) that generalize the original chain degrees of freedom. Specifically, we depict the two types of umklapp processes that obey Eq. (4).

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  • Figure 2
    Figure 2

    Numerical signatures of the topological phase. (a) and (b) Scaling of energy gaps as functions of L from DMRG. (a) shows that the energy difference between the first two lowest-lying eigenstates of (1) decays exponentially with L. The protected ground-state manifold is separated from the rest of the spectrum by a gap that decreases inversely with L, as shown in (b). Here, W=1.7t, t=0.5t, ϕ=π, N/L=1/3. (c)–(g) Transition out of the topological phase at large t for fixed W=1.7t, ϕ=π, L=48, N=16. (c)–(e) demonstrate the edge mode via the nonlocal correlations [26, 33, 34] in single-particle Green's functions. At t=3.0t, the edge mode disappears, indicating the transition to a trivial state. This is in accordance with (f) and (g) which show the corresponding evolutions of entanglement spectra and local fermion densities as the transition is approached.

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